Aviation Week & Space Technology

Michael A. Taverna (Paris)
Resurgent EADS/Socata is predicting strong growth again this year, driven by the popularity of its new TBM 850 turboprop single and high demand for aerostructures.

Staff
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Staff
Cathay Pacific Airways is adding 11 weekly flights to its European freight services. They will begin this month and operate from Hong Kong to Amsterdam, Frankfurt and Manchester.

Staff
Lexington (Ky.) Blue Grass Airport, among the first in the U.S. to install an in-line baggage screening system, next month will add the capability to conduct 100% inspection of cargo. The airport is procuring a vertical sorting unit that will allow cargo to be fed onto a conveyor belt linked to the existing in-line system. The $200,000 price will include the cost of the sorting unit, facility modifications and installation.

Michael A. Taverna (Paris and Cannes)
With its house finally in order, French space agency CNES appears once again ready to assert more of a leadership role in European space initiatives.

Staff
The South Korean government has suspended two Asiana Airlines pilots for deliberately flying into a hailstorm that broke their aircraft's windshield and nose cone. Other pilots who detected the June 9 storm returned to their origin airports. The government also plans to add domestic airlines to a safety watch list originally intended to cover only foreign carriers with a history of dangerous flying.

Staff
Michael Moore has been appointed vice president-operations and program management at Landmark Aviation's Associated Air Center, Dallas Love Field, James Wilson general manager of Landmark's operation at Dulles, Va., and Kerry Trosper general manager of the fixed-base operation at Wichita Falls, Tex. Moore was vice president/general manager of Timco Aviation Services. Wilson was a regional sales manager for Landmark's aircraft charter and management business, while Trosper was line service manager at Kerrville (Tex.) Aviation.

Staff
Singapore's Changi Airports International is branching out into China by buying a 29% stake in Nanjing Lukou International Airport. The private-equity investment is the first in China by a foreign airport operator, says Changi, a government-owned company that runs Singapore's airport. Nanjing Lukou handled 6.27 million passengers last year, 16.4% more than in 2005. Changi has stakes in airports in Costa Rica, Peru and Netherlands Antilles.

By Joe Anselmo
Dire warnings of an aerospace brain drain have been issued for so many years that it's easy to tune them out. Four years ago, a presidential commission predicted a "devastating loss of skill, experience and intellectual capital." Across the U.S., CEOs say the industry is not attracting nearly enough young engineers to replace the baby boomers that will start retiring in large numbers in the next few years. This magazine sounded the alarm in 1999, then 2000 and again in 2003.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Thai Airways International says it's likely to buy eight A330-300s that Airbus is offering at $90 million each as compensation for A380 delays. But the airline still isn't satisfied with the rest of the compensation package--$28 million in cash. Chairman Chalit Pukbhasuk says the price on the A330s represents a special discount of $10 million. Thai is interested in the offer because it needs 24 new aircraft within the next five years. It says that it will probably also take options on another four of the cheap A330s.

By Joe Anselmo
When Boeing takes an order for a new passenger airplane, several years can transpire before deliveries are made and payments are collected. Based on that model, the company's 2006 financial results should just be the start of a long run of growth. Revenues in Boeing's Commercial Airplanes unit rose 33% last year to $28.4 billion, and operating profit soared 91% to $2.7 billion, as the first benefits of an order surge that began in 2005 began to hit the bottom line. And there's much more to come.

Staff
Etihad Airways will start Airbus A340-500 services between Sydney and Abu Dhabi, its home base, Mar. 26, aiming to connect the Australian city with European and Middle Eastern destinations that Qantas doesn't serve. The announcement comes only three weeks after Canberra granted permission to the United Arab Emirates carrier to join the heavily contested Australian international market.

Staff
Kenneth J. Binder has been promoted to executive vice president/chief financial officer from senior vice president-finance/acting CFO of the New York-based Sequa Corp. Leonard P. Pasculli has become vice president-human resources and James P. Langelotti vice president/treasurer. Langelotti was assistant treasurer and succeeds Kenneth A. Drucker, who has retired. Gail Binderman has been named to the board of directors. She is director of corporate strategy and development and an investment officer of the Ampacet Corp.

Staff
Kongsberg Defense & Aerospace and Lockheed Martin have signed a joint marketing agreement for an air-launched version of the Norwegian company's Naval Strike Missile (NSM). Designated the Joint Strike Missile (JSM), the new weapon will be adapted for deployment by Lockheed Martin's F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), including carriage in its internal weapons bay. Kongsberg says it will take "three years to reach the technological maturity required for the missile to be an option for deployment on the JSF."

Staff
Steve Fossett--holder of numerous aviation world records in balloons, gliders, airships and powered aircraft--and four other "legends of flight" will be enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame, Dayton, Ohio, on July 21. The others are: Walter J. Boyne, former director of the Smithsonian Institution's Air and Space Museum, aviation historian and author; Evelyn Bryan Johnson, a flight instructor who has logged more flight hours, trained more pilots and given more FAA exams than any other pilot; Sally K.

Staff
Jake Hart (see photos) has become vice president-autopilot systems and Jim Shirey vice president-business development of Cobham subsidiary Chelton Flight Systems, Boise, Idaho. Hart was a marketing executive and Shirey a business development executive with Sagem Avionics Inc.

Dan Woodard (Merritt Island, Fla.)
NASA faces major challenges in both the Vision for Space Exploration (VSE) and in reestablishing its role in aviation and technology development (AW&ST Jan. 1, p. 66). Unfortunately, the budget will not permit both. The cost of human spaceflight is simply too high, and it will not be reduced by the VSE. Nor does it make sense to abandon the International Space Station, the only practical destination for a future generation of reusable spacecraft.

Staff
The European Space Agency will split a €329-million ($424.4-million) prime contract for Bepi Colombo Mercury mission, the agency's next major science project, between Astrium and Alcatel Alenia Space. Astrium Germany will be overall prime contractor, with Astrium U.K. and Alcatel Alenia Italy as co-primes, says Jacques Louet, ESA's director of science projects. But Astrium Germany will shoulder the full program risk under a "political expedient" approved last week by ESA's industrial policy committee.

Amy Butler (Ft. Belvoir, Va.)
Though the overwhelming majority of the Pentagon's highly skilled technical workforce is at the cusp of or beyond retirement age, workers apparently aren't running for the door, as once feared. This is giving the Defense Dept. borrowed time to continue planning how to manage its aging workforce and head off a mass exodus.

Edited by David Bond
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael (Buzz) Moseley apparently isn't enthusiastic about his service's $15-billion decision to buy a variant of the CH-47 to be its future combat search and rescue helicopter. "Buzz . . . doesn't want his special operations guys having to fly the Chinook design," says a senior Air Force official, who adds that it's an older-generation aircraft than its combat-search-and-rescue competitors, Lockheed Martin/AgustaWestland's US101 variant and Sikorsky's S-92 derivative.

Wally Roberts (San Clemente, Calif.)
In the Nov. 27, 2006, issue (p. 10), an editor rebuts Karl Kettler's letter entitled "What's the Fuss About ADS-B?" Policy decisions have been made that Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) is the en-route, if not terminal, air traffic control surveillance system of the future.

Staff
The importance of the Middle East as a market for luxury was underscored by Boeing's release of cabin concepts for its 787 VIP airplane, including this view of a flying office, at the Middle East Business Aviation Conference in Dubai last week. Most Boeing Business Jets are based on the 737 NG platform, but the company has taken seven orders for the 787. It isn't disclosing the home-base of those customers, but the huge expansion of business in the Middle East for commercial and private aviation can't be underestimated.

Staff
Air China has agreed with CFM International to set up a joint maintenance business in China. The airline has ordered 53 CFM56 engines for 24 A321s that will be delivered from 2008-12. The airline valued the order at $345 million, or $6.5 million per engine.

Staff
Andrew Shankland has been promoted to senior vice president-sales and marketing from vice president-sales for Airbus North America, Herndon, Va.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency declared the Jan. 26 test of the Theater High-Altitude Area Defense (Thaad) system a success. This was the first trial of Thaad at the Pacific Missile Range Facility near Kauai island in Hawaii, a facility that allows MDA to run the interceptor through its entire flight regime. Tests at White Sands, N.M., required them to truncate some of its capabilities for range safety. On Jan. 26, the interceptor hit its Scud-representative target just outside the Earth's atmosphere.