War, trade and Air India crash cast cloud over Paris Air Show
A Dassault Rafale B301 aircraft is seen before the opening of the 55th International Paris Airshow at Le Bourget Airport, near Paris, France, on June 13. PHOTO: REUTERS
PARIS - War, tariffs and the Air India crash will cast a shadow over the Paris Air Show as the aerospace industry's biggest annual gathering opens on June 16.
More than 2,400 companies from 48 countries are showing off their hardware at the week-long event at Le Bourget airfield on the outskirts of Paris.
The sales rivalry between Airbus and Boeing usually drives the headlines as the world's top civilian planemakers announce many of their biggest orders at the air show.
But this year's event 'is much more complex', said Airbus chief executive Guillaume Faury, who also chairs the board of the Gifas association of French aerospace firms that organises the biennial event.
The list of challenges is growing.
Russia's war in Ukraine is stretching into its fourth year and there are fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East after Israel launched strikes on Iran on June 13, disrupting commercial flights across the region.
The world economy is expected to slow sharply after US President Donald Trump launched his tariff blitz in April.
And Boeing is facing a new crisis after the June 12 crash of a 787 Dreamliner operated by Air India in the city of Ahmedabad, which killed at least 265 people on board and on the ground.
Boeing chief executive Kelly Ortberg cancelled plans to attend the Paris Air Show to focus on the investigation into the crash.
Prior to the tragedy, Boeing had been making progress under a new leadership as the US company sought to restore trust after a series of safety and quality lapses.
Boeing and its European rival, Airbus, have also been dealing with delays in delivering aircraft due to supply chain issues.
Trade war
US President Donald Trump's tariff onslaught has added to the issues facing the industry, which relies on a global supply chain.
Mr Trump imposed 10 per cent tariffs on US imports of goods from nearly every country in April, and steeper levies on dozens of countries could kick in in July.
The Trump administration is also mulling whether to impose sector-specific tariffs of between 10 and 20 per cent on civil aircraft and parts.
The heads of Airbus and Boeing have both called for tariffs to return to zero as had been the case since a 1979 agreement.
'The entire Western aerospace industry considers that would be the best that could happen,' said Mr Faury.
More than 2,400 companies from 48 countries are showing off their hardware at the week-long International Paris Airshow.
PHOTO: REUTERS
In a recent interview with trade journal Aviation Week, Boeing's Mr Ortberg warned that tariffs are an added cost for Boeing, which has been financially weakened in recent years by production problems.
We're 'not in a position to pass those (costs) along to our customers,' he told Aviation Week. 'I'm hopeful that, as each of these country-by-country negotiations resolve, those tariffs will go away in the long run.'
The tariff problems come as the industry has yet to fully recover from effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on its supply chain.
Airbus is having trouble getting enough fuel-efficient engines for its top-selling A320 family of single-aisle jets, holding back the delivery of around 40 aircraft.
The main bottleneck is a lack of toilets for widebody aircraft, said Mr Christian Scherer, the head of Airbus's commercial aircraft division.
Fighter jets
The Paris Air Show is also about showing off the latest military hardware, at a time of conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
European countries are boosting defence budgets in the face of the Ukraine war and fears about Mr Trump's commitment to the NatoO alliance.
'The geostrategic environment has led us to bolster this aspect which was in the background in previous years,' said Gifas head Frederic Parisot.
Some 75 companies related to weapons production will be participating at the show, with military jets, helicopters and drones to be displayed.
Lockheed Martin's F-35 fifth-generation stealth multirole fighter will be featured, along with the Rafale produced by France's Dassault Aviation.
Nine Israeli companies – fewer than in the past – are expected to have displays after a French court rejected a bid by NGOs to ban them over their alleged role in the Gaza conflict. AFP
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Sydney is racing to build more homes as housing prices soar. But where is the land?
The city of 5.6 million people has a growing population and spiralling property and rental prices that have made it one of the world's least affordable cities. PHOTO: REUTERS Sydney is racing to build more homes as housing prices soar. But where is the land? SYDNEY – Australia's most populous and least affordable city Sydney has a problem: It desperately needs more housing but is struggling to find a large parcel of empty land on which to build it. The city of 5.6 million people has a growing population and spiralling property and rental prices that have made it one of the world's least affordable cities. But the authorities want to end the urban expansion into undeveloped or greenfield sites in the outer fringes, which has resulted in remote suburbs that are as far as 80km from the city centre and that often lack adequate services. Instead, local and state governments have been looking for large, open or convertible spaces within existing urban areas. Like Singapore, which will develop new housing precincts at Bukit Timah Turf City and the former Keppel Golf Course, Sydney planners have been on the lookout for available parcels that could be redeveloped. Turf City is set to have 15,000 to 20,000 public and private homes over the next 20 to 30 years, while the Keppel site will have about 9,000 homes. But the authorities in Sydney are struggling to find similar sites. The New South Wales Government proposed converting a racecourse, called Rosehill Gardens, into a 'mini-city' of 25,000 new homes as well as a train station. The 140-year-old racecourse spans 57ha of prime real estate, about 25km west of the city centre. The government offered A$5 billion (S$4.2 billion) – about 128 times the value of the land – to buy the racecourse from the Australian Turf Club, which owns and operates it. But the club's members voted against the proposal on May 27 in a 56 to 44 per cent vote, due to a sentimental attachment to the racecourse and concerns its loss would damage the city's racing industry. The government is now searching for a 'Plan B' to try to meet its target of building 75,000 new homes a year, to keep up with population growth and improve affordability. Various proposals have emerged, including the site of the 2000 Olympics, an inner city port, and a dilapidated former main road. NSW Premier Chris Minns on June 10 warned that Sydney was losing younger residents who could not afford to live in the city. 'Housing persistently is our biggest challenge, not just in the economy but in terms of intergenerational fairness and equity and giving young people an opportunity,' he said in a speech to business leaders. 'A city without young people is a city without a future, and the leading reason for that is we're not building enough houses.' Sydney has the most 'impossibly unaffordable' housing in the world after Hong Kong, according to the most recent Demographia International Housing Affordability report in 2024. The average prices for houses and apartments in Sydney are A$1.5 million and A$860,000, respectively, while the average rental costs A$775 a week. Associate Professor Laurence Troy, an expert on urban renewal from Sydney University, told The Straits Times that the government should compulsorily acquire the racecourse, which was one of the few remaining brownfield – underused or abandoned -– sites that could be converted into large-scale housing. 'Clearly we still need to build more housing because the population is still growing,' he said. 'We are basically running out of brownfield sites. If Rosehill is of such strategic importance, why is the government letting the land holders hold them hostage?' But Mr Minns has so far ruled out compulsorily acquiring the racecourse. A potential option could be to expand housing at the site of the Sydney Olympics, a 430ha site about 19km west of the city centre. The site currently has a mix of sports and entertainment venues, parklands, commercial developments and housing. The government is planning to build 13,000 homes on the site by 2050, but is set to fall far short of its target of 10,700 homes by 2030. The lack of development at the site has been blamed on delays due to toxic waste contamination at the site, which was formerly an industrial area, as well as insufficient transport options. Another option could be to shut the last operating port in Sydney harbour at Glebe Island near the city centre and replace the site with housing. But business groups say the port is crucial for the transport of building materials, and its closure could add to construction costs. Another proposal is to develop housing along Parramatta Road, a main road that is being superseded by new underground roadways. But experts say an impediment will be pollution from the road traffic, which could pose health problems. Professor Nicole Gurran, an urban planning expert from Sydney University, said that adding to the housing supply in Sydney did not necessarily depend on findin g a 'sugar hit' such as a racecourse. 'We have abundant zoned sites that are appropriate for housing development,' she said. However, the authorities largely left it to market forces to instigate construction. In recent years, she said, high interest rates and construction cost s have discouraged developers. 'While prices are stagnant and people are struggling to get loans, and with affordability so poor and banks so cautious to lend, it is hard to get projects off the ground,' she said. Professor Troy also said the government should focus on the type of housing it wants to build, rather than depending on the creation of a quick-fix 'mini-city'. Instead of building high-rise towers, which are less popular with families and property buyers, or large houses in greenfield sites, Sydney should build more medium-density housing – such as terraces and low-rise apartments – which are popular and can increase the city's overall housing density. 'We need to look at the spaces we have and think about how we can do it better,' he said. Jonathan Pearlman writes about Australia and the Pacific for The Straits Times. Based in Sydney, he explains matters on Australia and the Pacific to readers outside the Oceania region. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Trump reports more than US$600 million in income from crypto, golf, licensing fees
Donald Trump reported more than US$600 million in income from crypto, golf clubs, licensing and other ventures in a public financial disclosure report released on Friday (Jun 13) that provided a glimpse of the vast business holdings of America's billionaire president. The annual financial disclosure form, which appeared to cover the 2024 calendar year, shows the president's push into crypto added substantially to his wealth but he also reported large fees from developments and revenues from his other businesses. Overall, the president reported assets worth at least US$1.6 billion, a Reuters calculation shows. While Trump has said he has put his businesses into a trust managed by his children, the disclosures show how income from those sources still ultimately accrues to the president - something that has opened him to accusations of conflicts of interest. Some of his businesses in areas such as crypto, for example, benefit from US policy shifts under him and have become a source of criticism. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The financial disclosure was signed on Jun 13 and did not state the time period it covered. The details of the cryptocurrency listings, as well as other information in the disclosure, suggest it was through the end of December 2024, which would exclude most of the money raised by the family's cryptocurrency ventures. Given the speed at which the Trump family has made deals during his ascent to the presidency, the filing is already a time capsule of sorts, capturing a period when the family was just starting to get into crypto but was largely still in the world of real estate deals and golf clubs. A meme coin released earlier this year by the president - $TRUMP - alone has earned an estimated US$320 million in fees, although it's not publicly known how that amount has been divided between a Trump-controlled entity and its partners. In addition to the meme coin fees, the Trump family has raked in more than US$400 million from World Liberty Financial, a decentralised finance company. The Trump family is involved, also, with a bitcoin mining operation and digital asset exchange-traded funds. In the disclosures, Trump reported US$57.35 million from token sales at World Liberty. He also reported holding 15.75 billion governance tokens in the venture. TRUMP MEDIA The wealth of the Republican businessman-turned-politician ranges from crypto to real estate, and a large part on paper is tied up in his stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of social media platform Truth Social. Besides assets and revenues from his business ventures, the president reported at least US$12 million in income, including through interest and dividends, from passive investments totalling at least US$211 million, a Reuters calculation shows. His biggest investments were in alternative fund manager Blue Owl Capital Corp and in government bond funds managed by Charles Schwab and Invesco. The disclosure often only gave ranges for the value of his assets and income; Reuters used the lower amount listed, meaning the total value of his assets and income was almost certainly higher. The disclosure showed income from various assets including Trump's properties in Florida. Trump's three golf-focused resorts in the state - Jupiter, Doral and West Palm Beach - plus his nearby private members' club at Mar-a-Lago generated at least US$217.7 million in income, according to the filing. Trump National Doral, the expansive Miami-area golf hub known for its Blue Monster course, was the family's single largest income source at US$110.4 million. The income figures provided are essentially revenues, not net profits after subtracting costs. The disclosure underlined the global nature of the Trump family business, listing income of US$5 million in license fees from a development in Vietnam, US$10 million in development fees from a project in India and almost US$16 million in licensing fees for a Dubai project. Trump collected royalty money, also, from a variety of deals - US$1.3 million from the Greenwood Bible (its website describes it as "the only Bible officially endorsed by Lee Greenwood and President Trump"); US$2.8 million from Trump Watches, and US$2.5 million from Trump Sneakers and Fragrances. Trump listed US$1.16 million in income from his NFTs - digital trading cards in his likeness - while First Lady Melania Trump earned around US$216,700 from license fees on her own NFT collection.


CNA
4 hours ago
- CNA
Boeing resumes China deliveries with 787-9 jet to Juneyao Airlines: Report
China and the US concluded two days of negotiations in London on Tuesday to resolve key trade issues in the two superpowers' bruising tariff war, where negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework covering tariff rates. On Monday, a new Boeing 737 MAX painted in the livery of Xiamen Airlines landed in China, adding to signs that the planemaker was resuming deliveries to China. The country represents about 10 per cent of Boeing's commercial backlog and is an important and growing aviation market. Boeing had previously said customers in China would not take delivery of new planes due to the tariffs and that it was looking to resell potentially dozens of aircraft.