Airbus seals deal with Iran for sale of 100 aircraft
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Airbus seals deal with Iran for sale of 100 aircraft

Airbus seals deal with Iran for sale of 100 aircraft

Iran said earlier this week that it had finalised the deal, which is roughly split equally between narrow body and wide body aircraft

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Airbus signed a firm contract on Thursday for the sale of 100 aircraft to Iran Air, as Tehran and Western companies race to re-open trade almost a year after sanctions against Iran were lifted.

Airbus said the contract, which Iran flagged earlier this week, covered 46 Airbus A320 planes, 38 A330 planes and 16 A350 XWB aircraft, with deliveries due to begin in early 2017.

The head of Iran Air was quoted on Sunday as saying the value of the contract would not be more than $10bn.

Read: Iran to acquire 100 Airbus aircraft but no A380s in revised deal

The deal, part of plans to renew the airline’s decaying fleet, comes against a backdrop of criticism by conservatives in Washington and Tehran of last year’s international agreement to allow such business after decades of sanctions.

Airbus said the deal was subject to US government Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) export licences, which were granted in September and November 2016.

Sanctions were lifted in January but were followed by months of regulatory delays, and Iran has only just finalised a deal to buy 80 jets from Airbus’ US rival Boeing.

Read: Iran Air to buy 80 planes from Boeing

“This is a landmark agreement not only because it paves the way for Iran Air’s fleet renewal,” said Fabrice Bregier, Airbus President and Chief Executive Officer.

“Our overall accord includes pilot training, airport operations and air traffic management so this agreement is also a significant first step in the overall modernisation of Iran’s commercial aviation sector,” added Bregier.

The timetable suggests the first Airbus A321 could arrive before the January 20 inauguration of US President-elect Donald Trump, who has opposed the deal to lift most sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear activities, and well ahead of Iranian presidential elections in May next year.

That could provide a boost to the government of President Hassan Rouhani and allow Airbus to find a home for some jets abandoned or deferred by other customers due to economic problems in South America and elsewhere, analysts say.

Airbus shares were down 0.8 per cent in mid-session trading, with the stock up by around 1 percent since the start of 2016.

In October, Airbus Group posted lower than expected third-quarter profits, although the company broadly maintained its full-year financial forecasts.


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