Robert Besser
24 Jan 2023, 13:10 GMT+10
PARIS, France: Airbus has changed the design of its A350 passenger jets amid a $2 billion dispute with Qatar Airways over damage to the surface of the aircraft.
The two companies have been involved in a court case revolving around the safety of flaking paint that exposed corrosion or gaps in a sub-layer of metallic lightning protection.
This week, Qatar Airways told a London court that Airbus had begun implementing the surface changes and called for more information. Meanwhile, Airbus confirmed that it had partly completed the changes, which began late last year.
The decision to start using a new design was significant to the case, said Judge David Waksman, during preliminary hearings.
Qatar Airways has blamed the damage on a design defect, but Airbus claims the former design remains state of the art and safe.
The A350 is a passenger plane mainly made of carbon and is competing with Boeing's 787 Dreamliner.
According to European regulators, the jets are safe, despite Qatar Airways claiming that this assessment cannot be guaranteed without more detailed analysis.
Qatar Airlines said it is requesting access to raw modeling data, so its technical experts can simulate the impact of a lightning strike.
After Airbus was overruled in a previous bid to use a special blocking law defending French interests, Qatar Airways accused Airbus of trying to prevent the release of data that could be valuable to its case.
But in a rare note of compromise, lawyers for the two companies provisionally agreed to not publicize the data.
Several other airlines have reported flaws in the painted surface of A350s, but only Qatar Airways stopped flying them.
Get a daily dose of Vancouver Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Vancouver Star.
More InformationWASHINGTON, DC - The global community has extended aid to Turkey and Syria following the devastating earthquakes that hit the ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: US lawmakers have called on the Department of Energy to release documents detailing attempts by Russian hackers to ...
Photo credit: Ercin Erturk / Anadolu AgencyThe death toll from Monday's massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake in Turkey and Syria has ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: In a sign of future political battles over record numbers of illegal crossings under Democratic President Joe Biden, ...
MOSCOW, Russia: Russian state-run TASS news agency has reported that a US woman was detained and fined by a Russian ...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Former President General (retd) Pervez Musharraf died in a Dubai hospital on Sunday at the age of ...
VEVEY, Switzerland: In an interview with Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung this week, Nestle's Chief Executive Mark Schneider said the world's largest ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: Despite the efforts of the Federal Reserve Bank to cool the job market to help curb record-high inflation, ...
NEW YORK, New York - A sharp rise in U.S. Treasury yields kept buyers at bay on Wall Street on ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: A report released this week detailed how, in January, layoffs in the US reached a more than two-year ...
PARIS, France: Following an 18 month controversy that exposed the workings of the global jet market, Airbus and Qatar Airways ...
TOKYO, Japan: Japan is preparing to revise legislation to allow it to restrict the export of advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment ...