New Straits Times

AIRBUS SET TO EXPAND MRO FACILITY

Company also pledges continuous support in Malaysia

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AIRBUS Helicopter­s is expanding its maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul (MRO) facility in Subang, Selangor, with the addition of a completion and delivery centre for the Southeast Asia region.

Airbus Helicopter­s head of sales for Southeast Asia and Pacific, Fabrice Rochereau, said the company’s expansion would also include an additional simulator, paint and interior installati­on facility for Airbus Helicopter­s in the region.

“With more than 100 local staff members, we are committed to developing our helicopter MRO facility, backed by the company’s continued investment to support local expertise and capabiliti­es,” he said at a media briefing during the Langkawi Internatio­nal Maritime and Aerospace exhibition (LIMA) 2019 here.

Rochereau said the work on the expansion started in the second half of last year and was expected to be completed by the middle of the year.

“The expansion will enable Airbus Helicopter­s to increase jobs for locals while expanding our MRO services for customers in the region and Malaysia.”

He said the facility would be capable of servicing up to a dozen helicopter­s at any one time, depending on the size and complexity of the MRO jobs.

With more than 15 years in Malaysia, Airbus Helicopter­s commands about 48 per cent of the civil and parapublic helicopter market in the country.

“Malaysia is also a regional training hub for the H225 and AS365 Dauphin helicopter­s. To date, about 1,200 pilots have gone through training at the H225 simulator.”

Meanwhile, Airbus Defence and Space Southeast Asia head Johan Pelissier said the company would continue supporting Malaysia with various land and coastal solutions for defence, security and maritime surveillan­ce to safeguard the country’s security.

Leveraging its strategic ties with Malaysia, he said Airbus would also ensure that the company’s holistic related services in aeronautic­s and aerospace were well integrated into Malaysia’s defence and security capability.

“We believe the integratio­n of all these building blocks all together provide an added value to key stakeholde­rs in terms of defence, security and maritime requiremen­ts,” he said.

Pelissier said Malaysia was a long-term sustainabl­e partner for Airbus with high capability of skilled labour and aviation-minded people.

“Malaysia has good engineers suitable for our technology ecosystem. We share technology with Malaysian small and medium enterprise­s. We are really making Malaysia our technology hub in the region.”

He said Airbus had already built a long-standing partnershi­p with Malaysia in various building blocks of its portfolio.

“For LIMA 2019, we are the major internatio­nal exhibitor. We engage with customers to ensure how these building blocks can indeed be well integrated. We are already present in aerospace for the Royal Malaysian Air Force (helicopter­s and aircraft), the Royal Malaysian Navy and Eastern Sabah Security Command (coastal surveillan­ce system services), communicat­ions and space imagery services.”

To date, Airbus provides various services, including telecommun­ication satellite for MEASAT-3B and delivered over 100 helicopter­s such as the AS355, H225M, H120, H130, AS350 and Dauphin for the police, Malaysian Maritime Enforcemen­t Agency and private operators.

On the military side, Malaysia operates four A400M Atlas airlifter and 12 H225M; five AS355 Fennec; and, three Dauphin helicopter­s.

Meanwhile, Pelissier said Airbus had received a request for informatio­n on the C295 maritime patrol aircraft, issued by the government in January.

He said senior officials indicated that maritime patrol aircraft had become a priority due to Malaysia’s strategic environmen­t as a maritime nation, requiring the country to beef up surveillan­ce and security capabiliti­es. “The C295 offers the lowest risks, given that it is not a concept aircraft that is unproven in service. It also has the best acquisitio­n and six times more fuel efficiency than jet aircraft.”

For border coastal surveillan­ce requiremen­ts, Pelissier said Airbus could also tailor a comprehens­ive solution that combined products and services across the company’s portfolio.

“Such a comprehens­ive solution would meet the needs of multiple national agencies, including manned and unmanned aircraft, helicopter­s, satellite imagery, intelligen­ce systems and data analytics,” he said.

 ??  ?? Johan Pelissier
Johan Pelissier
 ??  ?? Fabrice Rochereau
Fabrice Rochereau

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