Airbus sells 234 planes to Asian carrier Lion Air in $24 bln deal

Airbus sells 234 planes to Asian carrier Lion Air in $24 bln deal

PARIS - Agence France-Presse
Airbus sells 234 planes to Asian carrier Lion Air in $24 bln deal

Lion Air founder and president director Rusdi Kirana (L) poses with France's President Francois Hollande (R) after signing a contract with European aerospace giant Airbus during a ceremony at the Elysee presidential palace in Paris March 18, 2013. AFP Photo

European aircraft maker Airbus on Monday announced a record order worth 18.4 billion euros ($ 23.8 billion) from Indonesia's Lion Air for 234 medium-haul A320 jets.
 
Lion Air, Indonesia's largest private carrier and one of the world's fastest growing airlines, is a new client for Airbus as it has previously been equipped almost exclusively by US rival Boeing.
 
French President Francois Hollande said a deal he described as the biggest in the history of civil aviation would create 5,000 jobs in France over the next 10 years.
 
The agreement, hailed as "historic" by Hollande, was signed at the president's official residence, the Elysee Palace, by Airbus head Fabrice Bregier and his Lion Air counterpart Rusdi Kirana.
 
Lion Air will buy 60 A320 planes. The remainder involves its newer and more fuel-efficient Neo plane, which bears a catalogue price tag of more than $100 million, though discounts are common for large orders.
 
According to the Elysee, the A320s currently under production will be delivered from next year while the Neos will be supplied from 2016.
 
The news comes just days after Airbus received an order worth as much as $15.5 billion from Turkish airlines for up to 117 planes. That order also centred on Airbus's A320 medium-haul family.
 
Southeast Asia has emerged as one of the world's top market for medium haul planes as rising incomes and a burgeoning middle class have significantly boosted air travel.
 
Founded in 1999 by brothers Kusnan and Rusdi Kirana, who are ranked the 33rd richest Indonesians with collective wealth of $900 million, Lion Air is the country's first private airline.
 
Currently it operates a relatively modest 92 planes -- all Boeings except for one McDonnell Douglas -- which makes it number nine among regional carriers in terms of fleet size.
 
The company is however set to expand rapidly, having already ordered 230 Boeing 737s for $22.4 billion during US President Barack Obama's visit to Indonesia in 2011.
 
With some 240 million people, Indonesia is the world's fourth most populous nation and most far-flung archipelago with more than 17,000 islands scattered across 33 provinces. Air passenger numbers are currently growing at 20 percent per year.
 
Lion Air's 72 destinations are mostly in Indonesia, and the furthest it flies is to Saudi Arabia -- a route mostly packed with domestic workers and construction labourers. The company is banned from US and EU skies over safety fears.
 
In France, where economic stagnation has sent unemployment to record highs, Airbus is one of the few companies that continues to recruit in significant numbers.
 
In January, Bregier said the company would hire 3,000 people worldwide in 2013.