PARIS (REUTERS) – Airbus plane output will be 40 per cent lower for two years compared to pre-crisis plans, its chief executive said in remarks published on Monday (June 29), underscoring the threat to jobs as it draws up rapid restructuring plans due to a travel slump.
Reuters reported on June 3 that Airbus was looking to hold underlying jet output at 40 per cent below pre-coronavirus pandemic plans for two years as the basis for the restructuring.
“For the next two years – 2020/21 – we assume that production and deliveries will be 40 per cent lower than originally planned,” CEO Guillaume Faury told Die Welt newspaper, saying output would return to normal by 2025.
The latest figures do not imply any immediate new production cut after Airbus reduced output by between 33 per cent and 42 per cent to new output levels that it plans to keep under review.
Industry sources say the 40 per cent cut in core or “single-aisle equivalent” output is expected to drive a widely anticipated restructuring of the company’s workforce, details of which Airbus has promised to announce by the end of July.
Airbus declined to comment on internal schedules.
Mr Faury did not spell out any restructuring details but left no doubt that current temporary furloughs would not be enough.
“It’s a brutal fact, but we must do it. It is about the necessary adjustment to the massive drop in production. It’s about securing our future,” Mr Faury told Die Welt.
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