Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Pilots safe as B.C. plane crashes in Australia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2023 04:56 PM
  • Pilots safe as B.C. plane crashes in Australia

PORT ALBERNI, B.C. - A Boeing 737 air tanker owned by a British Columbia company has crashed in Western Australia while on deployment to a fire.

Coulson Aviation, based in Port Alberni on Vancouver Island, says in a statement that both pilots walked away from the accident and have been medically assessed.

The statement says the company is offering all the support it can to its local and international crews and is grateful to its firefighting and aviation industry colleagues in Australia.

Coulson announced last month that it had been awarded a contract to provide its Boeing 737 FireLiner, designated tanker 139, as Australia's new large air tanker.

At the time, the company said the state-of-the-art aircraft was capable of dropping more than 15,000 litres of retardant or water at flow rates of up to 11,000 litres per second.

While it's unclear what caused the crash, the Australian Broadcasting Corp. says the Department of Fire and Emergency Services and the Australian Transport Safety Bureau are conducting separate investigations into the crash.

MORE National ARTICLES

Health spending growth to slow down in 2022: CIHI

Health spending growth to slow down in 2022: CIHI
The total health spending in Canada is still expected to rise by 0.8 per cent this year, however that's much lower than the 7.6 per cent increase seen in 2021, and the 13.2 per cent surge in 2020. The annual report released Thursday said the country's health spending, including public and private expenditure.

Health spending growth to slow down in 2022: CIHI

Rain, wind, snow hit large parts of B.C.

Rain, wind, snow hit large parts of B.C.
Environment Canada says downpours over the inner south coast, including eastern Vancouver Island, Sunshine Coast and Metro Vancouver will deliver between 30 and 70 millimetres of rain. But it says chilly conditions could mean the rain falls as wet snow at slightly higher elevations across Metro Vancouver before conditions warm up on Friday.

Rain, wind, snow hit large parts of B.C.

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff
When restructuring at the Vancouver-based company was announced in August, CEO Tom Keiser said Hootsuite needed to refocus its business so it could drive efficiency, growth, and financial sustainability.  

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits
The Prime Minister's Office says Trudeau will attend the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit on Nov. 12 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, before heading to the the G20 Summit in Bali, Indonesia.

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness
Dennis Chimich, an expert in the biomechanics of bone fractures, testified for Doug McCallum's defence team, which is presenting evidence to suggest their client was not lying when he told police a woman ran over his foot in a grocery store parking lot. 

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley
Prices continued to soften, with month-over-month Benchmark prices down slightly across all property categories. For detached homes, prices are on par with October 2021 levels, while townhomes and apartments are up 7.7 per cent and 11.5 per cent, respectively, over 2021.

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley