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News
07/07/2002
Multi-million
dollar Airbus deal for Air Malta
All the mounting speculation on which company was going to provide
Air Malta with its new leased fleet, came to an end on Friday
with the announcement that the national airline concluded a multi-million
dollar agreement with French-based Airbus Industrie.
At the press conference Air Malta Chairman Louis Grech addressed
the controversy that had been building in some sections of the
print media on the intense competition between Boeing and Airbus
for the contract.
Mr Grech said that the criteria adopted by the company during
the selection process were purely technical and financial. He
adamantly excluded any political pressure to opt for one international
company rather than the other.
"Both Boeing and Airbus were running neck and neck for
quite some time but in the final package Airbus came out better,
and this was unanimously approved by the Air Malta board and other
independent consultants," Mr Grech reiterated.
Asked to make public the size of the deal, Mr Grech would not
reveal the amount citing commercial reasons for doing so. "I
would like to publish the figures so that everybody could see
what a good deal the company has brokered, but it does not make
any commercial sense to do so," Mr Grech told the media.
The agreement was brokered with the International Lease Finance
Corporation of the US for the renewal of Air Maltas fleet
over a four-and-a-half year period. ILFC is an international lessor
company and offered Air Malta a choice between Airbus and Boeing.
The deal sees Air Malta disposing of its current fleet and acquiring
a new fleet on a lease basis. The objectives of the deal were
to generate immediate cash for the airline, protect the airlines
current assets from premature depreciation, acquire a low-cost
but high-quality fleet and improve the airlines competitive
base.
The lease back from ILFC involves Air Maltas own two A320-200s
(Airbus) and three B737-300s (Boeing), and the lease of 12 new
aircraft for a term of twelve years each, which will be A320 family
aircraft. Air Maltas current aircraft will be leased for
a period of three years and will be phased out of the fleet on
the way.
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