Qatar releases video of scarred jets in Airbus dispute
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[January 22, 2022] By
Tim Hepher
PARIS (Reuters) -Qatar Airways took a
spiralling $4 million-a-day dispute with Europe's Airbus to social media
on Friday, publishing a video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mKN0SpWeILo&feature=youtu.be
of the scarred exterior of grounded A350 jets that the airline said
underscored "serious and legitimate safety concerns."
The two companies have been locked for months in a dispute over
deterioration to paint and anti-lightning protection on the long-haul
jets, which Airbus has acknowledged needs attention while insisting it
does not put safety at risk.
Qatar Airways hit back with the first official images of jets grounded
by its national regulator in a bid to keep the spotlight on technical
matters after Airbus accused the state-owned airline of engineering the
dispute to obtain compensation.
The dispute has led to the grounding of 21 planes out of 53 A350s
operated by Qatar Airways and cast a pall over the airline's
preparations for the World Cup later this year. The airline says it
needs planes to accommodate thousands of fans.
It has also prompted Qatar Airways to exclude Airbus from a
multi-billion-dollar deal to replace almost three dozen freighters,
which is expected to go to rival Boeing and could help bolster ties with
Washington in an upcoming visit.
Qatar Airways is pressing for compensation of $618 million plus $4
million a day and halted taking new A350 deliveries. Airbus has said it
will fight the claim in full.
In the video lasting just over a minute and a half released on YouTube,
Qatar Airways showed rows of defects on the skin of some of the A350s
grounded by the country's regulator.
Airbus had no immediate comment on the video.
Airbus has said there is "no reasonable or rational basis" for the
groundings, which have not happened elsewhere.
VIDEO EVIDENCE
The clip showed areas of peeling or missing paint, cracks and damage to
anti-lightning protection, as well as what the airline described as
patches of carbon-fibre that were exposed to moisture and potentially
damaging ultra-violet light.
The lightweight carbon-fibre jetliner relies on metallic foil embedded
beneath the paint to help lightning wash safely over the fuselage, which
is less conductive than earlier metal.
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Screenshot from video released by Qatar Airways on January 21, 2022
showing the condition of an Airbus A350 at an unspecified location.
Courtesy of Qatar Airways/Handout via REUTERS
Lightning strikes jetliners about once a year.
The video showed flakes of the copper-mesh anti-lightning system, which is
supposed to be fixed to the plane with resin, coming loose when paint was teased
away by a gloved hand.
The images echoed damage to A350s first revealed in pictures exclusively
published in a Reuters investigation last November.
The investigation showed that at least five other airlines had reported A350
paint or skin flaws since 2016, well before Qatar raised concerns in November
2020 when an attempt to repaint a jet in World Cup livery exposed some 980
defects.
"We continue to strongly believe that Airbus must undertake a thorough
investigation of this condition to conclusively establish its full root cause,"
Qatar Airways said.
Airbus has said that it is looking at changing the design of anti-lightning mesh
for future A350s, but insists there is adequate backup lightning protection. It
says Qatar is undermining global protocols by seeking leverage over safety.
The question of whether a "root-cause analysis" exists is part of a UK court
case due for a hearing in late April.
Airbus says it has provided the relevant information and concluded that there is
no airworthiness risk, a view echoed by Europe's air regulator.
The jet video capped 24 hours of intense exposure for the usually secretive
aviation world after Airbus took the rare step of revoking a separate Qatar
order for smaller A321neos.
Qatar Airways indicated it would fight the move, saying it was upholding all its
current contracts. The jet has been a major success for Airbus which faces
problems in keeping up with demand. "The opportunity cost to Airbus (of
cancelling) is zero; it may even be convenient," said consultant Bertrand
Grabowski.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher, Editing by Louise Heavens, Richard Chang and Grant
McCool)
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