The first of five Boeing P-8A Poseidon
aircraft for Norway performed its maiden flight on Monday.
The aircraft took off at 10:03 Pacific time and flew for 2
hours and 24 minutes, reaching a maximum altitude of 41,000 feet
during the flight from Renton Municipal Airport to Boeing Field in
Seattle.
The first flight marks the next phase of the
production cycle of this aircraft as it is moved to the
Installation and Checkout facility, where mission systems will be
installed and additional testing will take place before final
delivery to the Norwegian Defence Materiel Agency (NDMA) later
this year.
“This inaugural flight is an important milestone
for Norway, and the Boeing team remains committed to delivering
the P-8 fleet to the NDMA on schedule,” said Christian Thomsen,
P-8 Europe program manager. “The P-8 is a capability that will
help Norway improve anti-submarine warfare, anti-surface warfare,
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and
search-and-rescue missions, in addition to fostering valuable
regional collaboration and interoperability with NATO nations.”
The five P-8As will eventually replace Norway’s
current fleet of six P-3 Orions and three DA-20 Jet Falcons. The
Royal Norwegian Air Force currently operates its P-3s from Andoya
Air Station. With the introduction of the P-8s, flight operations
will move to new facilities at Evenes Air Station.
To date, Boeing has delivered 136 P-8 aircraft to
the U.S. Navy, the Royal Australian Air Force, the Indian Navy and
the United Kingdom’s Royal Air Force.
Norway is one of eight
nations that have selected the P-8A as their maritime patrol
aircraft, along with the United States, India, Australia, the
United Kingdom, Korea, New Zealand and Germany.
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