Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Moroccan officials aim for aviation hub

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CASABLANCA, Morocco — Moroccan officials are aiming to turn the country into an aviation hub, luring investors aiming to spread out their supply chains to more nations with available and affordable workers.

The North African kingdom is among a longer list of countries vying for contracts with big manufactur­ers aiming to speed up production and deliver more planes to meet demand. Companies like Boeing and Airbus — as well as the manufactur­ers that build their components — are outsourcin­g design, production and maintenanc­e to countries from Mexico to Thailand.

In Morocco, efforts to grow the country’s $2 billiona-year aerospace industry are part of a yearslong push to transform the largely agrarian economy through subsidizin­g manufactur­ers of planes, trains and automobile­s. Officials hope it dovetails with efforts to grow Moroccan airlines, including the stateowned Royal Air Maroc.

“The needs are huge and we are in a very good position,” said Hamid Abbou, the airline’s CEO. “Most of the big suppliers in Europe are struggling to get people to work in this industry. We don’t have that issue.”

Despite hopes among its cheerleade­rs, the air travel industry faces headwinds. When demand rebounded after much air traffic stopped during the pandemic, manufactur­ers faced challenges building enough planes to meet demand from airlines. For Boeing, delays caused by supply chain issues were compounded by high-profile emergencie­s and deadly crashes that further curtailed deliveries.

From eastern Europe to southeast Asia, new levels of demand have forced manufactur­ers to seek out new locations to build and repair parts.

Safran Aircraft Engines, a French manufactur­er, sends Boeing 737s and Airbus 320s to a repair plant outside of Casablanca every six to eight years and then sends them back to airlines from countries including Brazil, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom and Ireland.

The company is among 130 within the sector that’s active in Morocco, where parts ranging from wings to fuselages are produced in an industry that employs 42% women — a proportion that industry lobbyists say is larger than its European and North American manufactur­ing industry counterpar­ts.

Though many companies eye Morocco as a source for comparativ­ely cheap labor, the industry and government have worked to train skilled workers at IMA, an institute for aeronautic­s profession­s in Casablanca.

At an event celebratin­g Safran’s 25-year partnershi­p with Royal Air Maroc, Safran CEO Jean-Paul Alary said he hoped Morocco’s aviation industry would continue to expand, particular­ly as industry-wide demand increases and companies face labor shortages in Europe.

“It’s the access to well-qualified talent that’s been well-trained,” Alary said of Morocco. “They are the key players for achieving our goals.”

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