New Straits Times

Airbus woes deepen as Emirates jets delayed

- FRANKFURT

ENGINE TROUBLES: European planemaker to make deeper cost cuts to recover from financial drag of tardier handovers

AIRBUS Group SE’s struggles with its A380 superjumbo jet are deepening as the planemaker delays deliveries of a dozen aircraft over the next two years to Emirates, the company’s biggest customer.

To make up for the financial drag from the tardier handovers, Airbus will accelerate cost cuts, said the company on Tuesday.

The delay stems from an agreement between Emirates and engine supplier Rolls-Royce Group Holdings Plc, said the release.

Handovers of six A380s apiece that were originally planned for next year and 2018 will be shifted to a year later following a subsequent agreement with Emirates and Airbus, said the planemaker, adding it still plans to deliver about 12 A380s per year as of 2018.

Emirates and Rolls-Royce reached a settlement earlier this month over the airline’s A380 engine performanc­e and maintenanc­e concerns, after the carrier had revealed technical shortcomin­gs a few weeks earlier.

The delays compound Airbus’s efforts to turn around the fortunes of the A380 which lists for US$433 million (RM1.9 billion) before the discounts customary in the industry.

The announceme­nt caps a year of negative news for Airbus’s flagship model. An order for A380s from Iran never materialis­ed when that country announced purchases from Airbus earlier this month, meaning the company hasn’t received any advance contracts on the model this year.

As a consequenc­e of slack demand, Airbus cut its delivery target for the A380 in July. US competitor Boeing Co is also having trouble selling its competing 747-8.

Emirates is by far the biggest buyer and operator of the A380, with orders for more than 140 of the plane.

The carrier recently switched to Rolls-Royce engines for its latest batch of A380s, after relying on General

by delays stemming from a pact between Emirates and engine supplier Rolls-Royce Group Holdings Plc.

Electric Co’s Engine Alliance joint venture with Pratt & Whitney for the four powerplant­s that propel the airliner.

Rolls-Royce said that it will “continue to work with Airbus and Emirates to meet their requiremen­ts.” Winning Emirates as a customer for its Trent 900 engine to power the A380 was a major commercial victory for Rolls-Royce when it was announced in 2015, and the contract for a total of 50 aircraft remains the largest in the history of the United Kingdom’s prime manufactur­er.

In November, Emirates president Tim Clark revealed that feedback on the powerplant­s indicates “technical issues” that needed to be resolved before the first plane was delivered to Emirates, which had been due this month. Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Airbus’s efforts to turn around the fortunes of the A380 have been hampered
Bloomberg pic
Airbus’s efforts to turn around the fortunes of the A380 have been hampered Bloomberg pic
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