EADS to cut 5,800 jobs in Europe

Airbus parent company to restructure defence and space operations

EADS chief executive officer Tom Enders pauses during a news conference in Berlin earlier this year. Photo: Reuters
EADS chief executive officer Tom Enders pauses during a news conference in Berlin earlier this year. Photo: Reuters

Airbus parent company EADS is to cut 5,800 European jobs in a three-year restructuring of its defence and space activities, the European aerospace group said.

The cuts will be spread between Britain, France, Germany and Spain and will include 1,000 to 1,450 net redundancies, putting Europe’s largest aerospace company on a potential collision course with a French union that pledged to resist forced cuts.

The restructuring coincides with plans to merge the company’s defence and space divisions into one unit combining its share of Eurofighter combat jets and Ariane space rockets as the defence industry absorbs government budget cuts.

"We need to improve our competitiveness in defence and space - and we need to do it now," EADS chief executive officer Tom Enders said in a statement.

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EADS said the timing and size of a one-off restructuring charge was still under evaluation.

To cushion the impact of the almost 6,000 fewer positions, EADS pledged to open up 1,500 posts at Airbus and helicopter division Eurocopter for the redeployment of affected staff.

It said it would also freeze renewal of 1,300 temporary contracts and bring in further voluntary measures.

Some 500 corporate posts are included in the headcount reduction.

France’s Force Ouvriere union said it opposed any involuntary redundancies and reserved the right to carry out “any initiative” to back its case.

The company said the restructuring would lead to a “substantial consolidation” of sites across Germany, France, Spain and the UK, which are considered its home nations.

Reuters