Maurício
Botelho is a fan of Paris. Rather than decry the big air shows as
frivolous and gaudy circuses, the president and CEO of Embraer sees
them as real business opportunities, especially in a global marketplace
where international sales and partnership arrangements play an ever-increasing
role.
Shows like Paris are places where pending deals reach fruition,
Botelho says. Two years ago Embraer made waves here by disclosing
a $4.9 billion order for 40 ERJ-145 regional jets by Switzerland's
Crossair. Botelho got confirmation of the sale as he was clearing
French customs to attend the Le Bourget show.
This year's Embraer emphases include the ERJ 135-derived Legacy
business jet (unveiled at Farnborough last year) and the new ERJ
190 regional, for which Embraer has just selected Japan's Kawasaki
Heavy Industries as a risk-sharing partner on the wing.
Kawasaki joins a global line-up of Embraer partners that includes
General Electric/Honeywell, Hamilton Sundstrand and Parker Hannifin
of the U.S., Spain's Gamesa, Belgium's Sonaca, and Latecoere of
France. Wind tunnel testing on the new aircraft has been performed
at facilities as diverse as the NLR National Aerospace Laboratory
in the Netherlands and Russia's TsAGI Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute.
A European consortium of Dassault, EADS, Snecma and Thales owns
10% of Embraer, which is teamed with Italy's Alenia on the new AMX-T
jet trainer.
"This is a global business," says Botelho. "It's
global in terms of the customer base, the industrial partners and
the financial institutions."
Embraer, founded in 1969, has grown to be the world's fourth largest
aircraft manufacturer with a March 31 order backlog of $23.7 billion
consisting of $10.9 billion in firm orders and $12.8 billion in
options. Net sales increased nearly 48% from the first quarter of
2000 to the first quarter of 2001. The company is Brazil's biggest
exporter, as 98% of its sales are to foreign customers. Embraer
has offices in Australia, China, France, Singapore and the U.S.
and a total workforce of about 11,000.
Partnerships have allowed Embraer to boost its production rate on
its best-established, 30- to 50-passenger ERJ 145 family from seven
aircraft per month at the end of 1999 to 17 per month now, says
Botelho. For the larger 190, "we expanded the concept of partnership,"
he told Show News, "making these partners more responsible
for systems rather than parts."
Also under aggressive development at Embraer is the Legacy business
jet, derived from the ERJ 135 but with more thrust, a new fuel system
for enhanced range, winglets, a higher service ceiling, and additional
avionics. The Legacy prototype made its first flight on March 31
and is undergoing testing with an eye to certification and first
deliveries in the third quarter. Embraer had 63 Legacy orders on
the eve of the Paris show, 32 are firm and 31 options.
With the Legacy, Embraer brings its competition with Canada's Bombardier
from the regional to the business aircraft arena. The two are in
dispute before the World Trade Organization, where their respective
governments have been arguing over alleged unfair subsidies for
half a decade. "The problem that we are facing is not a legal
problem. It is not a technical problem," says Botelho. "It
is a political problem," he says, and as such will require
a political solution. WTO trade rules, he says, "are not feasible
for the emerging and developing countries."
Like other aerospace companies, Embraer is working to boost its
aftermarket services business. Partnerships will be key there too
as the company seeks to exploit the Internet for parts and warranty
support.
On the military side, Embraer is working on a new trainer, the AMX-T,
a derivative of the AMX dedicated ground attack fighter, with Alenia.
Venezuela has agreed to buy eight AMX-Ts; other likely customers
are the Brazilian and Italian air forces, which already operate
the AMX.
Embraer is also hoping, in partnership with its European shareholders
EADS and Dassault, to satisfy Brazil's requirement for an F-X supersonic
fighter. If that comes to fruition, says Botelho, Embraer will have
access to technology that could eventually allow development of
a Brazilian supersonic business jet.
By Rich Piellisch