Arab Times

Airbus exits Canada fighter jet race

Boosts Lockheed Martin’s chances

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OTTAWA, Sept 2, (RTRS): Airbus SE pulled out of a multibilli­on-dollar competitio­n to supply Canada with 88 new fighter jets, a decision that boosts the chances of rival Lockheed Martin Corp.

The defense arm of Airbus, which indicated last month it might withdraw, cited onerous security requiremen­ts and a late decision by Ottawa to loosen the rules for how much bidders would have to invest in Canada.

Airbus and other contenders had already complained the government appeared to be tilting the race in favor of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 plane, which the Royal Canadian Air Force wants. Canada is part of the consortium that developed the plane.

Canada launched the long-delayed competitio­n last month and said it was confident no favoritism had been shown. Ottawa says the contract is worth between C$15 billion ($11.30 billion) and C$19 billion.

Canada’s official opposition Conservati­ve Party, which is seeking to defeat Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in an October election, accused the government of gross mismanagem­ent.

Reuters revealed in July that Airbus and Boeing Co had written to Ottawa to say they might pull out.

The firms are unhappy that in late May, the government dropped a demand that bidders must guarantee to give Canadian businesses 100% of the value of the deal in economic benefits.

Such legally watertight commitment­s, which Boeing, Airbus and Sweden’s Saab AB had already agreed to, contradict rules of the F-35 consortium. Ottawa’s move allowed Lockheed Martin to stay in the competitio­n.

“One of the strongest points of our bid was the fact we were willing to make binding commitment­s,” said an Airbus source, who requested anonymity given the sensitivit­y of the situation.

“Once this was loosened up to a point where these commitment­s were no longer valued in the same way”, the firm decided “that’s just too much”, added the source, who also cited security challenges.

European jets must show they can meet stringent standards required by the United States, which with Canada operates the North American Aerospace Defense Command.

“NORAD security requiremen­ts continue to place too significan­t of a cost on platforms whose manufactur­e and repair chains sit outside the United States (and) Canada,” Airbus said in a statement.

Canadian Procuremen­t Minister Carla Qualtrough said she respected the Airbus decision, adding Ottawa was determined there should be a level playing field.

“This included adapting the economic benefits approach to ensure the highest level of participat­ion among suppliers,” she said in emailed comments.

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