
#3
Christian Science Monitor
August 16, 2002
Russian industry struggles to fly
At Russia's first civil aviation show this week, aircraft designers showed off
their latest offerings.
By Fred Weir | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
DOMODEDOVO, RUSSIA – When the United States needed somebody to retrieve a
damaged US Navy EP-3 Orion re- connaissance aircraft that crashed in China last
year, it turned to a Russian airline.
Flying the giant Soviet-built Antonov An-124, the world's largest operational
transport, the Polyot company from the Volga city of Ulyanovsk was able to haul
the huge $80 million American plane home in a single trip.
It's stories like that are fueling optimism in the Russian aviation industry.
Despite a decade-long slump that saw thousands of engineers and specialists
leave the industry, executives of top Russian design bureaus say they still have
plenty of ambitious projects in their cupboards. With Russian airlines carrying
about 15 percent more passengers every year, and companies looking to replace
their ageing Soviet-era fleets, many believe that formerly world-class Russian
aircraft producers could be poised for a comeback. "Our new offerings are
up to global standards and comparable to the products of Boeing, Airbus, and
other Western companies," says Mikhail Bakharev, head of the export
department at Ilyushin, one of Russia's most famous aviation names. "We
have recovered from the post-Soviet crisis, and are ready to work."
Russia's first civil aviation show, now under way at Domodedovo airport just
outside Moscow, has brought together most of the country's aircraft industry
leaders to talk up their wares. But despite the hopeful atmosphere, it's hard
not to notice a touch of desperation just below the surface. Most of the
"new" aircraft models on display are actually late-Soviet-era designs
which independent experts say are arriving on world markets at least a decade
late.
Getting off the ground
"Russian producers can carve out a place, but they have to make a very
swift transition to the market mentality," says Alexei Komarov, editor of
Air Transport Review, a Russian industry journal published in partnership with
Aviation Week. "If they don't grab this chance within a couple of years,
they can forget about it entirely."
Among the more interesting products from Soviet drawing boards is the
An-124's big brother, the An-224, an airborne behemoth capable of lugging a
250-ton payload around the world with two complete crew shifts living on its
comfortable upper deck. Then there is the world's only jet-powered flying boat,
the Beriev Be-200, which producers say could revolutionize fire fighting and
air-to-sea search and rescue. On display at the air show is the Tupolev Tu-334,
a mid-size passenger jet whose makers claim could compete head-to-head with
comparable products of Boeing or Airbus. Unfortunately, only a single flying
prototype of each of these planes exists, and no one knows when the companies
will be able to afford more.
"Without orders, nothing can happen," says Alexander Tafeyev, an
executive of Klimov corporation, a leading aircraft engine builder. "The
Soviet military used to be the main client for our whole industry, but now the
armed forces buy almost nothing. Even when you have great designs, it's hard to
sell them on the market."
Experts say Russia's chances on global markets are slim to none.
Apart from selling a few new Tupolev Tu-204 airliners to Egypt last year, no
big carriers are showing interest. Even the giant Aeroflot, which flies most of
the Russian industry's international routes, plans to purchase mostly US and
European planes, citing the inability of Russian models to meet new
international standards for noise, pollution and safety.
Russian producers are hopeful that domestic airlines will kick-start their
industry by ordering the new products. Steep tariff barriers imposed by the
Russian government against imports, and much lower production costs in Russia,
make their planes a bargain, they say. About 70 percent of the Soviet-era planes
currently serving domestic routes are said to be due for retirement. Meanwhile,
airlines are consolidating, following the post-Soviet chaos that saw the state
monopoly Aeroflot broken up into hundreds of tiny, inefficient and sometimes
downright dangerous "babyflots."
"There were some airline companies that had only one plane, one crew,
and the object just to make some money," recalls Sergei Rudakov, manager of
Domodedovo airport.
The number of domestic carriers has plunged from 328 in 1999 to 267 this past
year and could be cut in half when new flight safety standards are imposed by
the government next year. Experts say this means fewer but bigger companies, who
will be interested in purchasing new planes.
A financing issue
"Russian planes that correspond to modern standards are coming on the
market just as Russian carriers capable of purchasing them are emerging,"
says Sergei Rudakov, manager of Domodedovo Airport.
But airline officials tell a different tale. They say Russian planes are fine
for domestic use, but the Russian government won't help with financing, and
Russian aircraft manufacturers don't follow through with post-purchase servicing
and maintenance.
"The only thing the Russian government does is make it difficult to buy
foreign planes," says Andrei Martirosov, director of Tyumen Avia Trans, a
large regional carrier in Siberia. Despite the hurdles, he says the airline is
planning to purchase Canadian-made de Havilland Dash-8 short-range turboprops to
replace the 12 decaying Tu-134's it presently uses on local routes.
"Foreign companies offer much better packages, including help with
financing and full servicing for the life-cycle of the machine," says Mr.
Martirosov. "Our aircraft makers still think they're state bureaucrats, and
have no idea how to do these things."
The solution might be for Russian aircraft makers to share their design
prowess with Western companies, in exchange for commercial expertise, high-tech
and entree to global markets.
But so far only one joint venture of this sort exists, a feasibility plan by
the Russian industry leaders Sukhoi and Tupolev to build a mid-size regional
passenger plane in conjunction with the US aviation giant Boeing.
"If Russian aircraft companies can find terms of integration with
Western firms, they can still manage to be a major player in the future aviation
world," says Mr. Komarov.
"But time is running out for them. It's not enough to just build a
decent plane. They need to make big changes to the way they do business before
the present window of opportunity closes forever."
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