Kuwait Times

Airbus warns staff on jobs with its ‘survival at stake’

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PARIS/TOULOUSE: European planemaker Airbus gave its starkest assessment yet of damage from the coronaviru­s crisis, telling the company’s 135,000 employees to brace for potentiall­y deeper job cuts and warning its survival is at stake without immediate action. In a letter to staff late last week, Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said Airbus was “bleeding cash at an unpreceden­ted speed” and that a recent drop of a third or more in production rates did not reflect the worst-case scenario and would be kept under review.

Airbus said it did not comment on internal communicat­ions. Shares in Europe’s largest aerospace group closed down 2.4 percent on Monday after notching up the biggest falls on the Paris CAC40 index. Aviation commentato­r Howard Wheeldon said the letter showed the “realisatio­n of there being little prospect of a large-scale order recovery any time soon”. The letter was sent to employees days before the company is due to give first-quarter results overshadow­ed by a pandemic that has left airlines struggling to survive and virtually halted jet deliveries since mid-March.

Airbus has begun implementi­ng government­assisted furlough schemes starting with 3,000 workers in France, “but we may now need to plan for more far-reaching measures,” Faury said.

“The survival of Airbus is in question if we don’t act now,” he added. On Monday, Airbus furloughed 3,200 staff at its Broughton factory in Wales. Pressure to send workers home has been driven in part by a stockpile of extra wings built in anticipati­on of disruption from Britain’s exit from the European Union. Industry sources have said a new restructur­ing plan similar to the company’s 2007 Power8 which saw 10,000 job cuts could be launched in the summer, but Faury indicated Airbus was already exploring “all options” while waiting for clarity on demand. People familiar with the matter say Airbus is also in active discussion­s with European government­s about tapping schemes to assist struggling industries, including billions of dollars’ worth of state-guaranteed loans.

It has also lent its weight to calls for airlines such as Virgin Atlantic to be bailed out, believing that manufactur­ing aid would only defer the problem unless airlines also survived. Earlier this month, Airbus expanded commercial credit lines, buying what Faury’s letter called “time to adapt and resize”.

French union officials said they were preparing for a major restructur­ing in the summer and vowed to defend jobs.

To stem the outflow of cash, Airbus this month said it would slash benchmark narrow-body jet production by a third to 40 jets a month. It also issued targets for wide-body jets implying cuts up to 42 percent compared with previously published rates. “In other words, in just a couple of weeks we have lost roughly one-third of our business,” Faury wrote in the letter, which was first reported by Fly News in Spain. “And, frankly, that’s not even the worst-case scenario we could face”. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows Scandinavi­an Airlines (SAS) Airbus A320 planes parked at the Copenhagen Airport in Kaastrup, Denmark. — AFP
This file photo shows Scandinavi­an Airlines (SAS) Airbus A320 planes parked at the Copenhagen Airport in Kaastrup, Denmark. — AFP

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