U.S. says receives Airbus A350 loan funding documents
The U.S. government said on Saturday it had received European Union documents on funding for the Airbus A350 after requesting them from the World Trade Organization over a month ago in an ongoing transatlantic dispute over aircraft subsidies.
"The compliance panel directed the EU to provide documents and briefing upon a request made by the United States more than a month ago, and we received the documents just yesterday," a spokeswoman for the U.S. Trade Representative's Office said.
It is the first time the funding of Europe's answer to the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, due to make its maiden flight next year, has been drawn directly into the world's largest trade dispute but it remains to be seen how the WTO will act on the data.
Both sides are pressing for major trade sanctions after the Geneva-based WTO found that Airbus and U.S. rival Boeing had benefited from billions of dollars of unfair subsidies in a pair of trade complaints now in their ninth year.
Washington has called on Airbus to stop receiving loans from its host European nations - Britain, France, Germany and Spain - and argues that the WTO should take loans for the A350 into account when evaluating penalties for earlier support.
The EU says the carbon-composite jet lies outside the case and that its funding will comply with the latest WTO decisions.
A U.S. source told Reuters that outside estimates placed the loans paid to Airbus for the A350 at around $4.5 billion.
According to the U.S. source, who asked not to be identified, the A350 funding numbers were supplied on Friday as part of a WTO compliance procedure. Both sides claim to have obeyed WTO rules while saying their adversaries have not.
A European source said the WTO panel merely wanted to see the funding papers to assess whether they were relevant. It has so far declined to address the A350 payments directly.
No official European comment was immediately available.
The new move comes at a sensitive time for Airbus parent EADS as it ponders a merger with Britain's BAE Systems , which has significant interests in the United States.
Recent rumblings in the WTO dispute could offer further bait to U.S. opponents of the $45 billion merger, which would be subject to thorough vetting by U.S. authorities, including the U.S. Trade Representative's office, and is expected to draw close scrutiny from Boeing and its supporters in Congress.
Critics of EADS fear the combination of BAE's extensive U.S. operations and suspected ongoing subsidies to Airbus might give the group unfair pricing power and damage the U.S. industry.
But most trade specialists doubt the WTO dispute will be drawn into the merger approval process and say the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) generally sticks to a pure security mandate. It is not known to have rejected investment in U.S. companies on WTO-related grounds.
The United States seeks up to $10 billion in sanctions on the EU for not eliminating illegal European government support for Airbus.
The EU last month asked the WTO for the right to impose sanctions worth up to $12 billion annually in retaliation for U.S. subsidies mostly in the form of research.
Analysts say it could be years before the huge dispute plays itself out in sanctions or a settlement, while hanging over U.S.-European relations as a sporadic irritant in other issues. (Editing by Eric Walsh)