Times Colonist

Boeing confident Canadian relationsh­ip will endure

- ROSS MAROWITS

MONTREAL — Boeing’s relationsh­ips with Canada and Britain will survive even though the trade complaint launched against the C Series aircraft is having “ripple effects” on those bonds, the U.S. aircraft giant’s chairman and CEO said Wednesday.

“We’ve been together for 100 years in places like Canada and in the U.K. and we expect those longterm relationsh­ips to be sustained and we’re going to continue to work with our customers in both countries,” Dennis Muilenburg said during a conference call to discuss it’s third-quarter results.

He said the trade action is not targeted at customers or countries, but at fair trade. Boeing has 2,000 direct employees in Canada and hundreds of suppliers that allow it to contribute $4 billion a year to the Canadian economy.

Muilenburg added that it has a very good relationsh­ip with Delta Air Lines, which is eager to receive the C Series planes but is prepared to wait until they are produced in the United States.

He said Boeing is happy to compete, but that everyone needs to play by the same rules. “That’s why we brought the trade case and we’re mindful that while we bring a trade case like this that there are ripple effects and implicatio­ns to various customers and country relationsh­ips.”

Boeing’s complaint has prompted a heavy political reaction from the Canadian government and British Prime Minister Theresa May, who fears job losses at Bombardier’s wing assembly facility in Northern Ireland.

Canada has threatened to cancel the planned purchase of 18 Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornets to temporaril­y augment Canada’s aging fleet of CF-18 fighter jets.

Muilenburg insisted that Boeing doesn’t need to adjust its narrowbody aircraft strategy in light of the C Series partnershi­p between Airbus and Bombardier.

“Recent actions that you see that Airbus and Bombardier have announced are not actions that change our gameplan.”

The Chicago-based manufactur­er is increasing the number of 737 Max planes it will produce monthly to supply the record backlog of orders for its reengined planes. Demand is focused on the larger Max 8 and 9 planes with 162 to 220 seats. It foresees a market for 41,000 aircraft over the next 20 years, including 29,000 narrowbodi­es.

Bombardier has said it expects to capture half of the 6,000 orders for 100- to 150-seat aircraft it forecasts over the next two decades.

Muilenburg said Boeing isn’t surprised by the partnershi­p announced last week that will see its large European rival take a majority stake in the C Series for no financial payment.

He declined to comment on reports that Boeing itself spoke with Bombardier about a strategic partnershi­p before walking away from the table ahead of preliminar­y duties being announced by the Department of Commerce. Those tariffs would quadruple the C Series price on sales into the United States.

Boeing raised its outlook for the year on Wednesday after reporting better-than-expected profits of $1.85 billion US in the third quarter on $24.31 billion US in revenues.

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