SFGate: American to service Rolls-Royce jet engines at Alliance

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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
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inancial1151EDT0088.DTL
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Monday, April 19, 2004 (AP)
American to service Rolls-Royce jet engines at Alliance



   (04-19) 13:49 PDT FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) --
   Rolls Royce PLC has agreed to send up to $1.6 billion in maintenance work
on jet engines to a facility it owns in a joint venture with American
Airlines, the companies said Monday.
   Rolls Royce said it would send at least $900 million worth of engine work
over the next five years to Texas Aero Engine Services Ltd., which is part
of American's maintenance base at Alliance Airport in Fort Worth. That
work would be done at cost, officials said.
   Rolls-Royce said it could send an additional $700 million worth of work =
to
the facility if the center meets its business goals, which were not
detailed. The partnership would earn an unspecified profit on that extra
work, officials said.
   American said the deal also would help spread its costs of operating a
large engine-repair and overhaul facility.
   The new deal could increase the amount of work at the facility, which
performed $1.2 billion in work in its first five years after opening in
1998, the companies said. Most of that work, however, was done on
American's own planes, and only one-third was profitable, officials said.
   The facility performs work on planes owned by other airlines, including
Delta, America West and ATA, and the partners hope to lure other carriers.
   "The goal is to go after new business," said Benet J. Wilson, a
spokeswoman for Rolls-Royce's U.S. subsidiary.
   American has revamped its maintenance bases as part of an effort to
recover from near bankruptcy last year. The Fort Worth-based airline
launched aggressive programs to cut costs and consolidate some of its work
among its three bases at Alliance, Kansas City and Tulsa, Okla. The moves
have helped free space to bid for contracts to repair engines for outside
companies.
   The Alliance facility employs more than 530 American mechanics and other
workers, of which more than 200 were added to handle maintenance work for
customers other than American Airlines. Work for those new customers has
grown 75 percent over five years, American said.
   David Campbell, American's vice president of maintenance for Alliance
Airport and a maintenance base in Kansas City, said the deal would let the
joint venture grow and provide more job security for employees.
   Workers repair and overhaul the RB211 engines that American uses on its
Boeing 757 fleet, and the Trent 800 engines on its Boeing 777 aircraft.
   Rolls-Royce said the deal announced Monday would give it four facilities
to overhaul the Trent engines. The other three are in the United Kingdom
and Southeast Asia.
   American's parent, AMR Corp., lost $1.23 billion on revenue of $17.44
billion last year amid a long slump in travel and competition from
low-fare carriers.
   London-based Rolls-Royce is the world's second-largest maker of aircraft
engines, behind General Electric. It makes engines for military,
commercial and corporate planes and helicopters and marine engines and
power-generation products and had revenue last year of $9.28 billion.
Rolls-Royce cars are now made by German automaker BMW.
   AMR shares fell 26 cents to close at $12.12 on the New York Stock
Exchange.

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Copyright 2004 AP

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