Airbus confirms $9.4bn AirAsia order in boost to Welsh factory
EUROPEAN planemaker Airbus said yesterday that Malaysian group AirAsia was the customer behind a previously announced order for 100 A320 aircraft worth around $9.4bn (£5.8bn) at list prices.
The deal, which provides AirAsia with an additional 64 A320neo and 36 A320ceo aircraft, was formally unveiled at Airbus’s wing assembly plant in Broughton, Wales, in the presence of Prime Minister David Cameron.
The contract will safeguard 1,500 Airbus jobs in Britain and 7,500 in the group’s wider supply chain, Cameron’s office said.
“This is excellent news and a tremendous boost for the workforce and for UK manufacturing,” Cameron said in a statement.
“Today’s announcement demonstrates the strength of the UK aerospace sector and the important role it plays in growing and rebalancing our economy.”
Alongside AirAsia’s chief executive Tony Fernandes, Cameron toured the Broughton plant, which employs over 5,000 people and will be making the wings of the aircraft.
Other major parts are made in France, Germany and Spain.
The announcement comes a day after data showed that the number of people in work in Britain hit a record high in November, offering some relief to a government struggling with unpopular austerity measures and a sluggish economy. The contract also reaffirms AirAsia, Asia’s largest low-cost carrier, as the world’s largest A320 customer by number of aircraft ordered.
“We have just bought 100 planes which makes a total of 475. To meet the amazing demand in Asia,” Fernandes wrote on Twitter.