Arab Times

Mitsubishi Aircraft closing overseas locations, cutting jobs

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Mitsubishi Heavy Industries is cutting hundreds of jobs in Washington state and shuttering its US operations for the troubled SpaceJet project, the company said.

“Due to the budget directives, Mitsubishi Aircraft will close its overseas locations and consolidat­e activities at its headquarte­rs in Nagoya, Japan,” company spokesman Jeff Dronen told The Seattle Times via email. “This will impact the majority of our employees in the United States.”

The Mitsubishi Aircraft US headquarte­rs in Renton will close, and flight test operations in Moses Lake will cease, he said.

Dronen said Mitsubishi will retain “a small crew” at Moses Lake to store and maintain the four flight test aircraft there.

Mitsubishi is still working out the details of its budget cuts and did not disclose the number of employees affected nor whether severance packages will be offered. Dronen said management “will provide this informatio­n directly to employees in the coming weeks.”

The program had at one point supported about 400 jobs flight testing the initial M90 model in Moses Lake, along with 200 jobs in Seattle at Mitsubishi’s US partner AeroTEC, which provided testing, engineerin­g and certificat­ion support.

“We have had to make difficult decisions that will significan­tly reduce our global activities and will have a major impact on our organizati­on,” Dronen said.

The news comes after the Japanese industrial giant announced last week an overall loss of $275 million for the fiscal year ending in March. Management deemed that not acceptable as it faces the pandemic-driven downturn affecting all of Mitsubishi’s aviation operations, including its supply of major parts for Boeing jets.

Last week’s financial results showed the SpaceJet bleeding cash, with developmen­t costs of $1.3 billion in the last fiscal year.

The aircraft was launched as the Mitsubishi Regional Jet in 2008 with a sleek new design and a roomy passenger cabin.

The goal was to enter service five years later. After setbacks, it began flight tests in 2015 in Japan, then in 2016 moved the flight testing to Moses Lake in eastern Washington.

Mitsubishi last year rebranded the plane as the SpaceJet and revamped the concept, but has continued to face setbacks. (AP)

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