Paris asks partners to pay extra 1.5 billion euros for A400M
ISTANBUL, Turkey, Feb 4, 2010 (AFP) - Paris has urged its partners in the A400M project to provide up to an extra 1.5 billion euros to get the military carrier off the ground, Defence Minister Herve Morin said Thursday.The sum comes on top of two billion euros already envisaged by the seven partner countries, but still falls short of the 6.4 billion that Airbus parent company EADS is seeking from its clients to finance the project.
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"I have the prime minister's agreement for France to extend a refundable advance of 400 million euros," Morin told reporters following a meeting with his counterparts in Istanbul.
"That will will take us to between one and 1.5 billion euros if the other countries affected by the industrial fallout of the programme follow suit -- which is not certain," Morin said.
France, Germany and Spain are the main countries concerned, he added.
All seven partners -- Germany, France, Spain, Britain, Belgium, Luxembourg and Turkey -- have set Airbus a three-week deadline to agree a deal on launching the embattled aircraft, the French minister added.
Between them the seven have ordered 180 planes for 20 billion euros (28 billion dollars) from Airbus.
But Airbus has threatened to pull the plug unless the client countries stump up more cash, warning the fate of European aerospace giant EADS depends on the project.
Airbus has been meeting on the sidelines of a NATO meeting in Istanbul with nations hoping to buy the aircraft -- which is three years behind schedule and a reported 11 billion euros (15 billion dollars) over budget.
A German defence ministry spokesman said earlier Thursday there had been "substantial progress" in talks over the A400M, with "a broad agreement on delivery times and technical parameters."
Airbus has 52,000 employees around Europe, with about 10,000 working on the A400M, a state-of-the-art new aircraft that can carry troops, armoured vehicles and helicopters and would replace Europe's ageing fleet of transport planes.
by Daphne Benoit
(c) 2010 AFP

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