logo
Aircraft leasing giant calls on Trump to expand zero-tariff plane pact

Aircraft leasing giant calls on Trump to expand zero-tariff plane pact

AerCap CEO Aengus Kelly said the US would gradually cede aerospace manufacturing in any prolonged trade war. (Ardlinn pic)
PARIS : The head of the world's largest aircraft leasing company has called on US President Donald Trump to renegotiate and expand a duty-free trade agreement for the aircraft industry to include newcomers like China in a new lobbying twist to the trade war.
The aerospace industry has for weeks been pushing for exemptions to tariffs introduced by Trump, or to any foreign retaliation, and wants a return to the status quo represented by a 1979 deal between some 30 nations to ban tariffs on jetliners.
However, Aengus Kelly, chief executive of AerCap, said the current trade crisis also represented a chance to expand and improve the decades-old pact to ensure a level playing field under what he termed a 'Trump trade accord' for aviation.
'It would be a fantastic win for the president if he could enhance and significantly improve the 1979 aerospace treaty, which has only got (33) countries signed up to anything, while countries like India and China are not in it,' Kelly said.
The call for a Trump-led renegotiation marks a shift of emphasis by the aviation industry, which has so far focused mainly on restoring the existing tariff-free regime.
Dublin-based AerCap is the world's largest aircraft owner.
'If the president could convince other countries to join this zero-for-zero tariff agreement, that'll be an enormous win for high-tech manufacturing and engineering jobs in the US,' Kelly told Reuters in an interview.
The White House said it was in regular contact with industry groups about trade policy.
'The only special interest guiding President Trump's decision-making, however, is the best interest of the American people,' spokesman Kush Desai said.
A coalition of aerospace companies was expected to meet officials at the commerce department later today.
US Surplus
The Agreement on Trade in Civil Aircraft came into force in 1980 and eliminated tariffs on aircraft and parts.
It is one of a handful of side deals that survived from an earlier round of trade talks when the World Trade Organization was formed in 1995.
Current members include the US and EU – home to Boeing and Airbus – while China, India and several other fast-growing aerospace nations, such as South Korea and Turkey only have observer status.
Brazil is in the process of becoming a full member, but Mexico – with its growing supply chain – is not a signatory.
The AIA aerospace association has said the 1979 pact supports a US$75 billion trade surplus for the US aerospace sector, which includes manufacturing giants like GE Aerospace and RTX.
Analysts say a renegotiation would not be simple, however.
Trump has shown a preference for bilateral deals over broad alliances from trade to security and a new aircraft pact would include nations already embroiled in a larger jigsaw of trade disputes, making it harder to isolate specific issues.
Washington did however grant a carve-out to jet engines in a recent trade deal with Britain, benefiting Rolls-Royce.
The call for an expanded pact comes as China is increasing production of a home-grown competitor to Boeing and Airbus, the C919, though it has yet to win Western approvals.
Boeing deliveries to China were effectively frozen after the two largest economies imposed triple-digit tariffs on each other last month, before agreeing a pause in trade tensions.
Trump also briefly floated heavier tariffs on the EU, which has placed Boeing on a list of possible reprisals.
Kelly said the US would gradually cede aerospace manufacturing in any prolonged trade war.
'With very high tariffs, if they're retaliatory, then of course we're going to see the rest of the world move over time towards Airbus,' he said, though 'It won't happen overnight,' he added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oil edges up as geopolitical concerns and weaker dollar support
Oil edges up as geopolitical concerns and weaker dollar support

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Oil edges up as geopolitical concerns and weaker dollar support

JAKARTA/SINGAPORE (Reuters): Oil edged up on Tuesday, in the face of rising geopolitical tensions as the war in Ukraine ramped up despite peace talks in Turkey and Iran was set to reject a US nuclear deal proposal that would be key to easing sanctions on the major oil producer. Crude had gained nearly 3% on Monday after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, known as OPEC+, kept its July output hike at 411,000 barrels per day, the same as earlier months and less than some in the market had feared. Brent crude futures gained 45 cents, or 0.7%, to US$65.08 a barrel by 1154 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 31 cents, or 0.5%, to US$62.83. "Risk premia have filtered back into the oil price following deep Ukraine strikes on Russia over the weekend," said analyst Harry Tchilinguirian of Onyx Capital Group. "But more importantly for the barrel count, there is the to and fro between the U.S. and Iran regarding uranium enrichment." Ukraine and Russia at the weekend ramped up the war with one of the biggest drone battles of their conflict, a Russian highway bridge blown up over a passenger train and an attack on nuclear-capable bombers deep in Siberia. Iran, meanwhile, was poised to reject a U.S. proposal to end a decades-old nuclear dispute, an Iranian diplomat said on Monday, saying it fails to address Tehran's interests or soften Washington's stance on uranium enrichment. If the nuclear talks fail, it could mean continued sanctions on Iran, which would limit Iranian supply and be supportive of oil prices. Further support came from the weak dollar. The dollar index held near six-week lows as investors weighed the outlook for U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policy and its potential to hurt growth and stoke inflation. A weaker U.S. currency makes dollar-priced commodities such as oil less expensive for holders of other currencies. "Crude oil prices continue to rise, supported by the weakening dollar," said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova. Adding to supply worries, wildfires burning in Canada's province of Alberta have affected more than 344,000 barrels per day of oil sands production, or about 7% of the country's overall crude output, according to Reuters calculations. Further price support could come if forecasts of a drop in U.S. crude inventories are realised in the latest round of weekly supply reports. (Additional reporting by Michele Pek and Anjana Anil; Editing by David Evans and Susan Fenton) - Reuters

‘The Beautiful Game' falls for AI's charms as tech revolutionises football's future
‘The Beautiful Game' falls for AI's charms as tech revolutionises football's future

Malay Mail

timean hour ago

  • Malay Mail

‘The Beautiful Game' falls for AI's charms as tech revolutionises football's future

PARIS, June 4 — Sport has been unable to resist the surge of artificial intelligence and the biggest one of them all, football, is benefitting from data that AI can supply and the human eye cannot. Warsaw-based Vision, which says it is unique in gathering data by using AI, has two immediate goals — women's football and re-igniting Generation Z's interest in watching sports, their co-founder Pawel Osterreicher told AFP. The company — which numbers the South American football body Conmebol and their Central American counterparts Concacaf among their clients — are able to capture data from matches from just a single camera angle. This makes gathering data much cheaper, as players do not need to wear any technology, and there is no need for multiple cameras to capture the data, thanks to AI. Vision's programme — which was used at last year's Copa America — was recently awarded Fifa certification. Osterreicher says AI can provide data on aspects of football that humans cannot, such as acceleration, passing lanes, heat maps and zones of control. He said the data can help the 'Goliaths' as well as the 'Davids', just as it did by assisting in second-tier side Wisla Krakow's giantkilling exploits on their way to lifting the Polish Cup in 2024. However, despite this run of success the 36-year-old says he and his colleagues are not aiming for the men's World Cup or this year's men's World Club Cup. Instead they are targeting covering the inaugural women's World Club Cup in 2028, which fits in nicely with another of their aims, to halt the haemorrhage of Generation Z — people born from 1997 to 2012 — watching sports. 'What we see right now in the sports market in general is that women's sport grows at a much faster pace,' he said. 'Of course, from a lower base, but a much faster pace than men's sport. 'You can argue that men's is saturated. But one of the best investment opportunities and development opportunities in sports are currently women's franchises, women's sport and all the media around it.' 'More with less' Osterreicher says this could be a way to reboot the interest of younger viewers 'who are flocking away'. The young 'expect to get excited immediately... I have five seconds and if not, I'm swiping away. 'So women's sport is also potentially an opportunity for sport to attract younger audiences because maybe it's just too boring just to watch all the same setups, all the same guys,' he said. 'So lots of investment is being directed in women's sports and from our perspective as well. 'We're agnostic. Human is a human. We capture data on humans, not on particular genders. 'But definitely, more and more customers are asking us to just cover women's leagues.' Osterreicher — who along with his colleagues set up the company five years ago — says he is a 'realist', adding not everyone should use the technology as it is a 'complex thing, it requires certain resources'. Nevertheless Wisla's cup victory showed that you 'can do more with less'. 'You can have a smaller team wisely using technology and then beating the big guys,' he said. He added, though, that it is not a 'silver bullet' as human frailties can come into play. 'A player might have had a row with his wife and be off his game,' he said. While this technology is already tried and tested, Osterreicher and his team are months away from dealing another card to try and claw back the young audience, whose loyalty has switched to TikTok, Netflix and other platforms. 'The way for sports to address it is to create content which is much more to their liking,' he said. 'So you can recreate a game in 3D, which is what we are planning to do. 'So imagine a legendary goal being scored, or any goal being scored, and you switch to a replay from player perspective. 'So we are potentially entering the world where sport needs to reinvent itself a little bit, change the way it's being served, in order to not lose those people to TikToks and the video games and mobile games of the world.' — AFP

Vietnam to sign agriculture deals with US worth US$2bil; country has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States
Vietnam to sign agriculture deals with US worth US$2bil; country has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Vietnam to sign agriculture deals with US worth US$2bil; country has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States

HANOI (AFP): Vietnam is expected to sign deals with the United States to buy more than $2 billion worth of agricultural products, Hanoi said Tuesday, as it tries to slash President Donald Trump's threatened 46 percent tariff. The announcement came as a delegation from the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment led by Minister Do Duc Duy visited the United States. Vietnam has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States of any country after China and Mexico and is anxious to address the imbalance to head off the tariff threat. The deals announced Tuesday include five memorandums of understanding (MOUs) to buy products worth around $800 million from the state of Iowa over three years, the agriculture ministry said in a statement on its website. This is up from the current average of $44 million of agricultural exports per year from Iowa to Vietnam, the statement said. The new deals include the purchase of soybean meal, corn, wheat, dried soybeans and dried distillers grains (DDGS), it added. Vietnam is due to head into a third round of trade talks with the United States in the coming days. Last month it said "positive progress" has been made following three days of discussions in Washington. The Vietnamese team sought help during its time in the United States from US tech and industry giants, including Lockheed Martin, SpaceX and Google. It also signed an agreement with US company Westinghouse Electric on nuclear power development. Trump's real estate group broke ground last month in Vietnam on a $1.5-billion luxury resort and golf course 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of the capital Hanoi. His son, Eric Trump, an executive vice president of The Trump Organization, and his wife Lara attended the event, as well as local partner the Kinhbac City Development Corporation (KBC). He has also been scouting locations for a potential tower project in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's southern business hub. - AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store