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		Airbus plant in Alabama spared fallout from U.S. tariffs
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		 [October 03, 2019]  By 
		Andrea Shalal and Tim Hepher 
 WASHINGTON/
 LONDON (Reuters) - Alabama 
		aerospace workers won an unexpected reprieve from escalating trade 
		tensions on Wednesday when the United States spared an Airbus plant in 
		the state from the impact of tariffs against the European planemaker - 
		at least for now.
 
 While Airbus aircraft built in Europe will be hit with a tariff of 10% 
		after the World Trade Organization allowed Washington to impose 
		sanctions on EU goods, semi-finished fuselages and wings are exempted, 
		an official list showed.
 
 That means large parts shipped to the deep-sea Alabama port of Mobile 
		from plants in Europe will not be hit by the duties, allowing Airbus to 
		continue to supply U.S.-based airlines with a limited number of locally 
		assembled aircraft.
 
 "Earlier today, we received confirmation from Airbus of very positive 
		news that parts and components used at the final assembly plant in 
		Mobile will not be subject to tariffs," said George Talbot, spokesman 
		for the city of Mobile.
 
		
		 
		
 "There is a great sense of relief and gratitude about the outcome."
 
 France-based Airbus opened the Mobile plant in 2015, widening its 
		international footprint from existing assembly lines in Europe and 
		China.
 
 The Alabama plant produces four A320-family jets a month, a relatively 
		small part of the Airbus total, but is seen as important to the 
		company's plans to raise output globally. U.S. rival Boeing Co <BA.N> 
		has large manufacturing operations in the north of the state.
 
 Mobile city leaders and Alabama lawmakers had lobbied hard for 
		exemptions from the tariffs, arguing they could jeopardize some 1,000 
		jobs.
 
 Alabama's largely conservative voters supported U.S. President Donald 
		Trump in the 2016 presidential election, and he continues to poll very 
		strongly in the state.
 
 The surprise decision to omit imported aircraft sections came in a list 
		of tariffs that was smaller in percentage terms and in scope than 
		initially signaled by Washington.
 
		
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			European planemaker Airbus held a news conference on July 2, 2012, 
			in Mobile, Alabama, to announce that they would construct an 
			assembly plant for their A320 in the city. REUTERS/Jonathan 
			Bachman/File Photo 
            
			 
The United States said on Wednesday it expected the European Union to enter 
negotiations but stressed it also had authority to increase the tariffs or alter 
the products affected. 
NORTHERN IRELAND REPRIEVE
 Also spared by the decision to exempt imported aircraft parts were wings made in 
Northern Ireland for smaller Airbus A220 aircraft, which had been drawn into a 
separate row in 2017.
 
 The planes are mainly built in Canada where they were originally designed by 
industrial group Bombardier <BBDb.TO> before Airbus bought the loss-making 
program last year.
 
 But in August, Airbus also began building the planes in Mobile, adding plans for 
400 jobs to 850 already in place.
 
A dispute over low prices for the jets sucked Boeing into a three-way trade row 
with Canada and Britain in 2017 and caused a political storm about politically 
sensitive jobs in Belfast.
 For now, both those jobs and the new A220 jobs in Alabama appear to be sheltered 
from the latest dispute.
 
 Airbus said it was evaluating the tariff list in close collaboration with the 
European Commission.
 
 Despite relief over Airbus, Alabama is bracing for tariffs that could hit 
Germany's Daimler, which operates a large Mercedes auto plant in Tuscaloosa, 
beginning next month.
 
 Trump has repeatedly threatened to impose 25% tariffs on imported cars from 
Germany and elsewhere in Europe.
 
 (Additional reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Jane Wardell)
 
				 
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