The production of twelve amphibious firefighting planes to make up the permanent rescEU fleet has been launched following agreements signed by several EU Member States with the Canadian Commercial Corporation.
Wildfires have recently become a pan-European concern, and the fire risk is expected to further increase due to climate change.
The EU Civil Protection Mechanism coordinates pan-European assistance and ensures that all EU Member States and participating states to the Mechanism receive timely information in times of crises and emergencies.
The European Commission will finance the planes and these will become the new backbone of the EU’s crisis response to tackle forest fires.
Aircraft from the rescEU reserves can be rapidly deployed if a country faces severe wildfires that require additional support.
This is in line with the EU’s long-term strategy to establish a permanent rescEU firefighting fleet hosted by Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain.
Ten additional firefighting planes are being purchased by Member States directly to reinforce their national fleets.
This is a historic moment in European civil protection in this age of climate crisis. As wildfire seasons become longer, more deadly, and more unpredictable, we have been working tirelessly to bolster the EU’s firefighting response capacities. Today’s announcement proves that Europe is committed to strengthening and deepening these efforts. I want to thank all the Member States with whom we have worked to speed up the purchase of much-needed firefighting planes. Thanks to our collaboration, we are well on track with the timeline set by the European Commission to acquire a new, permanent fleet of firefighting aircraft of planes and helicopters, said Commissioner for Crisis Management, Janez Lenarčič.
Since 2019, the EU Civil Protection Mechanism has been progressively reinforced with the rescEU fleet, a European reserve that includes firefighting planes and helicopters and is 100 percent financed by the EU.
The EU funds will enable the acquisition of a total of 12 new firefighting planes, which will be distributed among six EU Member States (Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain), and several helicopters.
These will become the ‘permanent rescEU fleet’. The first airplanes are expected to be delivered in 2027. The first batch of helicopters is expected to arrive in 2026.