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ORAC
29th Jan 2017, 06:04
As F-35 Comes Online, Norway to Scrap F-16 Fleet (http://www.defensenews.com/articles/as-f-35-comes-online-norway-to-scrap-f-16-fleet)

BODØ AIR STATION, NORWAY – As the Norwegian air force prepares to bring its first three F-35 joint strike fighters to Norwegian soil, the government is taking a simple approach to disposing of its aging F-16 fleet. Rather than trying to deal with the complicated politics of reselling them or paying the cost of maintaining the older fighters as a reserve, the Ministry of Defense plans to scrap its collection fifty-plus Fighting Falcons, officials said during a visit here January 19........

The government plans to shut down the 56-plane fleet at the end of 2021, replacing it with a slightly smaller but more capable fleet of 52 F-35A conventional-takeoff-and-landing variants. Norway will take possession of six F-35s in 2017, with three going to Luke Air Force Base in Arizona, which is the US center for training international partners on the Lockheed Martin-designed plane (Norway already has four F-35s at Luke. Three others are expected to arrive in Norway in early November. From 2018 onward, planes will be delivered directly to Norway, with six new planes arriving each year. Norway plans for the planes to be declared operational in 2019.

The F-16s will still be operated through the end of 2021, although the number of flight hours will drop as the newer jets arrive. Currently the F-16 fleet logs around 7,000 hours per year; that will drop to around 3,000 by 2021, officials here said. Pilots over the age of 40 have been barred from re-training on the F-35, in order to make sure the F-16 has a dedicated pilot core until it is fully retired.

There are a number of factors at work here that make a resale of the old planes unlikely. The first is the age of this particular fleet -- Norway’s fleet is among the oldest of the F-16 groups in the world, with an average plane having over 10,000 hours of flight time. Another is the political restrictions on re-selling US defense weapons. As one official put it, regulations make it easier to “turn them into nails” then try to resell the jets.

Richard Aboulafia, an analyst with the Teal Group, says the age of the planes means they would likely be useful only as training aircraft or for spare parts. More broadly, he said the market for used F-16s hasn’t been very strong, despite some potential good fits around the world. “One issue has been that many F-16 users have been waiting longer than expected for F-35s, so the supply of used F-16s has been constrained. But even then US F-16s that have been available weren’t purchased in significant numbers,” he wrote in an email. “One problem is that there are relatively few countries that are wealthy enough to operate F-16s but not wealthy enough to buy them new. But even there, I’m surprised that more countries in Eastern Europe haven’t opted for used F-16s.”

The planes won’t be the only thing that is scrapped. The military facilities at Bodø, which have housed F-16s since they came into service, will no longer be home to fighter jets. The majority of the F-35 fleet will instead be hosted at Ørland Main Air Station, with a few kept at the more northern Evenes air base to protect the P-8 maritime surveillance fleet.

Bodø has a long history as a military facility, having served as a hub for both the U-2 and SR-71 spy planes operated by the US during the Cold War. (Gary Powers, the U-2 pilot who was famously shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960, was en route to Bodø when he was captured.) It has also served as the hub of training for the Norwegian F-16 pilot corps.

Brat
30th Jan 2017, 18:31
Having appeared to have committed themselves, and been extremely enthusiastic supporters, was a tad surprised to see this.
Norway Fears Lockheed Not Ready To Support F-35 | Defense content from Aviation Week (http://aviationweek.com/defense/norway-fears-lockheed-not-ready-support-f-35)

The full article.

Norway Fears Lockheed Not Ready To Support F-35
27 Jan 2017 Lara Seligman

"OSLO, Norway—As Norway readies to welcome its first F-35s in country in just nine short months, top defense officials here worry Lockheed Martin won’t be ready to support the new fleet.

The nation plans to begin operating the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) almost as soon as it arrives on Norwegian soil in November, according to air force officials. But while Lockheed has proved it can successfully deliver aircraft from the production line, the company has yet to show it will have a reliable system in place to support the aircraft on “day two,” says Maj. Gen. Morten Klever, Norway’s program director for F-35.

Norway has identified a number of “risk areas,” and is currently working with the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO), Lockheed and engine maker Pratt & Whitney to mitigate those risks, Klever says.

“They will start training for initial operating capability immediately and everything needs to be in place for them to do that,” Klever says. “Is the industry ready to support and sustain the aircraft in Norway? There is a risk right now.”

Lockheed and the partners are setting up roughly 30 F-35 bases internationally between now and 2020, a massive undertaking, Klever says. In particular, Klever is concerned about Lockheed’s ability on day two to provide the necessary spare parts, equipment and support, while at the same time navigating the specific laws and regulations of Norway and eight other partner countries.

“I think Lockheed Martin really needs to step up the work on sustainment,” Klever says. “After all, the partners are expecting a seamless global sustainment solution.”

Chief of the Royal Norwegian Air Force Brig. Gen. Tonje Skinnarland echoes Klever’s concerns, adding that she is keeping a close eye on some “critical deviations” that have emerged recently.

“We are on a very tight plan, a very tight schedule, and everything is linked together,” Skinnarland says. “If we drift off the plan for any reason it will affect our ability to be operational along the path we have.”

Lockheed pushed back on these concerns, pointing to the arrival of the first F-35s in country for the Israeli air force in December 2016 as proof the company will be ready to support Norway’s F-35s. Working with Lockheed, Israel successfully launched a two-ship flight just 16 hr. after the aircraft touched down, company spokesman Mike Rein says.

“In the six weeks since the arrival, the IAF has met or exceeded all of their flying objectives and the aircraft and system remain in a ready state,” Rein says. “We are confident that it will be a similar case when Norway’s F-35s arrive in country for the first time.”

Italy’s F-35s, which arrived at Amendola air base in December, also are flying sorties according to plan with Lockheed’s support, Rein adds. The company expects similar successes at U.S. Naval Air Station Lemoore once F-35C operations begin there.

Meanwhile, the men and women on the ground at Ørland Main Air Station are doing their part to stand up the first Norwegian F-35 squadron. But the transition from F-16 to F-35 is just one piece of a sweeping modernization effort across Norway’s armed forces. As it introduces new equipment like F-35, Boeing’s P-8 maritime patrol aircraft (MPA), and new search-and-rescue (SAR) helicopters, Norway is re-structuring bases across the country to streamline operations in a tight fiscal environment. The government is consolidating the air force organization, recently shuttering the air wing at Bodo that was home to two F-16 squadrons, one of which has now been deactivated in anticipation of the F-35. At the same time, Norway also will close Andoya, currently the main maritime patrol base, once the legacy P-3 MPA fleet is retired.

Ørland will become the nation’s main combat airbase, eventually home to two F-35 squadrons—the historic 332 and 331 squadrons, which flew Spitfires in World War II—advanced air and base defense forces, and an upgraded SAR helicopter detachment. It must also be able to accommodate deployments of allied aircraft, in particular the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System. The new P-8s will be based at Evenes air base north of the Arctic Circle, along with forward-deployed F-35s, to hunt for Russian submarines.

“We need to be more lean and more effective, and use our finances in a better way, but we also have to change our perception to network centric warfare,” [a la RAAF Project Jericho] says Col. Aage Lyder Longva, commander of the 132 Air Wing.

The Norwegian Defense Estate Agency (NDEA) began building the support infrastructure for F-35 at Ørland in May 2015, with the goal of getting the basic equipment in place for operations by the time the first aircraft arrive. The outer shell of the new F-35 facility is already complete; now, Longva is waiting on Lockheed to install the eight simulators and necessary equipment for the Autonomic Logistics and Information System, the maintenance backbone of the new fleet.

To protect the new F-35s from prying eyes, base personnel are building a dirt wall around the outer perimeter, says Olaf Dobloug, chief of combat aircraft base construction with the NDEA. They also are updating and extending the runway by 300 meters, and adding new navigational and lighting systems.

Altogether, Norway has estimated readying both Ørland and Evenes to accommodate new aircraft across the force—including infrastructure modernization and building new facilities—will cost 10 billion kroner, or about $1.3 billion, Longva says. Just over half of that will go exclusively toward supporting the F-35, he notes.

While much of the upgrade is focused on what happens inside base walls, Longva and Olaf also must keep in mind the surrounding area. A significant portion of the funds will go to noise abatement, partially due to stricter environmental regulations recently established by the Norwegian government and local authorities. By law the NDEA must offer to buy the private houses in the “red zone,” where noise from the existing F-16s and future F-35s will be the worst. If the residents choose to stay, the NDEA must install insulation into residents’ walls to protect against the noise.

Norway, Lockheed and the F-35 Joint Program Office clearly have a long way to go to prepare for the arrival of the JSF. But the new aircraft is not just a replacement for the legacy F-16 that Norway currently relies on to be its eyes and ears in the North Atlantic, Skinnarland says. The air force must fundamentally change its thinking to take full advantage of the new, fifth-generation capability.

“We have to be able to utilize the airframe in new ways, not continue in the same ways we have used the F-16,” Skinnarland says. “We have to develop concepts on how to operate, what’s the capabilities and possibilities of the new aircraft.”

Source: http://aviationweek.com/defense/norway- ... pport-f-35

riff_raff
31st Jan 2017, 06:56
I'm sure L-M will do whatever it takes to properly support the F-35's delivered to Norway. Norway has a long history of working with Lockheed on their F-16's, which are still very capable aircraft.

Also remember that 40% of Norway's $224 million military export revenues in 2016 were from the US.