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Airbus Trounces Boeing In Paris With $72 Billion Worth Of Orders

Airbus Boeing

GREG KELLER   06/23/11 01:43 PM ET   AP

LE BOURGET, France — Airbus is trouncing Boeing in the race to be the world's biggest planemaker, claiming over $72 billion dollars worth of orders and commitments at the Paris Air Show, where the popularity of its new fuel-efficient jets twice broke records for the largest order ever.

Airbus' success cast a long shadow over Chicago-based Boeing, which recorded only $22 billion in orders and commitments, and raised questions over the U.S. planemaker's ability to compete in a market dominated by concerns over high fuel prices.

Airbus CEO Tom Enders and AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes signed off Thursday on an $18.5 billion order for 200 of Airbus' new A320neo aircraft, which has proven to be the star of the aviation industry's premier event.

The order is the largest ever, eclipsing the previous record set just Wednesday by another A320neo customer, Asian carrier IndiGo. Airlines often negotiate discounts on large deals.

The recipe to Airbus' gains over Boeing is deceptively simple. It modified its existing workhorse jet, the A320, with improved engines and modified wingtips to make it allegedly 15 percent more fuel-efficient than Boeing's 737.

The plane will only start delivering in 2015 but Airbus is using it now to cash in on airlines' need to reduce sky-high fuel costs and cut carbon dioxide emissions.

Airbus' Enders said the A320neo was now "by far the best-selling airliner in the history of commercial aviation."

The company has over 1,000 orders or commitments for the plane, including 667 during the air show's first four days.

Airbus' success increases the pressure on its U.S. rival to respond to the challenge with either a revamped version of its own 737 or an entirely new aircraft. Boeing says it will make that decision in the coming months.

It played down the orders rivalry, saying it doesn't keep deals in reserve just to announce them at air shows.

It recorded orders and commitments for 142 aircraft worth $22 billion at catalog prices during the show. That includes a commitment from an undisclosed customer for it's hulking new 747-8 Intercontinentals worth $4.7 billion.

At this pace, Airbus looks likely to retain its position as industry leader for a fourth year running. Last year, it took in orders for 574 new aircraft worth $74 billion at list prices, more than Boeing's 530.

The biggest orders for Airbus planes this week have come from the fast-growing countries in Asia and the Middle East.

Besides AirAsia and IndiGo, Airbus also nabbed orders and commitments from the U.S. airline JetBlue and Garuda of Indonesia.

Boeing's highlights included a $1.7 billion order for 6 777 long-haul aircraft from Qatar Airways and 10 737s from Malaysian Airlines.

Though Airbus was ending the show with a bang, it had started off with a series of embarrassing gaffes before the opening.

Its A380 double decker superjumbo was briefly grounded after it clipped a wingtip while maneuvering on a taxiway at the Le Bourget airport outside Paris, where the air show is held every two years.

Airbus' long-overdue and over-budget military transporter, the A400M, was unable to perform a scheduled demonstration at the show because of what Airbus called a minor gearbox problem.

And the Airbus A350 long-range widebody had a new disappointment with the announcement that two versions of the jet would be delayed by about two years, so that the jet's exclusive engine supplier Rolls Royce can develop a higher powered motor for the stretched version of the aircraft, something Airbus said customers had demanded.

Although deals are typically announced during the first four days, before the opening to the general public on Friday, the planemakers held out hope for some last-minute surprises, possibly more orders.

"The show's not over yet," said Airbus CEO Enders.

___

Greg Keller can be reached at http://twitter.com/Greg_Keller

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LE BOURGET, France — Airbus is trouncing Boeing in the race to be the world's biggest planemaker, claiming over $72 billion dollars worth of orders and commitments at the Paris Air Show, where t...
LE BOURGET, France — Airbus is trouncing Boeing in the race to be the world's biggest planemaker, claiming over $72 billion dollars worth of orders and commitments at the Paris Air Show, where t...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
05:14 PM on 06/26/2011
looks like Boeing is going the route of the American automakers of the 70's when they responded poorly to the Japanese cars.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
09:23 AM on 06/26/2011
Airbus A400 military

http://www.airbusmilitary.com/A400M.aspx
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
10:52 AM on 06/26/2011
They can use the A400M in Libya - if EADS survives
A400M could cost EADS more than the failed A380
EU can hardly afford croissants, retsina and pasta
Another frog engineering failure - gonna sink EU
08:35 PM on 06/25/2011
I liked Boeing when it was based in WA. Now the CEO and the board, after moving to Chicago, are following what the text book of all the MBAs from Harrvard, and others do: Try to improve the company numbers by cutting wages and compensation; moving factories to places where they can exploit the employees, and on the way affecting R&D and innovation.
That method of business success works well for health insurance companies or telecom like AT&T, where buying legislators to have market control assures them prosperity without worrying about the competition; unfortunately that's not the case for Boeing and it's union busting strategy just impacts the product quality and also make the talented engineers to go away to other fields or other companies. They were ahead with the 787 now they were left behind...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
09:09 PM on 06/25/2011
I agree entirely.

And you're right, it 's the beancounting MBAs that are the cause of it.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
09:20 AM on 06/26/2011
well, if you like Boeing, move to South Carolina and work for them ... on the cheap ...
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
02:58 PM on 06/25/2011
China throws EADS under the bus - cancels A380 order over illegal EU carbon charges

http://www.aviationbrief.com/?p=2364
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:13 PM on 06/25/2011
Boeing deserves it for moving to SC. Workers of the world unite. If it ain't Union don't buy.
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George Hanshaw
There are none so blind as those who will not see.
02:09 PM on 06/25/2011
So you want to punish the company that best allows us to address our export-import imbalance by having the jobs go instead to Germany and France?

Sounds like cutting off your own nose to spite your face....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:36 PM on 06/25/2011
Eventually the jobs are going anyway. A company they will move to SC will eventually move to South East Asia just like jobs that moved to Mexico eventually moved to Souteast Asia.

Boeing should stay in Seattle and stay Unionized. If they move from Washington F them.
08:28 PM on 06/25/2011
I'll support my class before I'll support my country.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tquin
10:53 AM on 06/25/2011
Well of course Airbus will beat an American company. Foreign workers are much much better workers than Americans with their need for labor unions to hide the lazy.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
04:28 PM on 06/25/2011
Because there are no labor unions in Europe? Who knew?
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George Hanshaw
There are none so blind as those who will not see.
10:41 AM on 06/25/2011
It will be interesting to see how much longer Airbus can keep going. It's not like Boeing hasn't had problems with their 787, and the NLRB now seems determined to try to get them to write of a $2 Billion investment in South Carolina, but even with those problems the problems of Airbus look even more serious.

The A400M program should have been cancelled. It is decades behind time and massively over budget and - if successful - will still lose money and be very little better than the C-130 and Transall aircraft it will replace.

The A380 program - besides running in to commuter jets and buildings while it's taxiing because it's wingspan is just too damn big for 99% of the commercial airports will NEVER sell enough units to recoup development costs.

The A350 is still - after all these years - still not completely defined.

The A320neo is also - at the present time - smoke.

And ALL of these aircraft have depended on 'launch aid' - launch aid from governments who may no longer be capable of providing it.
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
11:47 AM on 06/25/2011
The South Carolina cluster will likely cause Boeing to take its next plant off shore. More US jobs lost.

All taxing authorities here in the US should be restricted to purchasing only US made products and services. I'm very tired of my tax dollars bolstering the world's economy while we struggle with massive debt. We need to hurry and do this while the US actually makes some products.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
04:29 PM on 06/25/2011
Much of a Boeing airliner is already manufactured overseas. Most of what gets done in Seattle is final assembly.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
04:36 PM on 06/25/2011
The A400M is quite a bit larger than a C-130. It fills a niche between a C-130 and a C-17.
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jeffrey678
You don't happen to make it. You make it happen.
09:15 AM on 06/25/2011
The airplane business is not a free-market laboratory. Rather, it is marked by subsidies, offsets, regulatory concessions, equity partnerships, and national policy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
phantasma
Pacific Northwest
05:07 AM on 06/25/2011
I do enjoy watching Union Busting Corporations hit the skids
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
10:38 PM on 06/24/2011
Actually both Boeing and Airbus are worried about competition from Embraer, Bombardier and the Chinese going forward.
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MPFIED
Blah,blah,blah and all other white noise.
08:05 PM on 06/24/2011
Airbus probably threatened the airlines with a weapon of mass destruction,otherwise known as the A380, if they didn't place orders. That beast has been clipping buildings and other airplanes all over the world. Its the Sasquatch of the skies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ember Firedog
A satiated micro-bio is not empty.
06:53 PM on 06/24/2011
I hope our friends at Boeing will be able to compete. We shall see.
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RRoadrunner
Living in a 'Pro-ignorant culture'
04:03 PM on 06/24/2011
I'm hearing a faint voice....B A I L O U T......
03:55 PM on 06/24/2011
Airbus: "$72 billion dollars worth of orders and commitments"

Boeing: "$22 billion in orders and commitments".

OUCH!
10:58 PM on 06/25/2011
And Boeing is stuck with a plant in SC that Obama will not let them use.
redonthehead
Winning trophies for my game face alone
10:35 AM on 06/24/2011
Headline--"HuffPo and Liberals giddy that government plane maker outsells Boeing"
03:22 PM on 06/24/2011
Hey that's witty.................................................................NOT!!!!!!!!!!!!!