Vancouver Sun

Aerospace powers signal start of major trade battle

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

The next potential WASHINGTON Canada-U.S. trade dispute unfolded Thursday as aerospace giants clashed at a Washington hearing that marked the formal launch of investigat­ions into Boeing’s allegation­s that Bombardier received subsidies allowing it to sell its CSeries planes at below-market prices.

“The U.S. market is the most open in the world, but we must take action if our rules are being broken,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement after the hearing began. “While assuring the case is decided strictly on a full and fair assessment of the facts, we will do everything in our power to stand up for American companies and their workers.”

U.S. aeronautic­s powerhouse Boeing argued at the hearing that duties should be imposed on Bombardier aircraft, insisting its smaller Montreal-based rival receives government subsidies that give it an illicit toehold in the internatio­nal market.

Bombardier has made it clear that its true goal is to grab half the internatio­nal market share for 100-to-150-seat aircraft, according to Boeing, which argues its rival has received an unfair head start from Canadian taxpayers.

Boeing vice-president Raymond Conner said the sale of cheap, subsidized planes to Delta Air Lines helped build momentum for Bombardier to enter a new market. If Bombardier reaches its stated goal, he said, it would squeeze Boeing from that market and cost the company US$330 million a year in annual sales.

“Today we are at a critical moment,” Conner told the sevenmembe­r U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission. “If you don’t fix it now, it will be too late to do anything about it later. … What we want is competitio­n that is fair.

“You guys can fix this before it is too late.”

Ross Mitchell, Bombardier’s vice-president of commercial operations, told the panel that it offered to alter its planes to the ‘CS100 Lite’ to win an order from United Continenta­l Holdings, because the CS100 was too big.

“Our competitio­n throughout was the even smaller Embraer 190. At the very end, however, Boeing swooped in and offered United a deal too good to refuse — not on a 100-seat aircraft, but on larger 737-700s that do not compete with the CS100,” Mitchell said.

Boeing has petitioned the U.S. Commerce Department and the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission to investigat­e subsidies of Bombardier’s CSeries aircraft that it says have allowed the company to export planes at well below cost. A preliminar­y determinat­ion is expected by June 12.

If the ITC determines there is a threat of injury to the U.S. industry, preliminar­y countervai­ling duties could be announced in July, followed in October by preliminar­y anti-dumping duties, unless the deadlines are extended. Final determinat­ions are scheduled for October and December.

Boeing is calling for countervai­ling duties of 79.41 per cent and anti-dumping charges of 79.82 per cent.

The Quebec government last year invested US$1 billion in exchange for a 49.5 per cent stake in the CSeries.

The federal government recently provided a $372.5-million loan. That’s on top of about $1 billion received in 2008 from Ottawa, Quebec and Britain to develop the CSeries.

Bombardier representa­tives countered their planes never competed with Boeing in a sale to Delta.

Bombardier lawyer Peter Lichtenbau­m said Boeing is a global powerhouse that hasn’t lost any sales as a result of Bombardier, and doesn’t even compete with Bombardier in the sales campaigns it has complained about because the CSeries is smaller than Boeing’s 737-800 and Max 8 planes.

“If this is a case of David vs. Goliath, Boeing has cast itself in the wrong role.”

Today we are at a critical moment. If you don’t fix it now, it will be too late to do anything about it later. … What we want is competitio­n that is fair.

 ?? JASON REDMOND/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Saying rival aerospace companies shouldn’t get an unfair advantage, U.S. aeronautic­s powerhouse Boeing wants duties to be imposed on aircraft made by Montreal-based Bombardier.
JASON REDMOND/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Saying rival aerospace companies shouldn’t get an unfair advantage, U.S. aeronautic­s powerhouse Boeing wants duties to be imposed on aircraft made by Montreal-based Bombardier.

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