Fighter Makers Cast Wary, Or Optimistic, Eye On Canada
Long-postponed fighter choice has key manufacturers on edge
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No matter what fighter aircraft is selected, Canadian Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan wants any deal to include local jobs for skilled laborers as well as high-end technology.
Jeff Babione, Lockheed’s F-35 vice president and general manager, says he is confident the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) will trounce any rival, as it recently did in Denmark. However, if Canada opts for a stopgap Super Hornet buy, he does not see the country’s industrial participation continuing at today’s level.
Fifteen years after Lockheed was selected to develop the F-35, Canada has not put money down for a single airplane, although it remains a bill-paying member of the JSF program writ large. But in light of the possibility of the country exiting from the program, Lockheed is actively looking at how long it would take another supplier to assume the F-35 work now performed in Canada, Babione says.
“There is a time line where we might have to take a look and say, ‘someone else could do that work,’” tapping in a partner that actually is buying airplanes, Babione said at the Royal International Air Tattoo in the U.K., where the F-35 made its international debut.
Lockheed notes on its F-35 website that Canadian firms have already secured more than $750 million in contracts related to the F-35 program across 200 projects, which is “more than double Canada’s current investment in the F-35 program.”
Lockheed President/CEO Marillyn Hewson says losing 65 orders would not substantially affect the price, and industry remains committed to driving down the F-35A unit cost to $85 million by 2019.
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Vice President Orlando Carvalho tells Aviation Week his team is in the process of answering a questionnaire Canada provided to all the potential bidders. He says his company will coordinate with the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO) on any workshare adjustments, should Canada decide to abandon ship.
Pentagon acquisition chief Frank Kendall says it is up to the prime contractor Lockheed, and not the F-35 JPO, to figure out how the workshare will be divided if Ottawa exits.
“We will have to deal with that as the situation arises,” he says. “I think there would be a pretty strong reaction among the rest of the partners to continuing to provide workshare to a country that’s not participating in buying aircraft.”
The Pentagon has no standard process in place to deal with one partner withdrawing from the program, but future contracts with Canadian industry would likely be up in the air, Kendall says. “I don’t think we would stop any existing work that’s in place; we’re not going to cancel any contracts as far as I’m concerned that are ongoing,” he says...
http://aviationweek.com/defense/fighter-makers-cast-wary-or-optimistic-eye-canada