The Telegram (St. John's)

Airbus puts supply chain executive at A220 helm

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PARIS — Airbus has appointed a senior internal supply chain executive to run its Canadian operation, with responsibi­lity for trimming losses on the A220 jetliner series, in the latest in a series of management changes at the European aerospace group.

Benoit Schultz, 48, will take over on Sept. 1 from Philippe Balducchi, a former finance executive who became the first head of the Canadian venture when Airbus bought the Cseries jet program from Bombardier in 2018 and renamed it A220.

Schultz is currently a senior vice president in Airbus procuremen­t, which runs its global supply chain. He steps up as Balducchi plans to “pursue other opportunit­ies,” Airbus said.

The Canadian-designed A220, with 110-130 seats and a modern lightweigh­t design, has seen a boost in sales under Airbus after its developmen­t took a heavy financial toll that helped trigger Bombardier’s near-total exit from the aerospace market.

It has notched up more net orders so far this year than any other Airbus model as airlines seek to reduce fuel costs and favour smaller aircraft in the wake of the coronaviru­s crisis.

While sales have benefited from the stronger Airbus marketing machine, industry sources say the European group has yet to secure low enough prices from suppliers for the plane’s components to push the A220 project back into the black.

Airbus is seen as particular­ly dependent on winning cuts in prices from Raytheon Technologi­es, whose aerospace businesses make the engines and many of the plane’s systems.

Placing a procuremen­t heavyweigh­t at the top of the recently formed Canadian subsidiary is a signal both to suppliers and to the Quebec government that the A220’s future depends on reducing industrial costs as well as winning orders, one insider said.

Airbus had no immediate comment.

 ?? REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? An employee works on an Airbus A220-300 at the Airbus facility in Mirabel, Que., on Feb. 20, 2020.
REUTERS FILE PHOTO An employee works on an Airbus A220-300 at the Airbus facility in Mirabel, Que., on Feb. 20, 2020.

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