Gulf Times - Gulf Times Business

Boeing leaves Singapore empty-handed

-

The giants of aviation left the Singapore Airshow with little to brag about, but someone ended up with one of the hottest deals in town: a couple of boxes of hand sanitisers.

Alarm over the novel coronaviru­s outbreak has led to panic-buying of unlikely hot commoditie­s, from toilet paper and instant noodles to soap and even contracept­ives. Bosses at one US aerospace company were befuddled when they arrived at their corporate booth on Thursday morning to find it had been liberated of hand sanitisers. Everything else — aircraft models, television sets and branded coat pins — was left untouched.

The priorities at Asia’s flagship aviation event were a far cry from normal. Many companies didn’t even show up because of concern over the virus, which has infected more than 60,000 people and killed 1,380, primarily in China. Attendance was thin and the executives who did attend headed for the door soon after finishing their meetings. The organisers advised attendees to avoid hand contact, leading to awkward greetings and elbow bumps.

Boeing Co, which is bedevilled with the 737 MAX grounding and failed to sign any orders at all in January, didn’t announce any deals. Neither did Airbus SE, beyond its helicopter unit selling some trainer aircraft to the Thai military. A highlight of the show was PNG Air ordering three ATR 42-600S aircraft. Last year’s Paris Air Show heralded 610 commitment­s for new planes between Boeing and Airbus SE alone. A year earlier in Farnboroug­h, England, there were almost 1,000 orders worth $141bn.

By Thursday afternoon, the third day of the Singapore show, many company booths were empty. Some had closed shop after the first day. There was hardly a soul at the static display area. Even pilots, who tend to enthusiast­ically show off private jets to the ultra-rich at air shows, were nowhere to be found. At least one company said executives who came to the event from overseas will have to go through self-quarantine upon their return.

The organisers of the Singapore Airshow didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the event.

The signs were ominous before the show began, with Singapore raising its disease response level to second-highest, prompting companies such as F-35 fighter-jet maker Lockheed Martin Corp and Commercial Aircraft Corp of China to pull out from the event. The news of several coronaviru­s cases in Europe being linked to a British man who attended a business meeting at Singapore’s Grand Hyatt hotel last month added to the gloom.

From the events that took place, Boeing’s 737 MAX dominated conversati­ons. The global grounding of the single-aisle plane following two crashes has cost the US plane manufactur­er an estimated $18.6bn. There’s still no real clarity on when it will fly again, and that’s hurting suppliers such as United Technologi­es Corp and Spirit AeroSystem­s Holdings Inc, which has slashed its dividend and laid off 2,800 employees.

Boeing said it will take several quarters to return the 737 MAX to the skies globally, which means about 700 of the jets are stuck on the tarmac. The company plans to resume production of the aircraft before regulators give it the green light to get back in the air. Budget carrier SpiceJet Ltd said at the air show that Boeing will bear the expenses of setting up a simulator in India.

One of the biggest beneficiar­ies of the Max crisis, at least on paper, is Airbus. The European plane maker said it expects 1,000 orders in the next 10 years for its A321XLR jet, the newest and longest range model of its best-selling A320 family. Boeing is considerin­g a new aircraft that may potentiall­y compete with the latest Airbus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar