Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Boeing scores again as VietJet confirms deal for 200 Max planes at Farnborough

The carrier said in a separate statement that the order is worth around $35 billion



The first 50 aircraft will be delivered to Thai VietJet, the Vietnamese budget carrier's affiliate in Thailand.
Image Credit: Reuters

VietJet Aviation JSC confirmed a deal for 200 Boeing Co. 737 Max jets, giving the US planemaker another boost at one of the industry’s biggest events.

The first 50 aircraft will be delivered to Thai VietJet, the Vietnamese budget carrier’s affiliate in Thailand, the company said in a Tuesday release issued during the Farnborough International Airshow in the UK.

“Today’s agreement is a strategic move for VietJet and Boeing,” VietJet Managing Director Dinh Viet Phuong said in the statement. The pact confirms each party’s “commitment to keep up with Vietjet’s international flight network expansion plan with a higher capacity”.

The carrier said in a separate statement the order is worth around $35 billion, including associated engine engineering services, and would bring around 200,000 jobs to the US. Sticker prices for jets are generally significantly reduced in large deals.

“The order is also expected to attract investment into Vietnam’s aviation industry, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs for the country’s aviation industry, including airports, air traffic control, technical services, training centers, technology transfer, component research and manufacturing,” VietJet said.

Advertisement

VietJet agreed in 2018 to double its order for Max jets to 200 after it signed an initial deal in 2016 during a visit to Vietnam by then-US President Barack Obama. The carrier’s announcement reaffirms that accord.

The agreement will also help Boeing shrug off nervousness over the 737 Max, which was grounded worldwide following two deadly crashes. The planemaker has made extensive fixes to the model following the accidents, and most regulators around the world have now approved the plane to fly again.

Advertisement