Boeing Co said it swapped the heads of its 787 Dreamliner and 777 programs, tapping the skills of the long-time 777 leader to ensure the delayed Dreamliner programme hits a production rate target that many experts believe is unrealistic. The changes came the same week Boeing said all 55 of the Dreamliners it has assembled so far could have a flaw in the fuselage that will take 10 to 14 days per plane to repair.
The plane-maker named Larry Loftis as general manager of its 787 program on Friday, replacing Scott Fancher, who takes Loftis' old job as head of the 777 program. The job swap comes as Boeing ramps up production on its long-delayed 787 program and plans to update the popular 777. "No one's been demoted or promoted," said RBC Capital Markets analyst Rob Stallard. "It's the proper allocation of management based on the background and experience they have."
Stallard said the shift will not guarantee Boeing hits its goal of increasing 787 productions to 10 planes per month by the end of next year from the current 2-1/2. But Boeing is hoping it improves the chances, he said. The 787, which entered service in 2011 after three years of delays, was stung this month by news of the most recent glitch, involving incorrect shimming and signs of "delamination" on a support structure in the rear fuselage. Delamination occurs when repeated stress causes layered composite materials to separate.
Boeing did not link the leadership shakeup, which takes effect immediately, to the new problem or any dissatisfaction with Fancher's leadership of the program. "Today we are announcing two leadership changes intended to better align our organisation for the challenges ahead," said Jim Albaugh, chief executive of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, in a statement.
The Dreamliner is a light-weight, carbon-composite airplane that promises fuel savings to operators and new comforts for passengers. Development of the plane has been delayed repeatedly, because of snags in the complex global supply chain. Boeing has 870 Dreamliner orders on its books and is eager to burn through some of that backlog. Some experts think Loftis, who has run the 777 program since April 2007, stands a better chance than Fancher of successfully increasing the build rate.
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