Company supplying Dorset's Air Ambulance helicopter saved from administration

Assets from Specialist Aviation Service have been sold on

Published 1st Feb 2024

An aviation firm supplying "critical" air ambulance services to charities, including Dorset's, has been saved from administration.

The firm, Specialist Aviation Service, which is based at Gloucestershire Airport, supported more than 5,000 ambulance flights in 2023.

It provided helicopters and pilots for air ambulance services that cover Dorset and Somerset, as well as Kent, Surrey and Sussex, Essex and Herts, East of England and London.

The company had sustained operating losses for several years and needed to seek new funding.

It hired administrators from advisory firm FRP on Wednesday (31st January) after failing to secure solvent sales.

On Thursday (1st February), its assets were sold to Gama Aviation, an aviation specialist headquartered in Hampshire.

Out of the company's 184 employees, all of them except for two will be transferring to Gama Aviation as part of the deal.

Andrew Sheridan, partner at FRP and joint administrator of Specialist Aviation Services, said:

"This was a complex transaction, in the heavily regulated aviation sector, and key parties included aircraft financiers, global OEMs (original equipment manufacturers), overseas government contracts and of course the air ambulance charities.

"Without the support of the CAA (Civil Aviation Authority) who mobilised a senior team and worked at speed, this transaction could not have happened and we wish to extend our gratitude to them, as well as to the Company's senior management team.

"The goal from the outset of our involvement was to ensure that the vital air ambulance operations continued without disruption, which they did.

"We take great satisfaction in ensuring that lives continued to be saved throughout the process and wish Gama and its newly acquired operations, highly skilled operatives and pilots, every success in the future."

This comes as the number of company insolvencies hit a 30-year high in 2023 as firms suffered amid high-interest rates and cost pressures.

Figures from the Insolvency Service revealed that 25,158 firms across England and Wales went bust last year - up 14% on 2022 and the highest annual number since 1993.

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