Airbus CEO urges trade war ceasefire, easing of COVID travel bans
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[February 20, 2021] By
Tim Hepher
PARIS (Reuters) - The head of European
planemaker Airbus called on Saturday for a "ceasefire" in a
transatlantic trade war over aircraft subsidies, saying tit-for-tat
tariffs on planes and other goods had aggravated damage from the
COVID-19 crisis.
Washington progressively imposed import duties of 15% on Airbus jets
from 2019 after a prolonged dispute at the World Trade Organization, and
the EU responded with matching tariffs on Boeing jets a year later.
Wine, whisky and other goods are also affected.
"This dispute, which is now an old dispute, has put us in a lose-lose
situation," Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said in a radio
interview.
"We have ended up in a situation where wisdom would normally dictate
that we have a ceasefire and resolve this conflict," he told France
Inter.
Boeing was not immediately available for comment.
Brazil, which has waged separate battles with Canada over subsidies for
smaller regional jets, on Thursday dropped its own complaint against
Ottawa and called for a global peace deal between producing nations on
support for aerospace.
Faury said the dispute with Boeing was particularly damaging during the
COVID-19 pandemic, which has badly hit air travel and led to travel
restrictions or border closures. He expressed particular concern about
widening bans within Europe.
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Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury attends Airbus's annual news conference
on 2019 results in Blagnac near Toulouse, France, February 13, 2020.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
"We are extremely frustrated by the barriers that restrict personal movement and
it is almost impossible today to travel in Europe by plane, even domestically,"
he said.
"The priority no. 1 for countries in general is to reopen frontiers and allow
people to travel on the basis of tests and then eventually vaccinations."
The comments come as businesses increase pressure on governments to reopen
economies as coronavirus vaccine roll-outs gather pace across Europe.
France has defended recently introduced border restrictions, saying they will
help the government avoid a new lockdown and stay in force until at least the
end of February.
Germany installed border controls with the Czech Republic and Austria last
Sunday, drawing protest from Austria and concerns about supply-chain
disruptions.
Berlin calls the move a temporary measure of last resort.
Poland said on Saturday it had not ruled out imposing restrictions at the
country's borders with Slovakia and the Czech Republic due to rising COVID-19
cases.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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