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Post by Jeff on Jul 28, 2019 18:50:24 GMT
The deal could include as many as 50-70 Canadian-designed A220 jets, formerly known as CSeries, to replace Air France’s aging fleet of roughly 50 A318 and A319 aircraft, they said.
Air France is also expected to pick the A320neo family to replace approximately 40 earlier versions of the Airbus A320 that are up to 18 years old.
A spokeswoman for Franco-Dutch parent Air France-KLM (AIRF.PA) said: “Air France is pursuing work on its medium-haul fleet renewal. No decision has been taken at this stage.”
Airbus declined to comment on the deal, which is expected to be formally discussed at an end-month Air France-KLM board meeting.
The expected deal marks a rebound for Airbus after rival Boeing (BA.N) poached part of the fleet of British Airways owner IAG (ICAG.L) at last month’s Paris Airshow.
That deal caught Airbus off guard, though in the longer term sources say it may also have eased the European planemaker’s anxieties over the grounding of Boeing’s 737 MAX following the Ethiopian Airlines crash in March.
Airbus privately hopes the MAX will survive the crisis to avoid a costly race to develop all-new aircraft and to ease the prospect of a radical change in certification rules.
The anticipated Air France deal also illustrates Airbus’s recent deliberate effort to boost A220 sales by packaging deals together with its benchmark A320, industry sources said.
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