SFGate: Airbus Considering Improvements to A350

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Monday, April 10, 2006 (AP)
Airbus Considering Improvements to A350



   (04-10) 07:39 PDT PARIS, France (AP) --

   Airbus said Monday it would consider improving the design of its
wide-bodied A350 airliner after the planned fuel-efficient jet drew
criticism from senior aviation executives.

   Airbus CEO Gustav Humbert, speaking at the inauguration of a new facility
at the company's headquarters in southern France, said the European
aircraft maker "has every reason to go the extra mile" to ensure its
products respond to customers' needs.

   Humbert was responding to remarks by Chew Choon Seng, chief executive of
Singapore Airlines Ltd., a key Asian customer.

   Having gone to the trouble of designing a new wing, tail and cockpit usi=
ng
advanced composite materials, Airbus "should have gone the whole hog and
designed a new fuselage," Chew said last week.

   Humbert stopped short of committing Airbus to make changes to the A350,
but he said the company was studying all options amid an "intensifying
dialogue" with airlines.

   Airbus hasn't yet started cutting metal for the A350, which is currently
scheduled to enter service in 2010.

   He acknowledged that Boeing had gained ground against Airbus in the mark=
et
for longer-range planes such as the A350's main rival, the 787
"Dreamliner, which is set to begin commercial flights two years earlier.

   "Boeing's sales advantage was based on the fact that it launched its 787
much earlier and scored some strong marketing points against us," Humbert
said.

   The 787 "has strongly contributed to a great Boeing comeback story which
they so urgently needed after all the trouble they had," he also conceded.

   But Airbus will not rush into any quick-fixes, Humbert stressed. "Our
strategy isn't driven by the needs of the next one or two campaigns, but
rather by a long-term view of the market and our ability to deliver on our
promises," he said.

   The A350 was originally intended to be an upgraded version of Airbus's
existing A330, a medium-capacity twin-engined jet, in what would have been
an economical way to compete with the 787. However, rising fuel costs have
already forced Airbus to redesign the aircraft once to make it attractive
to airlines.

   Steven Udvar-Hazy, chairman of leasing company International Lease Finan=
ce
Co., Airbus' largest customer, recently criticized Airbus for basing the
A350 on an older design.

   The company is "at a crossroads," Udvar-Hazy told an industry gathering =
in
Florida. "It needs to address whether it needs a new family of aircraft."

   Airbus is already spending billions to develop the A350 and the A400M
military cargo plane, however, and will only start earning serious revenue
from its A380 double-deck superjumbo at the end of this year. The
government loans that fund one-third of its airline development are also
the subject of a trans-Atlantic World Trade Organization dispute over
subsidies to Airbus and Boeing.

   Humbert also commented on the Friday announcement by Britain's BAE Syste=
ms
PLC that it had begun preliminary talks on selling its 20 percent share of
Airbus with European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co., the Dutch company
which owns the other 80 percent.

   Although BAE's interest in selling the stake had been known for some tim=
e,
Humbert said, "the timing came as a complete surprise to us." -------------=
---------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

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