Aerospace leaders say collaboration, government support
help mitigate pandemic
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[July 20, 2020] LONDON
(Reuters) - Deeper industry collaboration and government support will
help Europe's aerospace companies ride out the coronavirus pandemic,
sector leaders said on Monday, as they juggle lower revenues with the
need to invest in cleaner air travel for the future.
Europe's biggest aerospace and defence companies Airbus <AIR.PA>, BAE
Systems <BAES.L> and Leonardo <LDOF.MI> had expected to spend this week
showcasing aircraft and entertaining clients at the biennial Farnborough
Airshow in southern England.
But with the event cancelled, chief executives instead joined a webcast
as part of "Virtual Farnborough" to discuss coping strategies for the
gravest crisis in commercial aviation history.
"I think the challenge is to keep investing in spite of the crisis that
is taking away a lot of our investment capacity," Airbus CEO Guillaume
Faury said.
Faury said co-operation between governments, bigger companies and
smaller suppliers was better than he had seen for years, and that was
helping processes become faster and cheaper.
Britain's aerospace industry, which employs 375,000, is not only facing
the COVID-19 crisis, but also the threat of a disorderly exit from the
European Union when a transition period ends this year.
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Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury poses before Airbus's annual press
conference on Full-Year 2019 results in Blagnac near Toulouse,
France, February 13, 2020. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
Tony Wood, CEO of UK-based Meggitt <MGGT.L> which supplies parts to
aircraft manufacturers, called on the UK government to do more to
accelerate programmes such as Tempest, a UK plan to build a new fighter
jet, and investment in a zero-emissions flight to help boost the
industry.
"We're in close dialogue with the government. We'll be talking to them
further this week, and hoping to try and accelerate and conclude some of
those agreements," Wood said.
Faury said he continued to see the relationship between Airbus and
Britain, where Airbus produces wings, as a "successful partnership".
On the possibility of a disorderly Brexit, he said: "We don't like it,
but it's one problem among others that we have to solve."
Britain's business minister Alok Sharma said on Monday that the
government would provide grants totalling 200 million pounds ($252
million) to support technology to make flying more efficient.
(Reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by Mark Potter)
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