SFGate: Asian, low-cost airlines boost Airbus at air show

[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 SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2009/06/14/internatio=
nal/i050041D25.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday, June 16, 2009 (AP)
Asian, low-cost airlines boost Airbus at air show
By EMMA VANDORE and GREG KELLER, AP Business Writer


   (06-16) 08:35 PDT LE BOURGET, France (AP) --
   Asian and low-cost airlines defied worries about the global recession and
placed dozens of orders with Airbus at the Paris Air Show on Tuesday, in
sharp contrast to rival Boeing, which reported no new sales.
   Planemakers at the world's biggest air show are trying to coax airlines
and governments to open their pocketbooks and buy more aircraft despite
plunging passenger loads and revenues.
   Airbus CEO Tom Enders declared that Tuesday's sunny skies — after
pelting rain on Monday's opening day — boded well for business.
   Airbus announced two firm orders from Vietnam Airlines and the Philippin=
es
low-cost airline Cebu Pacific worth $1.8 billion on Tuesday. Vietnam
Airlines ordered 16 Airbus A321 single-aisle jets worth $1.4 billion and
pledged to buy two more A350-XWB planes.
   The airline made a deposit and signed a memorandum of understanding for
the two A350 planes, which falls short of a firm sale and means Airbus
does not count the order in its overall tally.
   Cebu Pacific made a firm order for five single-aisle A320s worth a total
of $385 million at list prices. Airlines often negotiate substantial
discounts to catalog prices, particularly in tough economic times.
   Kuala Lumpur low-cost airline Air Asia ordered 10 A350-900 jets and plac=
ed
options for five more. The list price for the 10 jets would be $2.4
billion.
   Boeing's vice president for international corporate communications,
Charlie Miller, shrugged off the Airbus announcements.
   "Airbus and Boeing approach air shows in a different way. Boeing doesn't
save up orders to announce at air shows. That has been our policy for
years. Our policy is to announce orders as soon as they are firm. And the
tally is updated weekly," he said.
   Boeing has sought to concentrate on its military programs. The head of i=
ts
air refueling tanker programs expressed confidence in the U.S. jet
manufacturer's chances to win the rematch with Airbus' parent EADS for a
multibillion-dollar contract with the U.S. Air Force.
   Boeing Vice President Dave Bowman said his team is "pumped and ready to
rock" when the Air Force issues its request for offers in the coming
weeks.
   Both rivals sought to minimize expectations this year amid worries about
credit markets, the global economy and the unexplained crash of Air France
Flight 447.
   "This is not the time to expect huge orders, but there are still orders
coming in because the situation is different from region to region" and
company to company, Airbus' Enders told a news conference. "What counts
for our numbers, our financial health, is not orders but turning our
backlog into delivery."
   He also sought to reassure the company's thousands of workers amid
cutbacks across the aviation industry.
   "We are very much interested in keeping stable the most important asset =
we
have in our company ... our skilled workforce," he said.
   Russia's Sukhoi won attention and domestic orders in a bid to revive the
country's civilian aircraft industry. Sukhoi notched up 28 more orders for
its new Superjet 100 regional airliner, a day after signing a letter of
intent with Hungarian national carrier Malev for 30 aircraft.
   Moscow-based Avia leasing company placed a firm order on Tuesday for 24 =
of
the planes, while Spain's Gadair European Airlines ordered two jets with
an option for two more. The value of the deals were not released.
   SuperJet International is a joint venture between Italy's Alenia
Aeronautica and Russian jet maker Sukhoi Civil Aircraft.
   French regional aircraft maker ATR and the Spanish carrier Air Nostrum
signed a contract for the purchase of 10 ATR 72-600s, plus options for 10
additional aircraft. The deal, announced on the occasion of the Paris Air
Show, is worth some $425 million, including options.
   Toulouse-based ATR says it's the world leader in the 50- to 74-seat
turboprop market.
   Gulf airline Etihad Airways announced orders Tuesday for 239 engines for
its Airbus and Boeing planes worth up to $7 billion, from GE, Engine
Alliance, IAE and Rolls-Royce.
   So far this year, Boeing — which is cutting 10,000 jobs — has
taken orders for 73 planes, but with cancellations of 66, the net order
intake is only 7 jets.
   The industry gathering has been shaken by Air France Flight 447's
still-unexplained May 31 crash into the Atlantic Ocean while en route from
Rio de Janeiro to Paris.
   Investigators have only two more weeks to find the flight data and cockp=
it
voice recorders from the Airbus A330 jet before the signals emitted by
small beacons on the black boxes start to fade. Without them, the cause of
the crash that killed all 228 on board may never be fully known.
   The Paris Air Show is marking its 100th anniversary. It opened to indust=
ry
on Monday, and then to the public Friday to Sunday.
   ___
   Associated Press writers Slobodan Lekic at Le Bourget contributed to this
report. -------------------------------------------------------------------=
---
Copyright 2009 AP

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

If you wish to unsubscribe from the AIRLINE List, please send an E-mail to:
"listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx".  Within the body of the text, only write the following:"SIGNOFF AIRLINE".

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