Qatar Airways ordina 80 A350XWB


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Publié le 30 mai 2007 à 13h10
Le Qatar commande 80 A350
Lors d'une cérémonie au palais de l'Elysée, la compagnie aérienne Qatar Airways vient de commander 80 Airbus long-courrier A350, pour un montant estimé à quelque 16 milliards de dollars.

Figaro.fr (Avec AFP).
 
ecco l'articolo di bloomberg, molto interessante per alcuni dettagli...;)

Airbus Wins $16 Billion Pledge From Qatar for A350s (Update2)

By Andrea Rothman and Francois De Beaupuy

May 30 (Bloomberg) -- Airbus SAS won a $16 billion pledge from Qatar Airways to buy 80 A350 XWB long-range planes, beating out Boeing Co.'s 787 Dreamliner in the first large commitment to the European aircraft in almost a year. Airbus Chief Executive Officer Louis Gallois and Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al-Baker signed the agreement today in the Elysee presidential palace in Paris. Deliveries will begin in 2013, Airbus said in a statement. The planes will be equipped with engines made by Rolls-Royce Group Plc. The agreement is a step toward building credibility for an aircraft that has won only 13 firm orders compared with 567 for Boeing's 787. Al-Baker had threatened to buy Boeing's Dreamliner unless Airbus came up with a detailed redesign of the A350 by June. Qatar was the first or so-called ``launch'' customer for the plane at the Paris Air Show in 2005. Airbus has reworked the aircraft several times as airlines chose Boeing's new plane. ``Boeing has been beating the pants of Airbus,'' said Nick Cunningham, an analyst with Panmure Gordon in London. ``They have effectively worked this aircraft over three times so this order does help to validate that work and it certainly is a big leg up. They will need lots more orders though before it can be considered a success.'' Shares of Airbus parent European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co. fell as much as 50 cents, or 2.2 percent, to 22.74 euros, and were down 1 percent at 1:58 p.m. in Paris. The stock has fallen 12 percent this year compared an 11 percent gain for Boeing.

The past year for Airbus, based in Toulouse, France, has been one of the most difficult in its 37-year history. Last June, the planemaker announced that the A380 superjumbo was running a year behind schedule. In October Airbus revised that, saying the plane was two years late, and would cost parent EADS about 4.8 billion euros ($6.4 billion) in profits through 2010. Turmoil surrounding the delays led to the ouster of EADS Co-CEO Noel Forgeard, as well as two Airbus chief executives. Gallois has been in place since October 2006. Airbus, based in Toulouse, France, had orders for about 100 of the A350s, though most of those have to be confirmed because of the redesign of the plane. The 787 may help Chicago-based Boeing regain the lead in commercial-jet building from Airbus as soon as 2008. ``It's a very nice contract, this plane promises to have a great future,'' Gallois said at the signing ceremony. ``It's a plane that interests many airlines.'' Also at the ceremony were French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, the emir of Qatar.

While the price of today's order was announced as $16 billion, large purchasers generally get discounts on planes. Cunningham said discounts for launch customers typically are around 20 percent and said Qatar may have gotten more. Gallois said he expects the airline to sign a firm purchase order for the planes ``in a few days.'' The Dreamliner, which is scheduled to enter service next year, will be about 50 percent built from composite materials, which are lighter than the traditional aluminum and make the plane more fuel-efficient. The A350 XWB will be as much 60 percent built from composite materials and carbon fibers, though design delays mean it won't enter service until 2013. The Qatari airline will buy three different versions of the Airbus plane, 20 A350-800s, 40 A350-900s, and 20 A350-1000s.

Airbus said in January it expects to spend about 11.6 billion euros developing the A350 XWB, 50 percent more than the earlier version, as the composite materials add to the expense. The only firm orders for the A350 XWB have been an 11-plane contract from Finnair Oyj, Finland's state-controlled carrier, signed March 8 and an order in December from U.S.-based leasing company Pegasus Aviation Finance Co., which signed for two. Singapore Airlines Ltd. agreed to buy 20 A350 XWBs last June, with options to buy 20 more, though hasn't yet signed a firm order. On March 22, Airbus also won a pledge from Russia's OAO Aeroflot to buy 22 A350s worth $4.4 billion, with Airbus offering Russian industry a 5 percent stake in building the aircraft. Aeroflot, eastern Europe's largest airline, signed a preliminary agreement March 22.