SF Gate: Contest to land new Boeing plane lacks one thing: a promise to build jet

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SF Gate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/news/archive/2003/06/11/n=
ational0540EDT0481.DTL

----------------------------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, June 11, 2003 (AP)
Contest to land new Boeing plane lacks one thing: a promise to build jet
HELEN JUNG, AP Business Writer


   (06-11) 02:40 PDT SEATTLE (AP) --
   As communities around the country devise tax breaks and other sweeteners
to persuade The Boeing Co. to build its next new jet in their states,
there is one element missing in the 7E7 sweepstakes: the guarantee that
Boeing will ever build it.
   The company has been soliciting bids from states that hope to land a new
factory where the mid-sized, fuel-efficient jet would be built. The
factory would mean about 800 to 1,200 jobs in assembly and support.
   Fourteen states are competing for the 7E7 project, with community bids d=
ue
June 20.
   Late Tuesday, the state House in Washington -- where Boeing already
assembles all but one of its commercial jets -- passed tax breaks for the
company worth $400 million through 2009, and up to $3.2 billion over 20
years.
   But a standoff developed when the Republican Senate approved Boeing-back=
ed
unemployment and workers' compensation bills and refused to vote on the
tax package until the Democratic House passed the unemployment bill. The
House demanded a more labor-friendly version.
   The debate came months before Boeing's board of directors will make the
most crucial decision -- whether to proceed with the first all-new jet
since the 777.
   The 7E7 is Boeing's third proposed jet in the past two years.
   In 2001, Boeing scrapped its plans for a 747 jumbo jet called the 747X,
instead focusing attention on a new proposal to build a jet that would
travel near the speed of sound, called the Sonic Cruiser.
   Then last December, in the midst of an economic downturn and with the
commercial airlines struggling to stay in business following the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Boeing formally mothballed the Sonic Cruiser
and unveiled plans for a more conventional, fuel-efficient jet, now dubbed
the 7E7.
   The 7E7 is to go before the Boeing board for approval in late 2003 or
early 2004. If it is authorized, Boeing would officially begin the program
in 2004 and offer the jet to airline customers.
   In some ways, the 7E7 has a much better shot at production than the Sonic
Cruiser, independent airline consultant Scott Hamilton said.
   It would seat about 210 passengers, travel a little faster than a 777, a=
nd
could fly at about 43,000 feet, Boeing said. It would also save airlines
considerable money by using 20 percent less fuel than other airplanes.
   "If indeed Boeing can cut the operational costs of the 7E7 by up to 20
percent, that is a quantum leap for airlines," Hamilton said. "That would
be a huge, huge thing."
   In fact, Boeing's previous proposed airplanes lacked that same kind of
strong market need, said Paul Nisbet at JSA Research.
   "If Boeing doesn't proceed in that direction, to me, it would be a very
clear indication that they don't see the airliner market as one worth
investing significant amounts into," he said.
   Work on the 7E7 is progressing, said Boeing spokeswoman Yvonne Leach,
although the company declined to reveal how many people are working on the
project. The company is early in the development stage.
   But Boeing is committed to the program, she said.
   "We feel very confident about this program moving forward," Leach said.
"We've analyzed the market and it's the right segment to target. We also
have a high degree of confidence in the customer base and the solution
we're bringing forward for the customer."
   The company even started a name-the-new-airplane contest on the Internet,
collecting votes on whether to rename the 7E7 one of four choices: Global
Cruiser, Dreamliner, eLiner or Stratoclimber. The results are to be
revealed next week at the Paris Air Show.
   In recent years, Boeing has been showing less commitment to commercial
airplanes and more of a commitment to preserving profit margins, said
Richard Aboulafia, with Teal Group aerospace and defense consulting firm.
   "They're not going to make investment decisions on the basis of heritage
or legacy," he said. "They're strictly doing it on a profitability basis."

On the Net:
   www.boeing.com

=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2003 AP

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]