Menú
Inicio
Visitar el Sitio Zona Militar
Foros
Nuevos mensajes
Buscar en los foros
Qué hay de nuevo
Nuevos mensajes
Última actividad
Miembros
Visitantes actuales
Entrar
Registrarse
Novedades
Buscar
Buscar
Buscar sólo en títulos
Por:
Nuevos mensajes
Buscar en los foros
Menú
Entrar
Registrarse
Inicio
Foros
Fuerzas Aéreas
Noticias y Actualidad de las Fuerzas Aéreas
A400M: primeras pruebas en tierra del motor
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
Estás usando un navegador obsoleto. No se pueden mostrar estos u otros sitios web correctamente.
Se debe actualizar o usar un
navegador alternativo
.
Responder al tema
Mensaje
<blockquote data-quote="paulo" data-source="post: 518592" data-attributes="member: 5327"><p><strong>A400M Contract 'Mission Impossible'</strong></p><p>15 January 2009</p><p></p><p></p><p>The head of planemaker Airbus called the way the delayed A400M airlifter project was conceived a 'recipe for disaster' and said the €20bn ($26.3bn) fixed contract would make rivals weep.</p><p></p><p>Parent EADS last week called for changes in the way Europe's largest single military procurement deal is carried out and requested more time to carry out plane tests. The move followed delays which EADS blames on a group of engine makers.</p><p></p><p>"We want to continue the programme, but we want to continue it in a way that ensures success for the customers and success for the industry," Airbus chief executive Tom Enders said on Thursday. "With the current contractual and organisational set-up we will not get there; this is a recipe for disaster".</p><p></p><p>He added: "It is mission impossible."</p><p></p><p>Enders suggested the project designed to renew transport capacity for seven Nato countries needed a significant overhaul. It is two years late, but EADS wants to add another year to stabilise the project and says it was unfairly saddled with all the risk.</p><p></p><p>"It would be irresponsible to continue on the current track, so our task is not to put the programme back on track but to put it on a new, solid and realistic footing in terms of the schedule, the organisation and finance," Enders said.</p><p></p><p><strong>Britain this week said a three to four-year delay was unacceptable.</strong></p><p></p><p>EADS faces steep penalties under the contract. It was drawn up initially on purely commercial terms, which is considered unusual for a military deal.</p><p></p><p><strong>EADS chief executive Louis Gallois said on Tuesday the company had made an error by accepting the A400M deal in 2003.</strong></p><p></p><p>Critics of the project say it was distorted by political meddling, particularly in the choice of a European engine consortium, but Germany has pressured EADS to honour the deal.</p><p></p><p>Enders said US rivals, many of whom get paid on guaranteed cost-plus contracts, would be appalled at the deal.</p><p></p><p><strong>"Our American colleagues would run away crying if they were obliged to step up into the A400M contract," he said.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>So far at least, one US contractor seems to be celebrating.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>Lockheed Martin expects to sell more of its competing C-130J transport planes as a result of the A400M delays, a senior company executive told Reuters earlier this month.</strong></p><p></p><p>EADS has taken €1.7bn in charges on the A400M and is expected to add more once negotiations over the programme's future with member countries have provided firm direction.</p><p></p><p>By Tim Hepher and Kerstin Doerr, Reuters.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="paulo, post: 518592, member: 5327"] [B]A400M Contract 'Mission Impossible'[/B] 15 January 2009 The head of planemaker Airbus called the way the delayed A400M airlifter project was conceived a 'recipe for disaster' and said the €20bn ($26.3bn) fixed contract would make rivals weep. Parent EADS last week called for changes in the way Europe's largest single military procurement deal is carried out and requested more time to carry out plane tests. The move followed delays which EADS blames on a group of engine makers. "We want to continue the programme, but we want to continue it in a way that ensures success for the customers and success for the industry," Airbus chief executive Tom Enders said on Thursday. "With the current contractual and organisational set-up we will not get there; this is a recipe for disaster". He added: "It is mission impossible." Enders suggested the project designed to renew transport capacity for seven Nato countries needed a significant overhaul. It is two years late, but EADS wants to add another year to stabilise the project and says it was unfairly saddled with all the risk. "It would be irresponsible to continue on the current track, so our task is not to put the programme back on track but to put it on a new, solid and realistic footing in terms of the schedule, the organisation and finance," Enders said. [B]Britain this week said a three to four-year delay was unacceptable.[/B] EADS faces steep penalties under the contract. It was drawn up initially on purely commercial terms, which is considered unusual for a military deal. [B]EADS chief executive Louis Gallois said on Tuesday the company had made an error by accepting the A400M deal in 2003.[/B] Critics of the project say it was distorted by political meddling, particularly in the choice of a European engine consortium, but Germany has pressured EADS to honour the deal. Enders said US rivals, many of whom get paid on guaranteed cost-plus contracts, would be appalled at the deal. [B]"Our American colleagues would run away crying if they were obliged to step up into the A400M contract," he said. So far at least, one US contractor seems to be celebrating. Lockheed Martin expects to sell more of its competing C-130J transport planes as a result of the A400M delays, a senior company executive told Reuters earlier this month.[/B] EADS has taken €1.7bn in charges on the A400M and is expected to add more once negotiations over the programme's future with member countries have provided firm direction. By Tim Hepher and Kerstin Doerr, Reuters. [/QUOTE]
Insertar citas…
Verificación
Guerra desarrollada entre Argentina y el Reino Unido en 1982
Responder
Inicio
Foros
Fuerzas Aéreas
Noticias y Actualidad de las Fuerzas Aéreas
A400M: primeras pruebas en tierra del motor
Este sitio usa cookies. Para continuar usando este sitio, se debe aceptar nuestro uso de cookies.
Aceptar
Más información.…
Arriba