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AIAC 2003

Bombardier’s Tellier issues a challenge

Written by Brooke Shaw   
Bombardier’s Tellier issues a challenge 198-tellierTHE CANADIAN AIRCRAFT industry has been challenged by one of its newest but most influential members to do a better job of getting its message out to politicians and the public. Paul Tellier, chairman of Bombardier Inc. since he moved over from Canadian National Railways last January, threw down the gauntlet at the October 6 Aerospace Industries Association of Canada annual meeting in Montreal.

The problem was that while the commercial fleet worldwide faces renewal, aircraft manufacturers and their suppliers were under a "black cloud of uncertainty" because of the difficulties many prospective buyers have in securing financing. "To put it bluntly, for those trying to serve our customers ... it seems that our rate of production is threatened by the financing which is not available to our customers the way it used to be," Tellier said, noting that buyers have three main options: the traditional financial institutions, national export credit agencies, and the aircraft manufacturers themselves. He said that Bombardier is prepared to carry interim financing for up to 60 aircraft for a total exposure of US$1 billion and is working with its own suppliers to explore additional support.

"Private-sector financing has recently shown some signs of improvement but this source of financing is not totally adequate because for some of our customers, in order to get access to this financing, they have put forward some equity. For some of them, especially the smaller regional carriers, this is quite a challenge." This summer, the Canadian government announced $1.2 billion in available financing through the Canada Account and Export Development Canada (formerly the Export Development Corp.). There was an immediate outcry about ‘subsidization’ but, as Tellier pointed out, Canada Account financing is at prevailing market rates. "There is no degree of subsidization in any way, shape or form!" Moreover, these loans are to Bombardier's customers rather than to the manufacturer.

"Despite these facts, these loans are sometimes portrayed in the media as government handouts to Bombardier in particular and to you in the rest of the industry," Tellier told his AIAC colleagues. "There is a troubling perception that has developed around government efforts to ensure Canada's aerospace industry competes on an equal with our competitors." Similar financing is accessible to Airbus and Embraer customers from those corporations' government agencies. The perception, he said, is that such programs are seen by critics as market-distorting subsidies.

"We must set the record straight! We owe it to ourselves, we owe it to our employees and we owe it to the government, the decisionmakers, who have to contend with public opinion ... Bombardier is one of the top two or three exporters in this country and therefore is making a significant contribution ... not to mention the 80,000 jobs that our industry has created. More than $20 billion of revenue produced by this industry within Canada – 80% of that is for export!"