This whole A400M issue is just a fiasco. While I actually strongly favor the capability to produce large transport aircraft in europe, we are at a point were even EADS/Airbus should perhaps feel some consequences. And the airlift issue is a really pressing one for europes armed forces.
MoD: Britain Wants A400M, 'But Not at Any Cost'
By andrew chuter
Published: 13 May 2009 14:29
LONDON - Airbus Military has told the British government it expects the delayed A400M airlifter will make its maiden flight no later than February, the Ministry of Defence reported May 13.
In a response to a recent report on procurement from the Parliament's Defence Committee, the MoD said the delay means the earliest in-service date for the aircraft with the Royal Air Force would be 2014.
The U.K. remains committed to A400M, but not at any cost," the MoD said in a statement. "We are considering all potential outcomes."
First deliveries of the A400M to lead customer France were originally scheduled this year, but development has been bogged down by a string of setbacks with the aircraft and its turboprop engines.
A seven-nation partnership - Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain and Turkey - signed a deal with Airbus in 2003 to develop the aircraft. These countries and export customers Malaysia and South Africa have ordered some 192 aircraft.
The partner nations are midway through a three-month moratorium imposed at the end of March as they seek to find a way forward on the program with Airbus in a bid to stop some countries from heading for the exit.
Britain has been touted by some as the most likely nation to cancel the program, turning to the United States to acquire airlifters instead.
The MoD response said it was considering a number of options to close the capability gap resulting from the delay, including "an extension to the life of the C-130K fleet and leasing or procuring additional C-17 and C-130J capacity."
The U.K. Royal Air Force has been looking to bolster its C-17 fleet with another two aircraft regardless of the outcome of the A400M deliberations. The original plan was to buy one aircraft this year and another next year. With the MoD's equipment budget under huge pressure, though, it is unclear whether that plan remains in place.
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The UK made another step towards procuring the third tranche of Eurofighter aircraft. Hopefully, we can now move along and finalize that decission for all four nations. It would be a big and necessary step for the technology base and self reliance, IMO.
Britain To Buy 3rd Batch of Typhoons
By andrew chuter
Published: 14 May 2009 06:48
LONDON - Britain has confirmed it will proceed with the purchase of a third batch of Typhoon combat aircraft. The future of the Ministry of Defence's involvement in the pan-European program has been in doubt for months as it attempts to cut equipment spending to match its budget.
The MoD said it hoped to sign the contract for the third and final batch of aircraft, known as Tranche 3, later this year once negotiations with Typhoon builder Eurofighter had been completed.
Defence Secretary John Hutton said in a statement May 14 that the final decision is subject to satisfactory negotiations over the cost of procurement and support of the aircraft.
"We look forward to receiving an affordable bid from European industry that will allow us to proceed," said Hutton.
The MoD said it will now initial the ministerial agreement which the partner nations Germany, Italy and Spain signed April 2.
The agreement contains a statement of principles, including the need to achieve significant through-life savings. The statement is also believed to endorse an arrangement which will allow the Tranche 3 buy to be split into two parts as well as allow the British to include some of the 2007 Saudi Typhoon export contract as part of its Tranche 3 commitment.
The announcement was given a guarded welcome by Society of British Aerospace Companies (SBAC) chief executive Ian Gooden
"We are pleased that the Government has confirmed its intention to participate in tranche 3," Gooden said. "This is a significant step to confirm the future of the program and the capabilities that it will provide for our armed forces.
However, it does not remove fully some of the uncertainty over the long-term future of this program, which supports thousands of U.K. jobs, particularly in the North West of England."
At peak production the program help sustains around 16,000 jobs in the British aerospace industry.
The British have several times tried to wriggle out of the legally binding commitment signed by the partner nations in 1997 to purchase a total of 620 aircraft.
Withdrawal would have cost the British billions of pounds in penalty payments and a huge loss in workshare on the program. Britain has a 37 percent share in Typhoon work.
The irony is the tightly worded contract was drawn up at the insistence of the British in order to stop the Germans pulling out of the program.
Now, however, Germany is setting the pace. It is pushing to have the deal tied up in time to present its budget proposals to parliament for approval by late June ahead of lawmakers breaking for the summer.
The fear among industry executives is that with German elections due in September, failure to get the deal okayed next month could delay the program start for several months, sparking a gap in production between the Tranche 2 aircraft now being assembled and the start of Tranche 3.
Executives reckon a break in production could cost as much as 150 million euros a month.
The four partners originally agreed to acquire 236 Typhoons from Eurofighter under the Tranche 3 procurement plan. That is now expected to be divided up with 124 aircraft being ordered in Tranche 3A and the remainder at a later date in 3B.
Britain's Tranche 3 commitment is for 88 aircraft to bring its total purchase up to 232 fighters for the Royal Air Force.
Eurofighter partner BAE Systems sealed a deal with Saudi Arabia to sell 72 Typhoon in 2007. The other industrial partners are EADS and Finmeccanica
The first of 24 Tranche 2 aircraft originally destined for the RAF, but diverted to meet the Saudi Arabia requirement, is scheduled to be handed over next month. The remainder of the aircraft are planned to be assembled in Saudi Arabia.
Nigel Whitehead, the group managing director programs & support, BAE Systems, said he was delighted the government had confirmed go ahead on Tranche 3 production
"This paves the way for a swift conclusion of the negotiations that will enable the contract to be finalized," said Whitehead. "The Typhoon program meets an essential military requirement for the U.K. and is the key driver of the world class capability which exists in this country's military aerospace industry."