Posted on 11/20/2011 8:52:19 PM PST by sukhoi-30mki
Hawker Beechcraft loses out on big Air Force contract
By Dan Voorhis
The Wichita Eagle
Hawker Beechcraft Corp. says the Air Force has informed the company that it lost out on a military contract worth nearly $1 billion.
The company had hoped to win the Light Air Support contract with its AT-6, an armed version of its T-6 trainer. But on Friday, the company said it received a letter from the Air Force saying the AT-6 had been excluded from the competition. The company wants an explanation.
According to the companys news release: The letter provides no basis for the exclusion. We are both confounded and troubled by this decision, as we have been working closely with the Air Force for two years and, with our partners Lockheed Martin, CMC Esterline, Pratt & Whitney Canada, L-3 WESCAM and CAE, have invested more than $100 million preparing to meet the Air Forces specific requirements.
The piston planes are designed for counterinsurgency, close air support, armed overwatch and homeland security.
Hawker Beechcraft said it continues to believe the AT-6 is the most capable, affordable and sustainable aircraft in the competition based on the Air Forces specifications. The company has said that winning the award would have kept its T-6 production line running after 2015. The company has said that 1,400 employees in 20 states including 800 at Hawker Beechcraft in Wichita work on the AT-6 and T-6 programs at the company and its U.S. suppliers and partners.
The company said Friday that it had no further comment, for now.
The decision appears to leave the field open to the Super Tucano built by Brazils Embraer for the initial contract to supply 35 with the potential for 55 aircraft worth up to $950 million. And that doesnt include foreign sales.
The Air Forces move surprised aircraft industry analyst Richard Aboulafia of the Teal Group.
They seemed to be the front runner for the contract, he said of Hawker. They had the most infrastructure spread over the most states and the most political support.
He said the loss is not critical to the companys survival, but it would have been a great boost to maintaining work and workers as the companys T-6 contract runs down.
The challenge is to build for the military market until the civil market comes back, Aboulafia said. And nobody knows when the civil market will come back, probably some time next year, but theres no guarantee.
Analyst Wayne Plucker, industry manager for aerospace at Frost & Sullivan, downplayed the importance of the contract to the company.
It might lead to more layoffs and other adjustments internally, but I dont think it significantly affects them as a going concern, he said. They just need to find another product niche.
He said the Super Tucano was built specifically for this kind of mission, while the AT-6 is an adaption that wasnt perfect. Embraer has struggled to sell enough of the planes so it has priced them very aggressively.
U.S. Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Wichita, said in an e-mailed statement that he was disappointed by the decision..
I have already demanded answers from the Pentagon on why they made this very unfortunate decision, and will continue to do so, he wrote. This contract is critical both to our nations security and to jobs in Wichita, Kansas.
This guy's perception is based on political support and not the performance of the proven Super Tucano v. an under development, reworked old platform.
Embraer teamed up with Sierra Nevada Corporation to bring Super T construction to the U.S. One thing to note is that SNC has a company president that would be considered a minority female. Their company structure has been a process of moving out of cable tv parts manufacture and into defense through the acquisition of small contractors. They are involved in the modification of civil aircraft for ISR and security operations, components for approach systems on aircraft carriers and auto landing systems for UAVs. They will be building these from kits. Eurocopter started their LUH-72 Lakota line the same way, assembling kits manufactured in Europe.
Ya know, Beechcraft isn’t exactly a poster child of an all-American company. It’s owned by a Canadian group, and the T-6 Texan is actually a Swiss design, the PC-9, built under licence.
Great. Couldn't we have at least asked them to make standard 1911's to sell us?
Not completely true.
Hawker Beechcraft is 49% owned by Oynx (who also own Spirit Aerosystems)
49% owned by Goldman Sachs
and 2% owned by executives.
So that would mean a slight majority is US owned.
But hey...the other 49% is Canadian....who are pretty much our Northern proxy anyway....
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