Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Christian Scherer"


18 mentions found


Toby Melville | ReutersFARNBOROUGH, England — Massive airplane orders, hundreds deep in recent years, were absent from this year's biggest air show. One standout was Air Korea's order for up to 50 Boeing wide-body planes, including the 777X, which Boeing is working toward getting certified by regulators. As both manufacturers grapple with production strains, Air Korea CEO Walter Cho quipped during the Boeing order signing: "Whichever comes first will become our flagship, whoever's on time." Boeing has an overall backlog of close to 5,500 planes, while Airbus has more than 8,000 on order. Many airlines from United Airlines to Air India have also stocked up on new jet orders as travel rebounded in the pandemic.
Persons: Toby Melville, Ihssane Mounir, Boeing's, Walter Cho, whoever's, Peter Anderson, Matthew Childs, Christian Scherer, Scherer Organizations: Airbus, Farnborough, Reuters, Boeing, Wall Street, Paris Air, Ishka, Air, Max, Airbus A321neo, United Airlines, Air India, The Boeing Company, AerCap, Reuters Airbus Locations: Farnborough, Britain, Reuters FARNBOROUGH, England, London, Paris, Air Korea, Arlington , Virginia
Airbus launches cost cuts to 'save 2024' after output woes
  + stars: | 2024-07-12 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
An Airbus A350-1000 aircraft flies above a mosque during the 2023 Dubai Airshow at Dubai World Central - Al-Maktoum International Airport on November 14, 2023. PARIS, July 12 (Reuters) — Airbus has launched a program of cost cuts and a freeze on overall headcount to shore up performance at its core planemaking business in 2024 and beyond, weeks after being forced to cut targets for jet production, industry sources said. An Airbus spokesperson declined to comment on internal memos but confirmed the existence of a performance-improvement plan. In the memo, Scherer predicted that Boeing's ongoing corporate and industrial crisis would force Airbus' main rival to "radically change for the better," the sources said. He also drew attention to the steady rise of China as a competitor with strong state backing and a big domestic market.
Persons: Christian Scherer, Scherer Organizations: Airbus, Maktoum International Airport, Boeing Locations: Dubai, Al, Maktoum, PARIS, China
CNN —Travelers who were hoping to experience Qantas’ long-awaited, record-breaking ‘Project Sunrise’ flights next year will have to be a bit more patient. Project Sunrise: Australian airline Qantas is gearing up to launch its ultra long-haul "Project Sunrise" flights between Australia and New York City and London. Qantas Business Suites: For the first time, Qantas will add a sliding door to its business class seats for added privacy. The layout includes six first class seats in a 1-1-1 configuration, 52 business class seats in 1-2-1, 40 premium economy seats in 2-4-2 and 140 economy seats in 3-3-3. Business class suites will be 42 inches wide with 25-inch-wide chairs that can be reclined into a two-meter bed.
Persons: ” Christian Scherer, Organizations: CNN — Travelers, Qantas, Airbus, Sydney, Reuters, CNN, Sunrise, Civil Aviation Safety Authority, Boeing, Australian, Qantas Qantas, Singapore Airlines ’, JFK Locations: Australia, New York, London, Singapore, Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Sri Lanka, New York City, Singapore Airlines ’ Singapore, JFK
A commercial Aircraft Corp of China (Comac) C919 aircraft operated by China Eastern Airlines during the Singapore Airshow in Singapore, on Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2024. SINGAPORE — China's homegrown airliner may be the latest challenger to Airbus and Boeing's passenger jets, but an executive from Airbus said he's not worried. The Comac C919 is "not going to rock the boat in particular," Christian Scherer, chief executive officer of Airbus's aircraft commercial business, said at a media roundtable on the sidelines of the Singapore Airshow. "It looks a bit like an Airbus narrow body," Scherer said, tongue in cheek, noting that the C919 is "not very different" from what Airbus and Boeing already have in the market. Scherer acknowledged that the C919 was a "legitimate effort" by China — but "the market is large enough for competition, we welcome the competition."
Persons: he's, Christian Scherer, Scherer Organizations: Aircraft Corp of China, China Eastern Airlines, Airbus, Boeing Locations: Singapore, SINGAPORE, China
Boeing beat Airbus in the orders tally after securing a $52 billion deal with Emirates on day one. The host nation's flag carrier made a $52 billion deal with Boeing on day one, before sparking tensions with Airbus and Rolls Royce. Boeing beats out Airbus in the orders battleBoeing got off to a hot start on Monday, announcing several deals. AdvertisementAs well as Emirates' order for 95 jets, the American manufacturer also called press conferences with SunExpress, flyDubai, Royal Jordanian, and Royal Air Maroc. As well as the smaller Emirates order, Airbus made deals with Ethopian Airlines, EgyptAir, and airBaltic.
Persons: , Rolls Royce, Tim Clark, Royce Trent XWB, Yehia Zakaria, Christian Scherer, Pete Syme, Tony Douglas, @riyadhair, Peter Bellew, Rafael Organizations: Airbus, Royce, Boeing, Emirates, Service, Dubai Airshow, Rolls, Bloomberg, Reuters, Royal, Royal Air Maroc, Ethopian Airlines, Turkish Airlines, Anadolu Agency, Saudi, Riyadh Air, Boeing MAX, Paris Air, IAI, Dubai, Business, CNBC, Israel Defense Forces, United, United Nations Locations: Riyadh, Emirates, Royal Jordanian, Dubai, Israel, United Arab Emirates
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Long-haul carrier Emirates said Thursday it will purchase 15 additional Airbus A350-900s worth $6 billion after a spat between the airline and the European manufacturer went unusually public during this week's Dubai Air Show. On Tuesday, Emirates President Tim Clark signaled the carrier would hold off on a major purchase of Airbus A350 aircraft over concerns about the Rolls-Royce Trent XWB-97 engines on the 350-1000. A statement issued by Emirates that also quoted Airbus did not mention the engine dispute, but the airline and the manufacturer notably did not hold a news conference at the Dubai Air Show to discuss the purchase. Airbus discontinued its iconic double-decker A380, which is one of the main workhorses of Emirates' fleet. “With this agreement, we mark another solid step forward in the long-standing relationship agreement between Emirates and Airbus,” Airbus Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer said in the statement.
Persons: , Tim Clark, Royce Trent XWB, Royce, Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Christian Scherer Organizations: United Arab Emirates, Emirates, Airbus, Dubai Air Show, Boeing Co, Tuesday, ” Emirates, , Boeing Locations: DUBAI, United Arab, European, Emirates, Dubai
Emirates airliners are seen on the tarmac in a general view of Dubai International Airport in Dubai, United Arab Emirates January 13, 2021. He told reporters Emirates would be prepared to order between 35 and 50 of the jets if Rolls-Royce improved both the durability and maintenance costs. Reuters reported on Monday that an order from Emirates for the largest version of the A350 appeared to be on hold over terms of engine guarantees with Rolls-Royce. With plans for an Emirates A350 order off the table for now, Airbus also saw a second major order from Turkish Airlines (THY) (THYAO.IS) slip off the show's agenda, industry sources said. Airbus said on Monday it had reached agreement "in principle" on a significant THY order.
Persons: Abdel Hadi Ramahi, Royce, Tim Clark, Christian Scherer, Trent XWB, Tim Hepher, Alexander Cornwell, Tom Hogue, Jason Neely Organizations: Emirates, Dubai International, United Arab Emirates, Rights, Airbus, Dubai, Boeing 777X, Royce, Reuters, GE, Boeing, Turkish Airlines, Thomson Locations: Dubai, United Arab, Rights DUBAI, Emirates, Egyptair, East, India
Airbus names sales chief Scherer CEO of planemaking arm
  + stars: | 2023-09-26 | by ( Tim Hepher | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Airbus Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer is interviewed by Reuters at the International Air Transport Association's Annual General Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., October 4, 2021. Scherer's appointment as Commercial Aircraft CEO, first reported by Reuters, will take effect from Jan. 1 after discussions with unions, Airbus said. Scherer, who is currently chief commercial officer, said Airbus would meet its operational objectives. Airbus formally merged with its dominant planemaking business in 2018, meaning it combines two separate headquarters and operational functions under one CEO, with the Helicopters and Defence & Space divisions sitting underneath. The shake-up brings back a separate planemaking CEO under the same roof but the company does not appear to be re-creating two entities, something that had created a stage for chronic in-fighting in the past.
Persons: Christian Scherer, Brian Snyder, Guillaume Faury, Scherer, Faury, Tim Hepher, Louise Heavens Organizations: Airbus, Reuters, International Air, REUTERS, Rights, Commercial Aircraft, Boeing, Helicopters, Defence, Space, Thomson Locations: Boston , Massachusetts, U.S
Airbus Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer is interviewed by Reuters at the International Air Transport Association's Annual General Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., October 4, 2021. Reuters revealed the plans to reorganise in July and this month Scherer, an Airbus veteran currently serving as chief commercial officer, emerged as one of the main candidates to run the jetmaking arm, which accounts for 70% of revenue. Airbus reorganisations are more sensitive than most because of a history of friction between founders France and Germany. Born in Germany and raised in Toulouse, 61-year-old Scherer has spent his career in the Airbus commercial arm, apart from stints in Defence and as CEO of turboprop affiliate ATR. Insiders say the immediate challenges Scherer faces will be less familiar industrial ones, such as meeting production and delivery targets and managing roughly 80,000 Airbus employees.
Persons: Christian Scherer, Brian Snyder, Guillaume Faury, Scherer, Faury, Fabrice Bregier, Tom Enders, Rob Stallard, Bruno, Frenchman Faury, Olaf Scholz, Tim Hepher, David Goodman, Sharon Singleton Organizations: Airbus, Reuters, International Air, REUTERS, Boeing, Partners, Airbus Helicopters, Defence, Monday Germany, Thomson Locations: Boston , Massachusetts, U.S, PARIS, France, Germany, Toulouse, Europe, China
[1/2] An Airbus logo is pictured at the 54th International Paris Airshow at Le Bourget Airport near Paris, France, June 19, 2023. Industry sources said a final decision on the shake-up was likely in coming weeks, capping weeks of speculation after Reuters reported the looming reorganisation in July. Airbus Helicopters CEO Bruno Even had earlier been cited as a possible candidate for the top planemaking role. But the focus of speculation has widened to Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer, a veteran of the Airbus planemaking business who has also had stints at the Defence division and in running turboprop joint-venture ATR, industry sources said. His appointment would herald broad continuity at the company's main planemaking business, which accounts for most of the company's revenue.
Persons: Benoit Tessier, Christian Scherer, Guillaume Faury, Bruno, Scherer, Tim Hepher, Louise Heavens Organizations: Airbus, Paris, REUTERS, Rights, Industry, Reuters, Airbus Helicopters, Defence, France, Jefferies, Bombardier, Pratt, Whitney, Airbus Defence & Space, Military Air Systems, FCAS, Thomson Locations: Le Bourget, Paris, France, Ukraine, Germany, United States
Airbus first-half deliveries up 6% to 316 jets -sources
  + stars: | 2023-07-06 | by ( Tim Hepher | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
PARIS, July 6 (Reuters) - Airbus (AIR.PA) deliveries increased by 6% in the first half of the year to reach 316 aircraft, industry sources said on Thursday. Airbus, which is targeting 720 deliveries for the year, declined to comment ahead of the publication of data on Friday. Airbus's first-half performance compares with industrial deliveries of 297 planes in the first six months of last year, before a negative adjustment of two units related to Russia. Based on tracking of test flights, Jefferies said in a report this week that underlying aircraft production remained soft compared with targeted rates but looked set to increase this summer. Airbus reports first-half results on July 26.
Persons: Airbus's, Christian Scherer, Jefferies, Tim Hepher, David Goodman Organizations: Airbus, Aerospace, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Russia
PARIS, June 22 (Reuters) - The first Paris Airshow in four years has clocked up billions of dollars in commercial jet orders and offered some respite for suppliers as air travel springs back sharply from the pandemic. The industry returned to Le Bourget with high expectations of commercial orders and low expectations regarding the supply chain, but generated a more balanced picture on both fronts. Announced orders reached near-record levels but were heavily dominated by two airlines leading the charge in India, the world's fastest growing market: IndiGo (INGL.NS) and Air India. A key focus of the show was how those planes will be produced after the pandemic disrupted supply chains. Several major companies said they had built up more buffer stocks and were seeing signs of improvement in supply chains.
Persons: Le Bourget, Christian Scherer, Pieter Elbers, Sash Tusa, Tim Hepher, Mark Potter Organizations: Air India, Airbus, Boeing, IndiGo, Aero Systems, Agency Partners, Thomson Locations: Paris, India, COVID, Ukraine
PARIS, June 16 (Reuters) - Airbus (AIR.PA) has signed orders this month including 60 A320-family jets with a lessor and 10 A350s with a major airline, said the planemaker's Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer. The deals come on top of any business to be announced at next week's Paris Airshow and will be booked at end-June, though the buyers will not disclosed, he also told reporters. He said next week's event would bring evidence of a strong recovery in terms of demand. Earlier on Friday, Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury had said that supply chains had stabilised although the industry still faced pressing labour shortages. Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Sudip Kar-GuptaOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Christian Scherer, Scherer, Guillaume Faury, Tim Hepher, Sudip Kar Organizations: Airbus, Boeing, Gupta, Thomson
Airbus seeing more predictable industrial rhythm after delays
  + stars: | 2023-06-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
ISTANBUL, June 4 (Reuters) - European planemaker Airbus (AIR.PA) is seeing a more predictable pattern in its industrial activities and what appears to be the start of a more positive trend in deliveries, Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer said. We are seeing a steady increase in our ability to fly planes as they come out of the assembly line," he told Reuters, adding that Airbus was fully focused on operations following recent supply chain disruption. "The industrial rhythm seems to be a little more predictable," he said on the sidelines of an airlines meeting. "The pulse was not the same pulse across the supply chain but there seems to be more harmony now," he added. Airbus and rival Boeing have blamed faltering supply chains for recent delays in jet deliveries, with airlines and leasing companies complaining of erratic changes in schedules.
Persons: Christian Scherer, Scherer, Tim Hepher, Hugh Lawson Organizations: Airbus, Reuters, Boeing, International Air Transport Association, Thomson Locations: ISTANBUL
PARIS, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Airbus (AIR.PA) will start delivering narrow-body A320neo-family jets to Air India at the end of this year as part of a 250-plane order, the aircraft manufacturer's chief commercial officer said. The carrier's huge aircraft acquisition will further expand as Air India additionally leases around 25 A320neo-family jets on the open market, he said in an interview. Reuters reported last month Air India was poised to acquire a total of 495 planes. The Airbus part of the direct order includes 34 A350-1000 aircraft and six smaller A350-900s originally destined for Russia's sanctions-hit Aeroflot. Asked whether the deal supported Airbus plans for higher A350 production, Scherer said: "It is poised to grow for sure".
Tata Group, which regained control of Air India last year after decades of public ownership, put out just six paragraphs. "Air India negotiated hard and the team is very sharp despite having no prior aviation experience. A second person who watched the billions fall into place said the Air India negotiators were "methodical, tough and very sophisticated". Plans for announcements on the anniversary of Tata's Air India takeover slipped as engine talks wore on. Analysts caution many obstacles remain to Air India's plans.
Airbus maintains jetmaker top spot despite missing goal
  + stars: | 2023-01-10 | by ( Tim Hepher | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
The France-based company said it had delivered 663 jets or a net total of 661 after allowing for two Aeroflot jets previously caught up in Western sanctions against Russia. It won 1,078 jet orders during 2022, or a net total of 820 after allowing for cancellations. Reuters reported last week that Airbus had provisionally delivered as many as 663 aircraft in 2022. Airbus last month abandoned a target of "around 700" deliveries for the year, saying the final outcome would not be materially below this. Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury blamed the shortfall on the "complexity of the operating environment" but said Airbus would continue to ramp up production.
PARIS, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Airbus (AIR.PA) delivered an estimated 66 jets in November, leaving itself a near-record challenge of 137 in December to meet its 2022 goal, though it has not excluded the possibility of trimming the target, industry sources said. A late surge pushed November higher than initially expected but failed to lift doubts over the 2022 target of “around 700” with weeks to go before the end of the year, the sources said. One industry source said the company had all but given up hope of reaching its key revenue-driving target. Missing parts forced Airbus to cut the target for deliveries to 700 from 720 in July. Reuters reported on Monday that preliminary external November data and industry sources pointed to increasing challenges in reaching the revised target.
Total: 18