Bristow Helicopters

Bristow Helicopters Limited
IATA ICAO Callsign
UH BHL BRISTOW
Founded 1955
Fleet size 490
Parent company The Bristow Group
Headquarters Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom
Revenue IncreaseUS$1.67B (FY 2014)[1]
Operating income IncreaseUS$177M (FY 2014)[1]
Net income IncreaseUS$187M (FY 2014)[1]
Total assets IncreaseUS$3.54(FY 2014)[2]
Total equity IncreaseUS$1.77B (FY 2014)[2]
Website bristowgroup.com

Bristow Helicopters Limited is a British civil helicopter operator originally based at Aberdeen Airport, Scotland which is now part of the U.S. based Bristow Group (NYSE: BRS, S&P 600 component) which in turn has its corporate headquarters in Houston, Texas.

Bristow Helicopters Limited holds a United Kingdom Civil Aviation Authority Type A Operating Licence, it is permitted to carry passengers, cargo and mail on aircraft with 20 seats or more.[3] The U.S. division of Bristow is a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) approved Part 135 air carrier.

History

Bristow Helicopters Limited was established in June 1955 by Alan Bristow.

Bristow Helicopters was one of the early suppliers of offshore helicopter services in the United Kingdom, it is also a supplier of Search and Rescue services and of military helicopter pilot training support in the UK. Bristow is a JAA-approved Type Rating Training Organization and Flight Training Organization, holding CAA approvals numbered UK/TRTO - 34 and UK/FTO - 84. Bristow offers courses in JAA-Approved Type Rating, JAA-Approved Instrument Rating, JAA-Approved TRI/TRE, and the AS332 simulator.

Westland Wessex 60 helicopter of Bristows in 1970
Hiller UH-12C used by Bristow to train Army Air Corps pilots.

From February 17, 1965 and onwards, it operated the Westland Wessex 60 ten-seat helicopter in support of North Sea Oil industry off-shore installations.[4]

During the late 1960s, Bristow operated a fleet of Hiller UH-12 training helicopters based at AAC Middle Wallop which were used to train flight crews for the UK Army Air Corps.

In 1985, it was acquired by British and Commonwealth Holdings plc.[5]

In 1996, Bristow Helicopters was purchased by Offshore Logistics, an American offshore helicopter operator which operated as Air Logistics in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and Alaska, and was structured as a reverse takeover. The group now operates and maintains a global fleet of over 400 aircraft. In 2006 Offshore Logistics re-branded itself as 'The Bristow Group'.

The Bristow Group expanded their portfolio in April 2007 with the purchase of Helicopter Adventures, a Florida-based flight school, Helicopter Adventures was subsequently renamed Bristow Academy.[6][7] The deal also provided the Bristow Group with the world's largest civilian fleet of Schweizer aircraft.[8]

The Bristow safety vision, Target Zero[9] was announced in Feb 2007.[10] It aims to achieve Zero Accidents, Zero Harm to People and Zero Harm to the Environment. It goes beyond Safety Management Systems to involve Safety Culture & Safety Leadership.[11][12] Bristow and its competitors share information on safety.[13]

Bristow Group: Bristow provides exceptional transportation, search and rescue (SAR) and aircraft support services in four main regions: Africa, Americas, Asia Pacific, and Europe Caspian. In addition, Bristow operates the world's largest commercial helicopter training solutions provider through Bristow Academy in Florida and Nevada in the U.S. and in Gloucester in the U.K. Further information on each region can be found here: http://www.bristowgroup.com/locations/

Bristow (formerly Air Logistics)

In January 2010, Bristow announced the retirement of the Air Logistics name and Gulf of Mexico operations would operate under the name Bristow. Bristow provides helicopter services, maintenance and other support services to the oil and gas industry. It operates more than 170 single and twin-turbine helicopters in the United States. These receive support, materials and operational assistance from its regional headquarters and primary maintenance facility located at the Acadiana Regional Airport in New Iberia, Louisiana.

Eastern Airways and Airnorth


Fixed Wing Bristow has controlling interests in Eastern Airways which is a regional airline based in the U.K. operating fixed wing regional jet and turboprop aircraft and Airnorth, also a regional airline, based in Australia operating fixed wing regional jet and turboprop aircraft. Both Eastern Airways and Airnorth operate scheduled passenger services, shuttle flights for oil and gas industry personnel, and charter services.[14]

Joint ventures

In addition to its wholly owned international operations, Bristow Group maintains service agreements and equity interests in helicopter operators in Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Mexico, Norway and Russia (Sakhalin) and the United Kingdom. This allows Bristow to extend its range of services into new and developing oil and gas markets and helps provide a lower cost structure in some operating areas. Partners include:

Norsk Helikopter-scheme

Although not a joint venture, in 2015 Bristow and AgustaWestland agreed to develop offshore and search and rescue capabilities for the AW609 tiltrotor.[16] This could simplify a typical trip from Clapham Common to an oil rig by using just one aircraft.[13] Bristow intends to order more than 10 tiltrotors.[17]

Military

The Search and Rescue Training Unit at RAF Valley is a detachment of the Defence Helicopter Flying School at Shawbury, from which its aircraft are distinguished by their flotation bags, rescue winches and cable cutters above the cockpit roof. The aircraft are maintained to EASA standards but are military registered allowing them to operate outside civilian flight restrictions.

All the Defence Helicopter Flying School Helicopters and Synthetic Training Equipment are owned by FB Heliservices, a consortium of Bristow Helicopters and FR Aviation, who provide 40% of the instructional staff, all the ground school and simulator staff, carry out all maintenance and provide support services.

Search and Rescue

Sikorsky S-61N operating for HM Coastguard
Bristow Helicopter (G-JSAR) at De Kooy Airfield. G-JSAR was a Search and Rescue helicopter.

Bristow helicopters operated Sikorsky S-61N helicopters on behalf of Her Majesty's Coastguard, the United Kingdom's Coast Guard, until July 2007 after which there was a 12-month transitional period whilst CHC Helicopter took over the contract replacing the S-61N with new helicopters.

Bristow operated four dedicated Search and Rescue (SAR) sites in the UK, on behalf of the Coast Guard Service. The units were located at Portland (EGDP) and Lee-on-Solent (EGHF) on the south coast of England, at Stornoway (EGPO) in the Outer Hebrides, and at Sumburgh (EGPB) in the Shetland Isles.

Northern North Sea services operated from Aberdeen (EGPD), Scatsta (EGPM) and Stavanger (ENZV).

Southern North Sea services operate from Norwich (EGSH), Humberside (EGNJ) and Den Helder (EHKD) with its support organisation based at Redhill (EGKR).

Bristow S61N's were responsible to carry out SAR tasks, operating from Den Helder Airport on behalf of the oil and gas industry.

On 26 March 2013 Bristow was awarded a 10-year contract to operate the search and rescue operations in the United Kingdom, at the time being provided by CHC Helicopter (on behalf of Her Majesty's Coastguard), the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy.[18] Bristow is currently operating AgustaWestland AW189 and Sikorsky S-92 helicopters in support of this contract.[14] for further information on UK SAR please visit: http://www.bristowgroup.com/uk-sar/

Fleet

Bristow operates a large fleet of over 450 helicopters and aircraft, which includes unconsolidated affiliates and joint venture partners.[19] Bristow intends to reduce fleet variety from 24 helicopter types to six.[13] For subsidiaries Eastern Airways and Airnorth fixed wing jet and turboprop aircraft, see Eastern Airways and Airnorth.

Incidents

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 BRISTOW GROUP (BRS) annual SEC income statement filing via Wikinvest.
  2. 1 2 BRISTOW GROUP (BRS) annual SEC balance sheet filing via Wikinvest.
  3. UK CAA - Operating Licence Holders
  4. Swartz, Kenneth I. (16 April 2015). "Setting the Standard". Vertical Magazine. Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  5. British & Commonwealth acquires remaining interest in Bristow Helicopter Group
  6. http://www.bristowgroup.com/pdf/Bristow_Corporate_Newsletter_May_2007.pdf
  7. Smith, Dale. "Training Profile: Bristow Academy" page 27-31. Rotor&Wing, July 2011.
  8. http://www.heli.com/helicopter-sales/
  9. http://www.raes-hfg.com/reports/10oct07-RiskInMaintEnv/10oct07-Evans-TZero.pdf
  10. http://www.bristowgroup.com/pdf/Bristow_Corporate_Newsletter_February_2007.pdf
  11. BURMAN, RICHARD & EVANS, ANDY (2008) Target Zero: A Culture of Safety, Defence Aviation Safety Centre Journal 2008, p22-27. http://www.mod.uk/NR/rdonlyres/849892B2-D6D2-4DFD-B5BD-9A4F288A9B18/0/DASCJournal2008.pdf
  12. EVANS, ANDY & PARKER, JOHN (2008) Beyond Safety Management Systems, AeroSafety World, May p12-17 http://www.flightsafety.org/asw/may08/asw_may08_p12-17.pdf
  13. 1 2 3 Johnson, Oliver. "Charting Bristow's Course" Vertical, August 2015. Archive
  14. 1 2 http://www.bristowgroup.com
  15. http://www.cougar.ca, 9/4/2012 press release: Bristow to acquire assets and minority equity interest in Cougar Helicopters
  16. AgustaWestland and Bristow Sign Exclusive Platform Development Agreement for the AW609 Tiltrotor Program AgustaWestland PR, 3 March 2015.
  17. Huber, Mark (3 March 2015). "Bristow Commits To Being Partner and Customer for AW609 Civil Tiltrotor". Aviation International News. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  18. "Bristow Group to take over UK search and rescue from RAF". BBC News. 26 March 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
  19. http://www.bristowgroup.com/about-bristow/helicopter-fleet/
  20. http://www.aaib.gov.uk/cms_resources/4-1983%20G-ASWI.pdf Report No: 4/1983. Report on the accident to Westland Wessex 60, G-ASWI, 12 miles ENE of Bacton, Norfolk on 13 August 1981
  21. http://www.aaib.gov.uk/cms_resources/4%2D1983%20G%2DASWI%20Append%2Epdf 4/1983 Westland Wessex 60, G-ASWI Appendices
  22. http://www.onderzoeksraad.nl/docs/rapporten/2006060e_2006137_G-JSAR_preliminary_report.pdf[]

Further reading

External links

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