50 SKY SHADES - World aviation news

United Airlines just delivered some terrible news to Canada's largest airplane maker

Download: Printable PDF Date: 22 Jan 2016 06:12 (UTC) category:
Publisher:
United Airlines just delivered some terrible news to Canada's largest airplane maker - Airlines publisher
Tatjana Obrazcova
Country: Canada Aircraft: Airplanes

United Airlines just delivered some bad news to Bombardier as the airplane maker seeks to dig itself out of a financial hole.

The aviation giant had been in talks with United Airlines about a 40-aircraft order for its widely praised, but slow selling, C-Series airliner.

Unfortunately for Bombardier, United announced with its latest earnings report that the airline has decided to go with Boeing's 737-700.

Industry sources told Reuters earlier this month that Boeing's ability to offer a slightly larger aircraft and greater discounts gave it the edge over Bombardier.

According to United, the 40 aircraft in the order will be used by the airline to takeover routes currently operated by the company's regional partners.

Bombardier, which recently filed a request for further financial assistance from the Canadian government, is in desperate need for a headline-grabbing deal with a major airline to inject some new life into the C-Series project.

The Canadian airplane maker has been fighting to recover from a tough 2015 in which the company was forced to write down $4.4 billion and take a $1.3 billion bailout.

One of the linchpins to Bombardier's turnaround strategy is to revive sales of the C-Series. The company has gone more than a year without registering a new order for its flagship product.

The United deal, valued at $3.2 billion based on catalog prices, would have given the C-Series program a much needed boost.

Though the C-Series is expected to enter service later this year with Swiss Global Air Lines, Bombardier still does not have an order from a major North American carrier. But not all hope is lost: Delta CEO Richard Anderson told reporters this week at the airline's investors call that it is "taking a serious look" at the C-Series.

United Airlines will begin to take delivery of the Boeing 737s in mid-2017.





Recommended

AIR selects Dynon Avionics as exclusive avionics provider across smart aircraft portfolio

AIR announced a strategic partnership with Dynon Avionics as its exclusive avionics provider across its aircraft portfolio. The portfolio includes the AIR ONE personal eVTOL and the company&...

AERO 2027 builds on the success of this year’s edition

AERO 2027, taking place from April 14-17, 2027, will feature a further developed concept designed to build on the great success of this year’s event. In 2026, 860 exhibitors from 50 countries to...

dnata wins multi-year Silk Way Group cargo handling contract in Singapore

dnata has secured a new multi-year contract with Silk Way Group to provide cargo and freighter handling services at Singapore Changi Airport (SIN), further strengthening a longstanding global par...

Daher Aircraft showcases its “go anywhere” Kodiak 900 along with the TBM 960 at France Air Expo

The European tour of Daher Aircraft’s “go-anywhere” Kodiak 900 multi-role airplane continues this week at the France Air Expo 2026 event in Lyon, France, where it will join a fast, e...

Android Apps development in Riga, Latvia