A former British Army sergeant who tried to kill his wife by sabotaging her parachute so he could get her insurance money has been sentenced to at least 18 years in prison.

Sgt Emile Cilliers was convicted last month of two counts of attempted murder for the parachute tampering and sabotaging a gas valve at the couple's home.

Victoria Cilliers, 42 – an experienced parachuting instructor – suffered near-fatal injuries when she fell 1200 metres in April 2015, but survived by landing on a newly ploughed field.

Prosecutors said the 38-year-old defendant was deeply in debt and wanted his wife's life insurance money to pay off his bills and start a new life with his lover.

Emile Cilliers, who has been dismissed from the army, was sentenced at Winchester Crown Court in southern England to life with no chance of parole for 18 years.

Judge Nigel Sweeney told him "this was wicked offending of extreme gravity".

"You have shown yourself to be a person of quite exceptional callousness who will stop at nothing to satisfy his own desires, material or otherwise," the judge said.

Outside court, the investigating officer, Detective Inspector Paul Franklin, said Emile Cilliers was "a cold, callous, selfish man who cares only about money and his sexual conquests".

"Today's sentencing means that society is a little safer with him locked away," he said.