Tuesday, September 07, 2010

India may use Obama visit to rekindle Dreamliner debate

New York: India could use the upcoming visit of US President Barack Obama as leverage to put pressure on Boeing over its delay in delivering 787 Dreamliner aircraft to Air India, says Union Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel. Speaking to Business Standard in New York, Patel said President Obama’s scheduled visit to India in November was a useful opportunity to exert pressure on the Seattle-based aircraft maker, from which Air India has demanded $840 million in compensation for the delays.
Air India’s parent company Nacil had placed orders for 27 of the Dreamliner aircraft in 2006, and was originally supposed to get delivery of the first plane in 2008.
Boeing announced on August 27 that it would postpone the start of its delivery of the long-haul aircraft to customers once again, to the first quarter of 2011. The deliveries to Air India are expected to be pushed back to the second quarter of 2011.
Even before that announcement, Air India had increased its demand for compensation from Boeing, from the $710 million it sought in January 2009, to about $840 million. The airline has also asked for the return of its pre-delivery payment of nearly a quarter of a billion dollars, along with interest.
Patel, who was in New York for the launch of the Nationalist Congress Party’s North America chapter, said the repeated delays in delivery of the Dreamliner had severely affected the expansion plans of Air India, as well as replacement plans for older aircraft.
07/09/10 Indira Kannan/Business Standard
To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline

0 comments:

Post a Comment