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Qatar Airways sues Airbus in A350 jet
damage dispute
PARIS (Reuters) - Qatar Airways said on Monday it had started proceedings
in a UK court against planemaker Airbus in a bid to resolve a dispute over skin
flaws on A350 passenger jets, bringing the two sides closer to a rare legal
showdown over aviation safety.
The companies have been locked in a row for months over damage, including
blistered paint and corrosion to a sub-layer of lightning protection, which
Qatar Airways says has now led to the grounding of 21 A350 jets by its domestic
regulator.
Airbus insists the carbon-composite passenger jets are safe to fly despite
some "surface degradation," while Qatar Airways says it is too early to say
whether safety has been compromised.
The dispute came to a head last week when Airbus, in what experts called an
unprecedented move, accused the Gulf airline of misrepresenting the problem as a
safety issue and threatened to call for an independent legal assessment.
On Monday, Qatar Airways hit back, saying it had taken its complaint
against Airbus to the High Court in London.
"We have sadly failed in all our attempts to reach a constructive solution
with Airbus in relation to the accelerated surface degradation condition
adversely impacting the Airbus A350 aircraft," it said in a statement. "Qatar
Airways has therefore been left with no alternative but to seek a rapid
resolution of this dispute via the courts."
In a statement late on Monday, Airbus confirmed it had received a formal
legal claim. "Airbus intends to vigorously defend its position," it said.
A spokesman earlier reiterated it had found the cause of the problem and
was working with customers and Europe's safety regulator, which has said it has
not identified a safety issue.
Qatar Airways denies that the surface flaws - which witnesses say have left
some of the jets with a pock-marked appearance - are properly understood and
said on Monday that it wanted Airbus to mount a "thorough investigation".
JETS GROUNDED
Several industry executives said such a public legal fight between two of
aviation's leading players is unprecedented.
The row widened this month when documents seen by Reuters revealed at least
five other airlines in varying climates had complained about paint or other
surface problems since 2016. Airbus had until recently maintained the problem
was focused on paint on Qatar's A350s, based in the Gulf.
Reuters also first reported that Airbus was looking at changing the
anti-lightning system.
The planemaker has said it is proposing interim solutions ranging from
repairs to repainting and has accused Qatar Airways of ignoring those proposals
without reasonable justification.
Qatar Airways reiterated on Monday it could not be sure whether proposed
repairs would work without deeper analysis. Its chief executive has questioned
why Airbus is still working on a solution if a reliable fix is already
available.
The 21 grounded jets represent 40% of its current fleet of A350s, for which
it was the launch customer with the biggest order. Other airlines still operate
the jet, saying its airworthiness is not affected by what they term cosmetic
issues.
The row meanwhile looks set to cost Airbus a big Qatar order for a new A350
freighter version. It received the first firm order for the model on Monday,
confirming a previously tentative order for four planes from France's CMA
CGM.
Qatar Airways Chief Executive Akbar Al Baker told the South China Morning
Post last week he had previously looked at placing a large order for the cargo
A350. Sources now expect Boeing to win the order to replace Qatar's 34-35
freighters.
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