Delta vows not to pay US duties on Bombardier C Series planes

Additional 300 per cent tariffs on Bomardier jets has angered Canada and the UK

A demonstrator uses his mobile phone as workers, union representatives and supporters protest in support of Bombardier Inc. workers outside the Houses of Parliament in London, U.K., on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2017. As if Brexit weren���t enough, Prime Minister��Theresa May��is fighting on two fronts to protect jobs across the U.K. after��BAE Systems Plc announced cuts and a dispute between��Bombardier��Inc.��and��Boeing Co.��festers. Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg
Powered by automated translation

Delta Air Lines pledged not to pay import duties on Bombardier's marquee jetliner, which was socked in the last two weeks with 300 per cent tariffs by the US Commerce Department.

It's possible Delta will delay deliveries of the C Series planes, which are scheduled to begin next year, chief executive Ed Bastian said Wednesday. The airline is also considering "various other plans" if the preliminary duties are finalised, he said without elaborating. Delta last year agreed to buy at least 75 of the jets at a list price of more than US$5 billion.

“We will not pay those tariffs, and that is very clear,” Bastian said on a conference call after reporting third-quarter results. “We intend to take the aircraft.”

Delta's determination not to pay the import charges raised the stakes in a dispute pitting Montreal-based Bombardier against Boeing, which accused its Canadian rival of selling the C Series at "absurdly low prices." Boeing won support from President Donald Trump's administration, which ruled that Bombardier sold the planes at less than their fair market value after benefiting from government subsidies in Canada.

_______________

Read more:

_______________

Bombardier jumped 6.8 per cent to C$2.35 at the close in Toronto, the biggest gain in five months. Delta advanced less than 1 percent to $53.07.

The trade spat has soured diplomatic relations between the US and two key allies.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned that the dispute is endangering his government’s purchase of new military jets from Boeing. Speaking to reporters in Washington after a meeting at the White House, Trudeau said he told Trump Canada disagrees “vehemently” with the tariffs.

Duties are “something that we look very negatively on,” Trudeau said. “I certainly mentioned that this was a block to us making any military procurements from Boeing.”

The US Commerce Department ruling has also drawn fire from British Prime Minister Theresa May, who lobbied Trump on behalf of Bombardier and the more than 4,000 people it employs at facilities in Northern Ireland.

The tariffs, which consist of 220 per cent countervailing duties and 80 per cent anti-dumping restrictions, could be reversed by the US International Trade Commission if it concludes that Boeing wasn’t injured by Bombardier’s jet program. That decision is expected to be made next year. The Commerce Department also still needs to issue a final ruling in both cases.

The argument that Boeing was harmed by the C Series is "unrealistic, a bit nonsensical," Bastian said on the conference call. He said Boeing competed against Bombardier by offering Delta used Embraer E190 planes.

Bombardier chief executive Alain Bellemare is counting on the C Series to help fuel an increase of almost 50 per cent in annual revenue by 2020. The company has begun ramping up output at its Mirabel factory north of Montreal, with about 30 units of the jet due to be shipped this year.

Delta, which has options to buy 50 more of the C Series jets, is the biggest buyer of the plane. Including the Delta deal, Bombardier has amassed 360 firm orders for the C Series and more than 400 other commitments.

Any appeal of the US duties by Bombardier would likely delay the start of shipments to Delta, said Nick Heymann, an analyst at William Blair & Co.

“Delta wants this plane. They wanted it yesterday,” Heymann said in an interview. “The next part of the process is to find out how Boeing was harmed - and if this case goes to appeal, then you will have a delay.”