Khaleej Times

Airbus takes control of C Series jets

- Allison Lampert and Tim Hepher

montreal/paris — Airbus has agreed to buy a majority stake in Bombardier’s CSeries jetliner programme, giving a powerful boost to the Canadian plane and train maker in its costly trade dispute with Boeing.

The deal, which would come at no cost for Europe’s largest aerospace group, would give Airbus a 50.01 per cent interest in CSeries Aircraft Limited Partnershi­p (CSALP), which manufactur­es and sells the jets, the companies said.

While Bombardier will lose control of a plane programme developed at a cost of $6 billion, it gives the CSeries improved economies of scale, a better sales network and, crucially, could change the power balance in the trade dispute with Boeing.

The 110-to-130 seat plane, which has not secured a new order in 18 months and is being threatened by a possible 300 per cent duty on US imports, would be built for US airlines at Airbus’s Alabama assembly plant, circumvent­ing any import penalties in a move that apparently caught Boeing off guard.

Bombardier said the partnershi­p should more than double the value of the CSeries programme.

“Bombardier no longer has control of this jet, but then again, it’s better to have a 30 per cent share of a very successful programme than to struggle with a highly risky programme that was perhaps too big for them from the start,” said aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia.

Canadian Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, who must decide whether to approve the deal, said in a statement that “on the surface, Bombardier’s new proposed partnershi­p... would help position the CSeries for success”.

Boeing — which is also locked in a separate 13-year trade dispute with Airbus — said it was a “questionab­le deal” between two of its subsidised competitor­s.

At 0815 GMT, Airbus shares were up 2.5 per cent at €78.96, the biggest rise by a European bluechip stock.

Strategic decision

Airbus chief executive Tom Enders said the company, based in Toulouse, France, had offered to assemble some of the narrowbody jets at its US plant in Alabama for orders by US carriers.

The US assembly line would mean the jets would not be subject to possible US anti-subsidy and anti-dumping duties of 300 per cent, Bombardier chief executive Alain Bellemare said on a media conference call.

Bellemare called the deal with Airbus, which was first attempted

50.01%

stake in cseries to be given to airbus at no cost

unsuccessf­ully in 2015, a “strategic” decision that is expected to close in the second half of 2018.

“We’re doing this deal here not because of this Boeing petition. We are doing this deal because it is the right strategic move for Bombardier,” Bellemare said, referring to Boeing’s complaint that the Canadian firm received illegal subsidies and dumped CSeries planes at “absurdly low” prices.

A Boeing spokesman dismissed the agreement as a “questionab­le deal between two state-subsidised competitor­s” to try to skirt a recent US trade finding against the CSeries.

In February, the Canadian government announced C$372.5 million ($297 million) in repayable loans for the CSeries and another Bombardier jet programme.

The Airbus investment does not place any more financial burdens on Ottawa, two sources close to the case said on Monday.

The sources, who requested anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to media, also said the deal would have no effect on a separate dispute between Canada and Boeing over a proposed purchase of 18 Super Hornet jets. — Reuters

 ?? Reuters ?? Tom Enders and Alain Bellemare pose in front of an Airbus A320neo and Bombardier C Series aircraft during a news conference to announce their partnershi­p on the C Series aircraft programme, in Colomiers near Toulouse, on Tuesday. —
Reuters Tom Enders and Alain Bellemare pose in front of an Airbus A320neo and Bombardier C Series aircraft during a news conference to announce their partnershi­p on the C Series aircraft programme, in Colomiers near Toulouse, on Tuesday. —

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