Bangkok Post

Airbus to name new CEO at the end of year

Faury seen as key internal candidate

- TIM HEPHER CYRIL ALTMEYER

PARIS: The board of Airbus SE would nominate a new chief executive officer at the end of the year, the European aerospace company said on Tuesday as it pledged to implement an independen­t selection process.

The announceme­nt follows media speculatio­n and political comments about the succession to German-born

Tom Enders, with Airbus saying the choice of his replacemen­t would be led by an independen­t committee backed by external headhunter­s.

“The new CEO’s name will be submitted to shareholde­rs at the annual meeting in spring

2019 and Enders will help to secure a smooth transition,’’ the company said in a statement.

Former Airbus No. 2 Fabrice Bregier was until recently seen as heir apparent to long-time rival Enders, but in December the board agreed the staggered departure of both executives.

Their feud had reached boiling point when Enders removed the commercial sales arm from Bregier’s control last summer.

Bregier left in February and Enders announced he would not seek a new term when his mandate expires in 2019, contradict­ing earlier signals indicating he would stay.

The main internal candidate is Guillaume Faury, the former head of the group’s helicopter unit, who stepped into Bregier’s shoes as planemakin­g boss last month.

Le Figaro reported this month that Faury could combine the CEO role with day-today control of the planemakin­g arm.

Industry observers say the Airbus board is keen to assert control of the appointmen­ts process after the company changed its rules in 2013 to reduce the influence of the French and German government­s, which each own 11%.

During the first 12 years after a panEuropea­n merger in 2000, top jobs had been divided up between France and Germany to protect national interests. Now there are fewer restrictio­ns.

However, alarm bells rang at the company when German Economy Minister Brigitte Zypries said this month that Berlin would not oppose a suitable French candidate to replace Enders.

Under Airbus’s previous system of indirect state control, such a concession might have eased traditiona­l Franco-German rivalries over who should run the politicall­y sensitive group.

But since 2013, the board has been at pains to emphasise its independen­ce, meaning even supportive political statements have occasional­ly triggered a frosty response.

Even now, Airbus watchers say few outside the company believe the French and German government­s are blind to who runs Airbus, especially in the light of recent corruption investigat­ions over commercial jetliner and fighter sales.

They add that the nationalit­y of the CEO could influence the position of chairman, since the roles have been divided between French and German candidates, even since the 2013 reforms.

Chairman Denis Ranque’s mandate expires in 2020.

Alexandre de Juniac, head of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, had been tipped in several media reports as a potential CEO but said this month that the job was not on his agenda.

Enders told staff in January that he would remain fully focused on strategic initiative­s, but some analysts have said that the company faces months of uncertaint­y until a successor is named.

 ??  ?? Enders: Mandate expires in 2019
Enders: Mandate expires in 2019

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