Aviation Week & Space Technology

Christina Kull Martens (see photo), a manufacturing integration manager and environmental engineer for Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, has received the Los Angeles County Chair's Green Leadership Award. The annual award recognizes the efforts of individuals who have improved environmental sustainability for the benefit of their community. Martens is responsible for identifying greenhouse gas emission reductions in the sector's manufacturing projects. She also implements training, development and new processes.

Mike Spears (see photo) has joined American Eurocopter as senior director of UH-72A Lakota production and retrofit at its Columbus, Miss., facility. He succeeds Fred Gerard, who is taking a leadership position with another EADS subsidiary, Airbus, in Mobile, Ala. Spears was general manager of the Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. production facility in Troy, Ala.

Michael Bruno
The Obama administration expects to sign the U.N. Arms Trade Treaty after it is unveiled for national signatures in New York on June 3, according to Thomas Countryman, assistant secretary of state for international security and nonproliferation—and that is a good thing. For all the reasons

Bert Obleski (Denver, Colo. )
The editorial “The High Costs of Washington Inertia” (AW&ST May 6/13, p. 74) failed to mention the largest “derelict-in-chief” of the consequences sequestration brings to national security.

Capt. Clyde Romero, Jr. (Marietta, Ga. )
In a recent cover story that deals with cockpits of the future (AW&ST April 22, p. 42), touchscreens are heavily featured. But, bottom line, they do not work in a professional pilot's environment. You need tactile feel, especially when things start going wrong and you only have one time to get it right.

Michael Mecham (Charlotte, N.C.)
Airbus will start building aircraft in the U.S. in Hamburg style
Air Transport

Richard “Ben” Hirst has been promoted to executive vice president/chief legal officer from senior vice president/general counsel of Delta Air Lines. He was Northwest Airlines' senior vice president-corporate affairs/general counsel before the two air carriers merged.

The delivery of All Nippon Airways' 18th 787-8 on May 14 marked the model's return to a regular manufacturing rhythm since Boeing halted deliveries in January in conjunction with a shutdown in commercial services due to lithium-ion battery safety concerns. Installation of a new fire containment system for the batteries continues for the 50 delivered 787s, which are reentering service.

As the smallest member of the MAX family, Boeing anticipated the 737-7 would be a slow seller, so it placed it last behind the larger 737-8s and 737-9s that airlines appear to prefer when deliveries begin in 2017.
Air Transport

A U.K. government committee is backing expansion of London Heathrow Airport and calling plans for a new airport in the Thames Estuary “not commercially viable.” In a report on the U.K.'s Aviation Strategy, the cross-party group said expansion of Heathrow is “necessary.”

Andrew Compart (Washington), Michael Bruno (Washington)
The future of the U.S. Export-Import Bank is again being threatened, just as the export credit agency (ECA) is registering record loan activity at the behest and benefit of the U.S. aircraft industry. If the confluence of events gains momentum, the bank could be forced to suspend or even end new loan-making, which could hurt Boeing, the bank's primary aircraft exporter, as it competes for foreign sales with Airbus—supported by three ECAs—and other state-affiliated manufacturers worldwide.
Air Transport

By Jens Flottau
Low demand for A380 as A350 nears flight-testing
Air Transport

Name Withheld By Request (Park Hills, Ky. )
I found “Flatlining” by Sean Broderick (AW&ST May 6/13, p. 63) interesting in that it regurgitates perceptions and economic models promoted by the major airlines, with no discussion of alternatives. I also noted the lack of mention of other small-jet carriers (e.g: Trans States Holdings, PSA) and how they fit into the picture. The way major airlines continue to pit small-jet carriers against each other is a pitiful way to do business.

Graham Warwick (Washington)
There is no shortage of candidates for feedstocks from which to make biofuels, from camelina to poplar and switchgrass to wood chips. But it is taking time to find ones that can be sustainably cultivated, harvested and transported in the quantities required to make commercial volumes of jet fuel.
Air Transport

Oliver Evans (see photo), who is chief cargo officer for Swiss International Air Lines, and Enno Osinga (see photo), senior vice president-cargo at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, have been elected as chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of The International Air Cargo Association for two-year terms. Evans, who was vice chairman, succeeds Michael Steen, executive vice president/chief commercial officer of Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings.

Amy Butler (Turin, Italy, and Rome)
Italy eyes 'black' UAV program as U.S. waffles on arming Predators
Defense

Scientists have “terabytes” of data from NASA's Kepler extra-solar planet-finder to analyze, but the failure of a second reaction control wheel on the space telescope probably means it will not be able to measure more of the faint flickers of distant stars when a planet passes in front of them.
Space

Michael Bruno
Once an unquestioned benefit, armed UAVs are increasingly becoming an issue for Washington. The latest instance involves exporting the capability—even to close allies like Britain and Italy—and the Missile Technology Control Regime, a voluntary international arms control body. The regime restricts the sale of unmanned air systems that can deliver weapons of mass destruction, which had meant platforms like cruise missiles and nuke warheads when it was first created in the 1980s, but increasingly ensnares large UAVs such as Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk.

John Schumacher has become vice president-business relations for GenCorp Inc., Sacramento, Calif. He was president of the Astrium Americas subsidiary of EADS North America and had been vice president-Washington operations for GenCorp subsidiary Aerojet.

The U.S. Army has concluded that the path forward for its Armed Aerial Scout (AAS) requirement is either a service life extension program (SLEP) for the Bell OH-58D/F Kiowa Warrior or a new development program. After evaluating five off-the-shelf candidates, “we did not find a single aircraft out there that could meet Army requirements,” Lt. Gen. William Phillips, principal military deputy for acquisition, told American lawmakers.

Michael Mecham
What a difference a decade makes. In 2000, China's labor rates were a fraction of those for U.S. workers, the dollar was strong, oil prices were relatively low, and the promise of access to the Chinese market had manufacturers hopping to get into China.

Graham Warwick (Washington)
For an organization that exists to think decades ahead to prevent technology surprise and enable military superiority, the future for U.S. national security looks particularly uncertain to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa).
Defense

Germany has halted the purchase of the Euro Hawk signals-intelligence platform over concerns the aircraft cannot be certified to fly in the country's civil airspace. Germany has one Euro Hawk, a variant of the RQ-4 Global Hawk fitted with an EADS Cassidian sigint sensor package. The aircraft will fly in support of sensor testing until September.

Lee Ann Tegtmeier (Brussels)
Speaking of strain on systems, the Swissport baggage handlers went on strike, unannounced, at the Brussels Airport on May 12. I had the joy of experiencing this firsthand when I landed there for a connecting flight on May 13. I didn't learn of the strike until 15 min. before Brussels Airlines announced the boarding of my flight to Vilnius, Lithuania.