Alberta DHC-515 Waterbombers: Alberta orders five as Canada’s scooper debate reignites
Could Alberta DHC-515 waterbombers finally give one of Canada’s most wildfire-prone provinces the aerial firepower it has long needed? On February 17, 2026, Premier Danielle Smith stood before cameras at De Havilland Aircraft of Canada‘s Calgary offices. She announced a $400-million contract — what the province calls a major step forward in strengthening wildfire protection
Trump UFO disclosure: Inside the July 8, 2026 speech rumour—and what aerospace can verify
Trump UFO disclosure: Is President Donald Trump really preparing a “ready-to-go” speech that confirms alien life on July 8, 2026? The practical question for aerospace readers is simpler. What evidence, if any, is moving through the systems that pilots, controllers, and defence analysts actually use? Moreover, the rumour matters even if the “aliens” angle collapses.
DSR Bank Montreal: Montréal’s bid for a new multinational defence bank
DSR Bank Montreal: can Montréal really win the headquarters race for a proposed Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSR Bank) aimed at funding allied rearmament? Moreover, if the bank does land in Canada, will aerospace suppliers feel the impact first—or last? On February 2, 2026, La Presse reported that Montréal was courting a new multinational
HADES Global 6500: US Army Seeks Contractors for Up to 11 Bombardier-Based Spy Planes
HADES Global 6500: what does the U.S. Army’s January 2026 Request for Information (RFI), seeking industry input on up to 11 new aircraft, mean for survivable standoff intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR)? On January 30, 2026, Aerospace Global News highlighted the Army’s latest market check around the High Accuracy Detection and Exploitation System (HADES). It
UPDATE #3 Gripen deal Canada: Bombardier hears chances of Saab deal at 85%
Gripen deal Canada: does an “85%” rumour mean Ottawa is ready to sign—or just ready to signal? Earlier, on November 14, 2025, Reuters reported that Saab was in talks with the Canadian government and Bombardier about building the Saab JAS 39 Gripen under licence in Canada, with talk of roughly 10,000 jobs and Bombardier confirming
Russia revives retired aircraft: Tu-204s, Il-96s and Boeing 747s return as fleet pressure builds
Russia revives retired aircraft: what is forcing airlines to pull Tu-204s, Il-96s and Boeing 747s out of storage in 2026? First, the demand picture is not a collapse. Russia is still moving large passenger volumes across a vast domestic network. The fleet picture is tightening. Age, sanctions, and delayed domestic production are converging on the
Canadian aircraft decertification: Gulfstream vs Canada and the fleets at risk
Canadian aircraft decertification: is Transport Canada really blocking Gulfstream—and can a U.S. president “decertify” Canadian-built aircraft in retaliation? First, the stakes are not abstract. They sit on U.S. ramps, fly U.S. passengers, and support U.S. missions. (Read our follow-up story: Gulfstream certification: Transport Canada clears G500 and G600) Next, the claim at the center of
Airbus A220-500 update: Dublin signals on a bigger, tougher engines, and UK supply-chain pressure
Airbus A220-500 update: what did Airbus’s new commercial-aircraft chief actually say in Dublin on January 26, 2026—and how does it connect to a possible stretch and a second engine option? First, the headline from the Airline Economics conference in Dublin was not a grand product launch. Instead, it was a blunt reminder that 2026 is
Discombobulator secret weapon: the mystery “switch‑off” tech behind the Venezuela raid—and the word’s bizarre past
Discombobulator secret weapon: what is it—and did it really help U.S. forces seize Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in Caracas? First, the name sounds like a prop from a spy parody. Yet the claim attached to it sits inside a real, high‑stakes event: the U.S. raid that captured Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. On January
Tocumen Airport expansion: PTY’s next build cycle and Panama’s connectivity surge
Tocumen Airport expansion: can Panama City’s Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen (IATA code: PTY; ICAO code: MPTO) stay ahead of demand as it targets up to 22.6 million passengers in 2026? First, the numbers look big because they are big. Panama’s main gateway closed 2025 with 20.98 million passengers (+9% vs 2024), then publicly projected 2026











