By Kylie Madry
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Brazilian planemaker Embraer sights Mexico as a major marketplace for its Super Tucano and C-390 safety airplane, the enterprise’s head said on Monday.
Embraer CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Francisco Gomes Neto said that the planemaker, the globe’s third-largest, remained in energetic talks with Mexico’s federal authorities and had truly introduced a C-390 to the nation for presentation journeys.
The C-390 is known as a multi-mission airplane, and takes on Lockheed’s C-130.
“We believe it can be a great solution for Mexico,” Gomes Neto knowledgeable Reuters all through a flick thru to Mexico prematurely of inbound President Claudia Sheinbaum’s graduation.
The exec didn’t declare the quantity of of every airplane it was eager to market to Mexico.
If Mexico had been to bind an acquisition of the lighter Super Tucano airplane, which Gomes Neto highlighted for its utilization as a coaching airplane or for boundary monitoring, it could actually join with a wide range of numerous different Latin American nations tightening orders in present months.
Gomes Neto said that it was likewise contemplating firm jet gross sales in Mexico, the globe’s third-largest marketplace for such airplane.
“We expect to grow our fleet in Mexico by 11% in the next two years,” he said.
Embraer certain a $750 million order in June for 20 E2 jetliners to Mexico’s military-run airline Mexicana.
Gomes Neto shook off worries from consultants in regards to the safety of the supply, occupied with Mexicana’s claimed failing to repay a united state service supplier.
“We are working with Mexicana very closely, we really want this operation to be a great success to show the market how good the aircraft is,” he said.
The exec likewise said that Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena had truly consulted with the corporate beforehand this 12 months in Brazil which “she was very positive about the future of Mexicana.”
“Embraer is looking for a win-win situation in doing business with Mexico,” he included.
(Reporting by Kylie Madry in Mexico City)