Canada orders Boeing Globemaster

Boeing and the Canadian government have signed an agreement for the purchase of four C-17 Globemaster IIIs for Canada's Department of National Defence. The aircraft will provide new strategic airlift capabilities for Canadian Forces.
Boeing will deliver the aircraft from its Long Beach, California, factory where the airlifters are assembled. The first delivery will occur as soon as autumn, 2007.
Boeing is on contract to design, build, deliver and support 190 US Air Force C-17s. The new Canadian C-17s are already factored into the C-17 production plan and will not extend the Long Beach production line beyond mid-2009, when the last C-17 is scheduled for delivery.
In addition to the 160 C-17s now in service with the US Air Force, the UK’s Royal Air Force operates four C-17s, and the Royal Australian Air Force in late 2006 took delivery of its first of four C-17s. With this announcement, Canada will become the fourth nation to operate C-17s.
Register now to continue reading
Thanks for visiting The Engineer. You’ve now reached your monthly limit of news stories. Register for free to unlock unlimited access to all of our news coverage, as well as premium content including opinion, in-depth features and special reports.
Benefits of registering
-
In-depth insights and coverage of key emerging trends
-
Unrestricted access to special reports throughout the year
-
Daily technology news delivered straight to your inbox
Experts speculate over cause of Iberian power outages
I´m sure politicians will be thumping tables and demanding answers - while Professor Bell, as reported above, says ´wait for detailed professional...