May warns Boeing its relationship with the UK is being undermined by Bombardier row
[LONDON] British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Thursday that Boeing was undermining its relationship with Britain by its behaviour in a dispute with Canadian rival Bombardier that has put 4,200 jobs at risk in Northern Ireland. "What I would say in relation to Boeing is that of course we have a long-term partnership with Boeing in various aspects of government and this is not the sort of behaviour we expect form a long-term partner and it undermines that partnership," Mrs May said when answering a question at a Bank of England event.
The US Department of Commerce on Tuesday imposed a 220-per cent duty on Bombardier's CSeries jets, whose wings are made at a plant in Belfast, following a complaint by Boeing which accuses Canada of unfairly subsidising Bombardier.
Mrs May said she would try to work with Canada's government to stress the importance of Bombardier to Northern Ireland.
Mrs May also said that there was a risk to the world economy from "creeping protectionism," adding that there signs that some countries were rowing back on their commitment to open markets and free trade. "On the wider issue, I think there is a real challenge for us globally today because I think that there are aspects of protectionism creeping in around the world," she said.
On Wednesday, British defence minister Michael Fallon also criticised Boeing, using similar language to Mrs May. He ruled out cancelling existing orders with Boeing for nine P-8 spy planes and 50 Apache helicopters, but added the US firm was seeking other UK contracts.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
BMW says costs, low used car prices to weigh on 2024 pre-tax profit
Global car giants seek tech allies in China’s cutthroat EV market
Elon Musk proposed to launch robotaxis in China during April visit: state media
Tesla sends top executive back to China as sales slump worsens
Qantas boss says demand for premium class seats at record levels
Lyft beats on bookings, adds new riders