The Jerusalem Post

Boeing to sell 175 planes to budget carrier flydubai

- • By ALEXANDER CORNWELL and TIM HEPHER

DUBAI (Reuters) – Boeing Co. reached a preliminar­y deal for 175 of its 737 MAX jets with flydubai on Wednesday, potentiall­y committing the budget airline’s fleet to the US plane maker for another decade.

The Dubai-based carrier wants more than 50 of Boeing’s largest narrowbody jet, the 737-10, as well as to-be-determined numbers of its 7379s and 737-8s, Boeing said in a statement at the Dubai Airshow.

Reuters had reported that Boeing was close to reaching a deal with flydubai for 175 737 MAX jets.

Flydubai chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed al-Maktoum told a news conference the provisiona­l deal was struck Tuesday night.

It is flydubai’s third aircraft deal. It agreed to buy 75 737-8 MAX aircraft at the Dubai Airshow four years ago.

“We try to grow as fast as we want,” chief executive Ghaith al-Ghaith told reporters.

Delivery of flydubai’s 175 planes will begin in 2019 and be spread across 10 years with some overlap with the delivery of its 2013 order, Ghaith said.

The current fleet of flydubai, which started flights in 2009, is all Boeing. It currently only operates 737-8s.

The provisiona­l deal is worth $27 billion, including purchasing options for an additional 50 planes.

Ghaith told Reuters the airline was interested in the new midsized jet that Boeing is studying whether to develop, but it had not been discussed during the 737 negotiatio­ns.

Boeing is looking at potentiall­y filling a market gap between narrow- and widebody jets with a new aircraft that could seat 220 to 270 passengers.

Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief executive Kevin McAllister told the news conference that flydubai’s 737 commitment would be good for jobs in the United States and in the Middle East.

Gulf customers are keen to stress the importance of their orders for US jobs as they are locked in a trade dispute with three major American carriers.

Maktoum said the airline had picked the 737s after also looking at Airbus’s similar-sized A320s, echoing comments he made this week in his role as Emirates chairman, when he said the 787 had been chosen over the Airbus A350.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel