Airbus halts production of long-haul A340 plane
PARIS - European planemaker Airbus said Thursday it was abandoning production of its A340 long-haul four-engine aircraft, which failed to compete with Boeing's 777."We have accepted reality. We have not sold any A340s for nearly two years," Airbus finance director Hans Peter Ring said during a presentation on the third-quarter results of Airbus parent company EADS.
Related Research on ASDReports.com:
The European Union Defence Market: Industry and National Procurement
The European Union Defence Market: Industry and National Procurement
The abandoning of the programme will allow Airbus to write back into its books a provision of 192 million euros ($261 million) it had made on the programme.
The A340 first flew in April 1992 and in 1993 it scored a record for the longest non-stop flight, between Paris and Auckland, New Zealand.
The Boeing 777 launched two years later and had the same capacity but with only two engines it was more fuel-efficient.
Airbus parent company EADS announced on Thursday a six-month delay in first deliveries of its A350 long-haul jetliner, designed to compete with Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, but raised its outlook for the year after third-quarter profits surged.
(c) 2011 AFP
AIAA Fluid Dynamics and Co-located Conferences and Exhibit
Jun 24 - 27, 2013 - San Diego, United States
Jan 13 - 17, 2014 - National Harbor (near Washington, DC), United States


Print
Email
