Rolls-Royce sees demand
for a new mid-market jet
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[June 16, 2017]
By Tim Hepher and Cyril Altmeyer
PARIS
(Reuters) - Engine maker Rolls-Royce believes there is a market for a
new mid-priced jet such as the one Boeing is currently exploring and
would consider working with Boeing on it, an executive said on Friday.
Boeing is studying a gap in the market between narrow-body jets and
long-haul aircraft for a potential new airplane that could seat 220 to
260 passengers.
"There is clearly a market, the question is how do you serve it?" Eric
Schulz, president of civil aerospace at Rolls-Royce, told journalists at
a briefing ahead of the Paris Air Show, which starts on Monday.
He said that should Boeing decide on a mid-market jet, then Rolls-Royce
as an engine maker would weigh up the opportunity.
"If there is the possibility to enter a program, we will examine it and
if the conditions are right, we will," he said.
Earlier on Friday, Rolls-Royce said it had made a good start to 2017,
but the outlook for cash flow remained challenging.
The company is grappling with falling revenue from its older engines at
the same time as investing in new engines.
"Our ramp up in large engine production is progressing well, reflecting
the significant investments in manufacturing capability in recent
years," Chief Executive Warren East said.
Schulz said the company was increasing production of Trent engines,
including the Trent XWB 84K for the A350.
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A Rolls-Royce logo is seen at the company aerospace engineering and
development site in Bristol in Britain December 17, 2015.
REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
"Six
to seven years ago we were making 250 Trent engines a year, this year we want to
manufacture more than 400 and our target is 430-450," he said. "Eighteen months
from now, we want to produce 600 Trent engines a year."
He said the company was now making seven Trent XWB 84K engines a week and aimed
to reach 10 engines a week in the first quarter of 2018.
But Rolls-Royce is still behind on the Trent 7000 program for the A330neo, with
a current three-four month delay.
"We are in a phase where we can catch up some of the delay, to reach a
reasonable delay of two-three months compared with what we initially expected,"
he said.
He said he hoped to see the A330neo fly around the start of September.
Shares in Rolls-Royce were up 1.4 percent at 1009 GMT.
(Additional reporting by Victoria Bryan and Paul Sandle; Editing by Maria
Sheahan and Elaine Hardcastle)
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