Regina Leader-Post

Bombardier, Boeing feud expected to drag on regardless of trade ruling

Montreal manufactur­er fears U.S. rival will likely file new petition if it loses case

- ROSS MAROWITS

The heated battle between Boeing Co. and Bombardier Inc. over CSeries sales in the United States will likely drag on regardless which side comes up short Friday in a U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission ruling.

In new documents filed Wednesday, Bombardier said it expects Boeing will likely respond to a loss by filing a new petition once there is a new U.S. order for the CSeries.

“The threat of a new petition — which Boeing has not disclaimed — makes the partnershi­p with Airbus to build a U.S. full assembly line a necessity regardless of how this case is resolved,” the Montrealba­sed manufactur­er wrote in a 20-page submission.

Bombardier said the proposed move with Airbus SE, announced last October, is the only way to reassure Delta Air Lines, Inc. and prospectiv­e U.S. customers that they won’t face heavy duties.

“There is no returning to the status quo ante. The only way to counter the risk created by Boeing ’s petition is through a new U.S. full assembly line.”

A Canadian government source said it would not be surprised if the USITC rules against Bombardier.

“I think the feeling about tomorrow’s decision is that we’re still at a disadvanta­ge when we’re in front of the Department of Commerce and the USITC,” said the contact who is not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Internatio­nal trade lawyer Lawrence Herman expects the quasi-judicial body will support the American manufactur­er and that the federal government will appeal to the World Trade Organizati­on and through NAFTA under Chapter 19.

“There is a strong possibilit­y that the commission will decide against Bombardier because there is a tendency in the current climate for

The threat of a new petition ... makes the partnershi­p with Airbus to build a U.S. full assembly line a necessity.

all tribunals and agencies involved in trade to take protection­ist decisions,” he said in an interview.

The USITC is expected to decide Friday afternoon if Boeing suffered harm from the CSeries and whether import duties totalling 292.21 per cent sanctioned by the Department of Commerce will be applied.

Bombardier needs to win support from three of four commission­ers since Boeing wins on a tie vote.

Cameron Doerksen of National Bank Financial said the evidence suggests that Boeing suffered no harm.

“But we believe the odds are somewhat stacked against Bombardier,” he wrote in a report. “We expect that with the building of a U.S. assembly plant, the whole trade dispute will be irrelevant.”

The two aircraft manufactur­ers made their closing arguments in separate submission­s that painted dramatical­ly opposing pictures.

Bombardier insisted that Boeing faces no “threat of material injury” from CSeries imports. However, it noted that Boeing went to great lengths to have Embraer SA’s E190-E2 jets excluded from considerat­ion in the petition while keeping its negotiatio­ns to acquire the Brazilian manufactur­er secret.

“If the C Series is forced out of the U.S. market, and if the Embraer acquisitio­n is finalized, Boeing will be the beneficiar­y through orders for E-Jets made in Brazil.”

The Chicago-based aerospace giant didn’t mention Embraer in its submission but claimed the domestic industry will lose more market share if it loses the case.

“The commission now holds the domestic industry’s fate in its hands,” it wrote.

“An affirmativ­e determinat­ion is the only thing that will provide a viable future for the domestic industry and ensure that winners in this market are determined through fair competitio­n, not by foreign government­s and their subsidized national champions.”

The Canadian government told the commission that it can’t side with Boeing’s “unpreceden­ted” argument because there is no evidence that any CSeries planes will be imported into the United States because the planes destined for U.S. customers will be assembled in Alabama.

“With absolutely no evidence of imports in the imminent future, the commission is prohibited by the Act from making an affirmativ­e threat finding,” it wrote.

The government filing also said it would be inappropri­ate for the commission to make any decision about parts imported from Canada because the Department of Commerce, which controls the scope of the investigat­ion, didn’t reach a conclusion on parts.

It noted that the only parts for the CS100 and CS300 aircraft imported from Canada will be the cockpit and a small section of the aft fuselage.

Delta was expected to receive the first of its firm order for 75 CS100 planes in the spring, but now plans to wait until the aircraft destined for U.S. customers is built in Mobile, Ala.

Boeing launched the trade case last April, arguing that government­s in Canada and Britain subsidized the plane’s developmen­t and allowed Bombardier to sell it at unfairly low prices.

 ?? CLEMENT SABOURIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Observers believe the odds are stacked against Bombardier in its case regarding CSeries sales in the U.S. The U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission will make a decision Friday.
CLEMENT SABOURIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Observers believe the odds are stacked against Bombardier in its case regarding CSeries sales in the U.S. The U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission will make a decision Friday.

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