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Business / World Business

Airbus to open first US jet production plant

Published: 15 Sep 2015 - 10:49 am | Last Updated: 02 Nov 2021 - 02:47 am
Peninsula

Mobile, United States: European jetmaker Airbus is taking its fight for a bigger market share to rival Boeing’s backyard yesterday, as it inaugurates its first production plant in the United States.
The $600m facility in Mobile, Alabama, is due to eventually employ about 1,000 workers.
The move will also help Airbus cut costs. Alabama has one of the lowest minimum wages in the United States — $7.25 per hour — and strikes are rare in the state. Employment benefits are about 30 percent less expensive than in Europe. “It’s a historic day,” said Airbus CEO Fabrice Bregier.
“Having an assembly line in the United States will increase our visibility.”
The inauguration ceremony, taking place three years after the project first kicked off, is set for 1500 GMT, with lawmakers and economic players from this former capital of colonial French Louisiana. Three years ago, Airbus had a 20 percent share of the US market, against 80 percent for Boeing. Since announcing the Mobile plant, its market share has doubled to 40 percent. 
The company based just outside Toulouse, France estimates that it will get orders for 5,000 new planes in North America over the next 20 years. 
Airbus is betting it will benefit from its US facility among American companies renewing their fleets. By producing in the United States, for example, Airbus will be freed from the variations in euro to dollar exchange rate.
Based on the former Brookley Air Force Base where World War II planes were built, the Airbus facility is a 116-acre complex. The company has access to an additional 116 acres if it chooses to expand.
The Mobile plant will assemble single-aisle A319, A320 and A321 jets, its best-selling product first launched in 1988.
Starting in 2017, it will also assemble the A320 Neo, a new version with a more fuel-efficient motor. Airbus hopes to produce four planes per month starting in 2018, or 40 to 50 per year. But the jetmaker says it can build eight per month. Bregier notes that plane assembly only accounts for about 10 percent of the price.
“Mobile does do three things for Airbus,” said Richard Aboulafia of the Teal Group Corporation. AFP

US factory several weeks behind schedule: Airbus
MOBILE: Airbus Group said that production of its first US-built jetliner is several weeks behind schedule due to tooling problems, but that the company expects to deliver the plane on time to customer JetBlue Airways Corp in the second quarter of 2016.
“If we look at the original master programme, we’re a little bit behind schedule in certain parts of the project, but none of that is going to affect the actual delivery,” Barry Eccleston, President of Airbus Americas Inc, said. “We still think we’ll make the delivery on the original schedule.”
Workers at the factory said that the programme was eight weeks behind in some stations due to problems with tools. Eccleston said the delay was “a few weeks. It’s not eight weeks. It’s actually a bit less than that but it depends on tool to tool.” Reuters