Transportation Industry
Aircraft News - Europe
AirGuide Business, July 14, 2008
7/14/2008
European Parliament yesterday adopted a compromise agreement with the European Council on including aviation in the EU Emissions Trading System beginning Jan. 1, 2012. Under terms of the deal, all flights starting and/or landing in Europe (including government flights) will be included in the ETS. Airline emissions allowances in 2012 will be capped at 97% of the average annual emissions in 2004-06 and at 95% from 2013 onward. Eighty-five percent of emissions certificates will be allocated for free according to a common European benchmark and the remaining 15% will be auctioned. The compromise proposal obliges the EU. The 27 member states will have the discretion to determine how to use revenue generated from allowance auctions as long as it is applied to research and development, climate change mitigation or related endeavors. Certain operations will be excluded from the ETS, including those performed by aircraft with MTOW under 5.7 tonnes, airlines operating fewer than an average 243 flights per four-month period and those producing emissions under 10,000 tonnes per year. 7/8/2008
Airbus
Airbus Chief Executive Tom Enders said, despite prospects for weakening aircraft demand, there was no need to abandon plans to ramp up production of the A320 single-aisle aircraft family to 40 from 34 a month, though he plans to revisit the issue later this year. The boss of that jet program, Tom Williams, said Airbus aimed to assemble 36 A320s a month in Europe and four in China beginning in 2011, though he stressed that final assembly only represented 5 percent of the value chain. Airbus aimed to reach a maximum production rate of four aircraft a month for its delayed A380 superjumbo in 2-1/2 to 3 years, Williams said. Negotiations to sell a British Airbus plant at Filton to auto parts maker GKN were advanced, Airbus CEO Enders said. He was also confident of closing a deal to sell an Airbus plant in Germany at Laupheim to French defence electronics firm Thales. The sales are part of a push by Airbus to combat costs from plane delivery delays, surging prices of metals and other raw materials and a weak dollar that gives US rival Boeing an advantage. 7/18/2008
Airbus
Plane orders worth more than USD$40 billion announced this week at the Farnborough air show may mark the start of a far slower end of year for Airbus, the plane maker's chief salesman said on Thursday. Airbus clinched firm orders for 247 aircraft at the event this week, taking its 2008 net orders for the year to 730. Leahy said the company was aiming at 850 for the full year. While Chinese and Gulf-based airlines are busy buying planes for growth, high oil prices and slowing economies have hurt aircraft demand from Europe and the United States. Leahy said companies that lease aircraft to airlines were still buying, too. 7/18/2008
Airbus
Airbus and Boeing, the fierce industry rivals came to Farnborough neck and neck with net 2008 orders of 487 planes for Airbus and 475 for Boeing, and are now close to their targets for the whole year. Airbus and Boeing, between them, posted 444 firm orders worth $62 billion. That exceeded the forecasts of many who had said they would struggle to reach half the 600 firm deals seen at a similar showcase in Paris in 2007. A $40 billion spree by Gulf oil states prevented aircraft orders from going into freefall at this week's Farnborough Airshow but left little for Airbus and Boeing to scrap over for the rest of the year. Airbus, the planemaking unit of Europe aerospace group EADS squeezed out a handful of final orders on day four of a show that exposed a yawning divide between the industry's rich and poor as oil prices approach $150 a barrel. EADS shares rose 6.1 percent, while Boeing opened flat. 7/17/2008
Airbus
Airbus emerged as the clear winner at the Farnborough Airshow on Thursday after racking up plane orders dwarfing the deals done by U.S. rival Boeing. An agreement to sell South American consortium Synergy Aerospace 10 aircraft worth $2.1 billion took Airbus' total orders so far at the weeklong show outside of London to 247 planes worth $38.7 billion at catalog prices. Airbus on Thursday held a self-congratulatory press conference, with the Toulouse, France-based company's chief salesman John Leahy saying the figures defied the "doom and gloom" that many industry watchers had expected to pervade this year's air show given soaring oil prices and the global credit crisis. Airbus now has a total of 730 firm orders for the year so far. 7/17/2008
Airbus
Airbus posted firm orders of 247 planes worth $38 billion, bringing net orders so far this year to 734 aircraft. Sales chief John Leahy upped his forecast for 2008 orders to more than 850 aircraft from 700, but acknowledged this meant a slowdown in the rest of the year as airlines hoard cash. The European company sold 1,341 planes in 2007, which proved to be the climax of an unprecedented three-year industry bubble. Airbus is sticking to planned production hikes even if, in the worst case, it loses a third of its 6-year backlog. 7/17/2008
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