Montreal Gazette

Plane-making boss named new Airbus CEO

- TIM HEPHER

PARIS Plane-making boss Guillaume Faury was named as the next chief executive of Airbus on Monday, ending months of uncertaint­y over the leadership of Europe’s largest aerospace group and underlinin­g the dominance of its commercial jet arm.

The 50-year-old Frenchman will replace German-born Tom Enders when he retires at the next shareholde­r meeting in April 2019, the Franco-German-Spanish company said in a statement.

Chairman Denis Ranque, a Frenchman, will depart when his own term expires in 2020, it added.

Enders had played a key role in negotiatin­g a partnershi­p with Bombardier in July, taking a majority stake in the Montreal-based airplane maker’s C Series planes, now being marketed as Airbus A Series planes.

The announceme­nt came after the board brought forward discussion­s on the handover amid a growing leadership vacuum in the wake of a series of management departures, internal and external graft probes and the preannounc­ed exit of Enders. It did so as the board grappled with the need to avoid appearing indecisive following months of uncertaint­y over the top job and a string of midlevel and senior departures.

On Sept. 28, Reuters exclusivel­y reported Airbus was moving swiftly towards appointing Faury as its next CEO and could announce a decision within weeks.

Faury was appointed head of the core plane-making business last December after Fabrice Bregier agreed to quit following a power battle with Enders, a shakeup that also saw the German CEO drop plans to seek a third term in 2019.

Pressure to end uncertaint­y over the CEO job grew with the resignatio­n of sales chief Eric Schulz in August, with the former Rolls-Royce executive’s abrupt departure strengthen­ing calls for an internal successor to Enders.

A person close to Enders denied there had been any leadership vacuum since he announced his intention not to seek a third term and said he had remained involved in the business.

As CEO of the only serious rival to U.S. plane-maker Boeing, Faury will continue to tackle industrial problems affecting some jet deliveries while overseeing smaller but increasing­ly autonomous helicopter and defence units.

Sources said he would not be replaced in his current role, though this did not exclude shoring up the operationa­l management as two top industrial executives prepare to retire at the end of this year. Reuters

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