Aviation Week & Space Technology

By Bradley Perrett
The problem with five-year plans is that they come around only once every five years. That can be a long time in commercial aviation. As available production slots for reengined Airbus and Boeing narrowbodies move rapidly to the right, China is under pressure to set aside its usual stately planning process and hurriedly sign a round of big airliner orders.
Air Transport

Winder
Nina Ward has joined the finance and acquisitions department of Denver-based law firm Davis Graham & Stubbs as an associate representing aircraft owners, lessors, lessees and lenders. Derek Vanstone has been named VP-corporate strategy, industry and government affairs for Air Canada, effective Sept. 10. He is deputy chief of staff to Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Winder
Ignacio Mataix (see photo), who has been CEO of the ITP Group, has been appointed president of the the Hegan Aeronautics and Space Cluster Association, Bilbao, Spain, succeeding Jorge Unda, who has been CEO of Sener, and now will be Hegan's VP. Pedro Fuente of Aernnova is the new secretary. New members of the board of directors are Armando Jimenez of Alfa Precision Casting and Angel Alonso of Novaltis.

Winder
Gregory Taylor (see photo) has become VP-corporate strategy and business development at Harris Corp., Melbourne, Fla. He was VP-sales, marketing and business development for UTC Automation and Controls Solutions.

Winder
Prabu Natarajan (see photo) will become corporate VP and treasurer of the Northrop Grumman Corp., effective Jan. 1. He will succeed Mark Caylor, who has been named corporate VP and president of the company's Enterprise Shared Services. Natarajan will continue as VP-tax, a position he held at the AES Corp. Thomas E. Vice will become corporate VP and president of the Aerospace Systems Sector and Gloria A. Flach corporate VP and president of the Electronic Systems Sector. Vice and Flach will succeed Gary W. Ervin and James F. Pitts, who plan to retire. Linda A.

A U.S. court upheld new Transportation Department rules that require airlines to include all government-imposed taxes and fees in their advertised fares and let most customers cancel a reservation without penalty for 24 hr. after booking. But the ramifications of the court's decision extend beyond those new requirements, which already have been implemented. By upholding the scope of the department's authority, the U.S.

France and the U.K. have yet to sign an agreement affirming cooperation on a medium-altitude, long-endurance (MALE) unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), but the two countries did take a step toward closer defense ties during bilateral talks in London last week. During a meeting between French defense minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and his U.K. counterpart, Philip Hammond, France agreed to conduct operational trials of the Thales-built Watchkeeper tactical UAV through mid-2013, at which point the French are likely to purchase the multi-sensor, all-weather system.

By Sean Broderick
Operators and OEMs are lining up against the FAA over a proposed Boeing 757 airworthiness directive (AD) that they see as an unsubstantiated shift in the agency's view on the likelihood of fuel tank explosions on older freighters—a change that could have broader rulemaking ramifications.

Winder
Kristen Murphy has been named VP-capture management of American Systems, Chantilly, Va. She was director of capture management for ManTech.

By Guy Norris
Aerojet and Rocketdyne trace their roots to the dawn of the space age, with both companies building the engines that powered multiple generations of ICBMs and manned space vehicles. But the long-term outlook for both suppliers became clouded in recent years with the sharp decline in the demand for government launch services and the advent of new, lower-cost rivals, such as Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX).
Space

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Web Readers
“Where the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) faltered, can private enterprise succeed?” asks Senior Editor Graham Warwick. He reports on Flight Of The Century's (FOTC) flight of a modified Rutan Long-EZ with which it plans to set electric-aircraft speed and altitude records en route to its goal of developing an “infinite-range” aircraft and attempting an all-electric transatlantic flight to demo its technology.

The U.S. Justice Department and the European Commission have given final approvals to United Technologies Corp.'s acquisition of Goodrich, clearing the way for UTC to close on the $18.4 billion mega-merger, strengthening its position as a commercial aircraft powerhouse. UTC CEO Louis Chenevert told analysts late last week that his company expects to generate $8 billion in synergies this year from the merger, which was announced in September 2011.

There are not many secret technologies or materials in the jet engine business. All the major engine makers are working with exotic materials in the search for weight savings, emissions reductions, coatings that extend life cycles and technologies that allow faster production of complex parts. The question is always when new technology and/or materials are ready to move from the laboratory into production.
Air Transport

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington), Michael Mecham (San Francisco)
For Sally Ride, who died July 23, 2012, of pancreatic cancer, being the first U.S. woman in space was only the beginning of a long and productive career.
Space

Winder
Gabriel Maestracci has been promoted to regional director for Latin America for Cirrus Aircraft, Duluth, Minn., from manager of the international sales center for Venezuela and Colombia.

Winder
Michael Nadal has been appointed global accounts manager of Associated Global Systems, New Hyde Park, N.Y. He held a managerial position in the Expedited Services Div. of ABF Freight Systems.

India will soon release a request for proposals (RFP) for 56 cargo aircraft for its air force to replace its aging fleet of BAE Systems Avros, according to a defense ministry official. The final approval for expanding the cargo fleet of the Indian air force (IAF), estimated at $2.5 billion, was provided during a meeting of the Defense Acquisition Council headed by Defense Minister A.K. Antony last week. The RFP “. . . will make it clear to foreign players that they will have to select an Indian partner for this project,” he says.

David Fulghum (Washington)
Lack of funding will keep key weapons in the laboratory
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
WASHINGTON - Small satellites, once the realm of one-off low-budget science missions and undergraduate engineering classes, have come full circle with the growing realization among hard-pressed, high-end users that the little birds can do the big jobs, too. (Cubesat image: Raytheon)
Space

Thomas S. Momiyama (Silver Spring, Md. )
David Fulghum's “Fragile China” (AW&ST June 4/11, p. 69) outlines a concern about the “threatening” cybersecurity initiatives of China and underscores the current strategic inflection of the U.S. and the world toward the Asia-Pacific region. Cyberweaponry is obviously more quickly achievable for China than its military's lagging, reverse-engineering-based developments such as aircraft carriers and indigenous “fifth-generation” fighters.

By Jen DiMascio
After dueling foreign policy speeches before the Veterans of Foreign Wars last week, the U.S. presidential candidates unleashed their surrogates on Washington, where a discussion at the Brookings Institution underscored both candidates' inability to answer questions on defense spending.

Winder
John Hinton (see photo) has been appointed regional sales manager of Aircell, Broomfield, Colo. He was principal sales manager at Rockwell Collins.

By Guy Norris
The A400M airlifter has been through more than its fair share of development and cost issues on the road to service entry, but with its operational debut on the horizon, Airbus Military is gearing up for a hectic final phase of military-specific testing.
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Open-ended technology-development program collects data for future exploration
Space