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British Aerospace

British Aerospace plc (BAe) was a British aircraft, munitions and defence-systems manufacturer. Its head office was at Warwick House in the Farnborough Aerospace Centre in Farnborough, Hampshire.[1] Formed in 1977, in 1999 it purchased Marconi Electronic Systems, the defence electronics and naval shipbuilding subsidiary of the General Electric Company plc, to form BAE Systems.

British Aerospace plc
Type
IndustryAerospace
Predecessor
Founded29 April 1977; 45 years ago (1977-04-29)
Defunct30 November 1999; 23 years ago (1999-11-30)
FateMerged with Marconi Electronic Systems
SuccessorBAE Systems
Headquarters,
United Kingdom
ProductsAircraft
Subsidiaries
Website (archived)
British Aerospace Act 1980
Long titleAn Act to provide for the vesting of all the property, rights, liabilities and obligations of British Aerospace in a company nominated by the Secretary of State and the subsequent dissolution of British Aerospace; and to make provision with respect to the finances of that company.
Citation1980 c. 26
Introduced byunknown
Territorial extent England and Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland
Dates
Royal assent1 May 1980
Commencement1 May 1980
Other legislation
Amended by
Relates toAircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977
Status: Current legislation
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended
Text of the British Aerospace as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

History

Formation and privatisation

The company has its origins in the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977, which called for the nationalisation and merger of the British Aircraft Corporation, Hawker Siddeley Aviation, Hawker Siddeley Dynamics and Scottish Aviation. On 29 April 1977, the new entity was formed in the United Kingdom as a statutory corporation.

Under the provisions of the British Aerospace Act 1980 on 1 January the statutory corporation was transferred to a limited company, which then re-registered as a public limited company (plc), under the name "British Aerospace Public Limited Company", on 2 January 1981.[2] BAe was privatised in two main phases, the first in February 1981, involving 51.6% shares of the company, during which the public sale was 3.5 times subscribed and at the end of the first day's trading, share prices were 14% above the original offer price.[3] The second phase occurred in May 1985, in which 48.4% shares were sold; this sale was 5.4 times subscribed and the first day closing price was 11% above the initial offer price.[3] Despite this privatisation, the British Government maintained a £1 golden share, which allowed it to veto foreign control of the board or company.[4]

Programmes

 
A German Air Force Tornado IDS in flight, 2007

Prior to the formation of British Aerospace, its predecessors were involved in several aircraft programmes. Scottish Aviation was working on a project for a 19-seat turboprop airliner, an upgraded version of the Handley Page Jetstream. BAe continued development and placed the Jetstream 31 into production after the first flight of the prototype in March 1980. At the same time, production of Hawker Siddeley’s HS 125 business jet, Harrier VTOL jet fighter and HS 748 turboprop airliner continued under BAe, as did the that of the Trident jet airliner for a short time. Similarly, low-rate production of the British Aircraft Corporation‘s One-Eleven jet airliner and Strikemaster two-seat military jet trainer/attack aircraft — and the iconic Concorde supersonic airliner — also continued.

On 29 July 1976, less than a year prior to BAe's formation, the contract for production of the first batch of the Panavia Tornado, an advanced nuclear-capable fighter bomber, was signed.[5] It was developed and produced via a multinational company, Panavia Aircraft GmbH, of which BAe was one of several companies to be heavily involved.[6][7] On 10 July 1979, the maiden flight of a production Tornado occurred.[8] On 5 and 6 June 1979, the first aircraft were delivered to the RAF and German Air Force respectively.[9] On 25 September 1981, the first Italian Tornado was delivered.[10]

The Tornado would be produced in large numbers, the 500th aircraft to be completed was delivered to West Germany on 19 December 1987.[11] Production of the Tornado ended in 1998, the final batch being delivered to the Royal Saudi Air Force, that had ordered a total of 96 IDS Tornados.[12] Aviation author Jon Lake noted that "The Trinational Panavia Consortium produced just short of 1,000 Tornados, making it one of the most successful postwar bomber programs".[13]

In 1978, BAe relaunched the BAe 146, a short-haul regional airliner that had been previously worked on by Hawker Siddeley. The company marketed it as a quiet and economic turbofan-powered compact airliner that could replace the previous generation of turboprop-powered feeder aircraft.[14] In 1982, the first completed aircraft made its first flight.[15][16] Upon its launch into service the following year, it was hailed as being "the world's quietest jetliner".[17] In 1993, an upgraded model of the BAe 146, referred to as the Avro RJ series, superseded the original; changes included the replacement of the original Lycoming ALF 502 turbofan engines by higher-thrust LF 507 turbofan engines, which were housed in redesigned nacelles. The Avro RJ series also featured a modernised cockpit with EFIS replacing the analogue ADI, HSI, and engine instrumentation.[18] Production of the Avro RJ ended with the final four aircraft being delivered in late 2003; a total of 173 Avro RJ aircraft was delivered between 1993 and 2003.[19]

 
A 800 NAS Sea Harrier FRS1 from HMS Illustrious in post-Falklands War low-visibility paint scheme.

BAe developed several advanced models of the Harrier family. In 1978, the Royal Navy received the first BAe Sea Harrier of an initial order for 24.[20][21] The Sea Harrier was declared operational three years later, being initially embarked on both the first Invincible class aircraft carrier HMS Invincible, and the older HMS Hermes.[22] Following their decisive role in the 1982 Falklands War,[23] several of the lessons learnt from the conflict shaped a new upgrade programme for the fleet authorised in 1984, resulting in the Sea Harrier FRS.2 (later known as FA2). The first flight of the prototype took place in September 1988 and a contract was signed for 29 upgraded aircraft in December of that year.[24] The Sea Harrier FA2 was fitted with the Blue Vixen radar, which was described as one of the most advanced pulse doppler radar systems in the world.[25]

In August 1981, BAe and the American aircraft manufacturer McDonnell Douglas signed a memorandum of understanding regarding the McDonnell Douglas AV-8B Harrier II.[26] Under this agreement, BAe was effectively a subcontractor rather than a full partner, receiving 40 percent of the airframe's work-share in terms of man-hours.[26] Production took place at McDonnell Douglas' facilities in suburban St. Louis, Missouri, and manufacturing by BAe at its Kingston and Dunsfold facilities in Surrey, England.[27] The variant procured for the RAF, which was known as the BAe Harrier II, featured many differences, including avionics fit, armaments and equipment; the wing of the GR5 featured a stainless steel leading edge, giving it different flex characteristics from the AV-8B.[28] In December 1989, the first RAF squadron to be equipped with the Harrier II was declared operational.[29]

In 1979, BAe officially joined the multinational aircraft manufacturer Airbus and acquired a 20% share in the venture,[30][31] the move effectively reversed a decision made ten years prior in which the UK government had withdrawn its support for the Airbus consortium. Airbus' first aircraft, the A300, had been received with little initial demand,[32] but orders for the airliner had picked up in the late 1970s.[33][34] By 1979, the consortium had 256 orders for A300,[35] and Airbus had launched its second airliner, the A310, less than 12 months prior to BAe formally joining the consortium.[31] As time went on, it was becoming clear that Airbus was no longer a temporary collaboration to produce a single design as per its original mission statement; it had become a long-term brand for the development of further aircraft. By the late 1980s, work had begun on a pair of new wide-body airliners, the biggest to be produced at this point under the Airbus name; these would be launched in the 1990s as the Airbus A330 and the Airbus A340.[36][37]

During the 1983 Paris Air Show, the launch of the Experimental Aircraft Programme (EAP) to develop and fly an advanced fighter technology demonstrator was announced; at this point, the effort was intended to be a partnership between Britain and several of its European neighbours, including West Germany and Italy.[38][39] The resulting aircraft, the British Aerospace EAP, ended up being primarily developed by BAe as a private venture; it formed the basis for the multinational Eurofighter Typhoon. In 1986, in conjunction Alenia Aeronautica, CASA and DASA, BAe formed Eurofighter GmbH for the development and production of the Eurofighter.[40] The multinational organisation's head office was established in Hallbergmoos, Bavaria, Germany.[41] The maiden flight of the Eurofighter prototype took place in Bavaria on 27 March 1994, flown by DASA chief test pilot Peter Weger.[42] On 30 January 1998, the first production contract for the Eurofighter was signed between Eurofighter GmbH, engine manufacturer Eurojet and the NATO Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency, the organisation set up to manage the procurement of the aircraft.[43]

On 26 September 1985, the UK and Saudi Arabian governments signed the Al-Yamamah arms deal with BAe as prime contractor. The contracts, extended in the 1990s and never fully detailed, involved the supply of Panavia Tornado strike and air defence aircraft, BAe Hawk trainer jets, Rapier missile systems, infrastructure works and naval vessels.[44] The Al Yamamah deals are valued at anything up to £20 billion and still continue to provide a large percentage of BAE Systems' profits.[45][46]

Acquisitions and restructuring

On 22 April 1987, BAe acquired Royal Ordnance, the British armaments manufacturer, for £190 million. Subsequently, the German armaments specialist Heckler & Koch was folded into this division following its acquisition by BAe four years later.

In 1988, BAe purchased the Rover Group from the British government of Margaret Thatcher for £150 million. The sale was controversial due to opaque financial arrangements between the government and BAe; however the House of Commons Trade and Industry Committee was said to believe that "in spite of a catalogue of complaints, the committee concludes that the sale to BAe may well have been the best solution for the government."[47]

In 1991, BAe acquired a 30% interest in Hutchison Telecommunications through a stock swap deal, where Hutchison was given a controlling stake of 65% in BAe's wholly owned subsidiary – Microtel Communications Ltd.[48][49][50] In August 1991, BAe formed a naval systems joint venture, BAeSEMA, with the Sema Group.[48] BAe acquired Sema's 50% share in 1998. That year also saw BAe begin to experience major difficulties. BAe saw its share price fall below 100p for the first time. On 9 September 1991, the company issued a profits warning and later that week "bungled" the launch of a £432 million rights issue.[51] On 25 September 1991 BAe directors led by CEO Richard Evans ousted the Chairman Professor Sir Roland Smith in a move described by The Independent as "one of the most spectacular and brutal boardroom coups witnessed in many years."[52] Evans described the troubles as a confluence of events:[53]

"our property company [Arlington Securities] was hit with a lousy market. Sales of the Rover Group sank by about a fifth and losses mounted. The government's defence spending volumes underwent a major review. Losses in our commercial aerospace division increased dramatically with the recession in the airline industry."

In mid-1992, BAe wrote off £1 billion of assets, largely as part of redundancies and restructuring of its regional aircraft division.[54] This was the largest asset write-off in UK corporate history. General Electric Company (GEC), later to sell its defence interests to BAe, came close to acquiring BAe at this time.[54] BAe cut 47% of its workforce (60,000 out of 127,000), 40,000 of which were from the regional aircraft division.

Evans decided to sell non-core business activities which included The Rover Group, Arlington Securities, BAe Corporate Jets, BAe Communications and Ballast Nedam. Although the rationale of diversification was sound (to shield the company from cyclical aerospace and defence markets) the struggling company could not afford to continue the position: "We simply could not afford to carry two core businesses, cars and aerospace. At one point Rover was eating up about £2 billion of our banking capacity."[55] BAe Corporate Jets Ltd and Arkansas Aerospace Inc were sold to Raytheon in 1993. In 1994, the Rover Group was sold to BMW and British Aerospace Space Systems was sold to Matra Marconi Space. In 1998, BAe's shareholding of Orange plc was reduced to 5%.[49] The Orange shareholding was a legacy of the 30% stake in Hutchison Telecommunications (UK) Ltd.

In 1994, BAeSEMA, Siemens Plessey and GEC-Marconi formed UKAMS Limited as part of the Principal Anti-Air Missile System (PAAMS) consortium. UKAMS would become a wholly owned subsidiary of BAe Dynamics in 1998. In 1995, Saab Military Aircraft and BAe signed an agreement for the joint development and marketing of the export version of the JAS 39 Gripen. In 1996, BAe and Matra Defense agreed to merge their missile businesses into a joint venture called Matra BAe Dynamics.[56] In 1997, BAe joined the Lockheed Martin X-35 Joint Strike Fighter team.[57] The following year, BAe acquired the UK operations of Siemens Plessey Systems (SPS) from Siemens, while DASA purchased SPS' German assets.[58][59]

In the 1990s, BAe was the largest exporter based in the United Kingdom; a Competition Commission report released in 2005 calculated a ten-year aggregate figure of £45 billion, with defence sales accounting for approximately 80%.[60]

Transition to BAE Systems

In the late 1990s, European defence consolidation became a prevailing practice; European governments wished to see the merger of their defence manufacturers into a single entity, a European Aerospace and Defence Company.[61] This ambition led to numerous reports linking various European defence groups – mainly with each other but also with American defence contractors. In July 1998, merger discussions began between BAe and DASA.[62] Terms for such a merger had been reportedly agreed between British Aerospace Chairman Richard Evans and DASA CEO Jürgen Schrempp in December 1998.[63][64] However, when the British General Electric Company (GEC) put its defence electronics business Marconi Electronic Systems (MES) up for sale on 22 December 1998, BAe's management opted to abandon the DASA merger in favour of purchasing its British rival.[65][66] During 2004, Evans stated that his fear was that an American defence contractor would acquire MES and challenge both British Aerospace and DASA.[63]

Schrempp was angered by BAe's reversal, and opted to pursue other partner companies for DASA to merge with. On 11 June 1999, the Spanish aircraft company CASA a memorandum of understanding for such a merger.[67] On 14 October 1999, DASA agreed to merge with Aérospatiale-Matra to create the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS).[68] 10 July 2000 was "day one" for the new company, which became the world's second-largest aerospace company after Boeing and the second-largest European arms manufacturer after BAE Systems.[69]

The GEC merger to create a solely British company, compared to the prospective Anglo-German company that would have resulted from merging with DASA, was promoted as having superior prospects for further penetration of the lucrative defence market of the United States. The newly combined company, which was initially referred to as "New British Aerospace", was officially formed on 30 November 1999; it is named BAE Systems.[70]

Products

Aircraft production

 
A buzz BAe 146–300
 
Harrier GR5
 
BAe Nimrod MRA4
 
Sea Harrier FA2 hovering
 
A BAe built Eurofighter development aircraft

Airliner wing production

 
An example of a wing of the first Airbus model, the A300

Missiles

 
A vertically-launched Sea Wolf
 
Skylark sounding rocket

Unmanned Air Vehicles

Space hardware

 
An artist's depiction of HOTOL

Security Systems

  • CONDOR CONtraband DetectOR
  • Vehicle Cargo X-Ray Systems

Corruption investigation and criticisms

There have been allegations that the Al Yamamah contracts were a result of bribes ("douceurs") to members of the Saudi royal family and government officials. Some allegations suggested that the former Prime Minister's son Mark Thatcher may have been involved; he has strongly denied receiving payments or exploiting his mother's connections in his business dealings.[71] The National Audit Office investigated the contracts and has so far never released its conclusions – the only NAO report ever to be withheld. The BBC's Newsnight observed that it is ironic that the once classified report analysing the construction of MI5's Thames House and MI6's Vauxhall Cross headquarters has been released, but the Al Yamamah report is still deemed too sensitive.[citation needed]

The 2007 documentary film Welcome Aboard Toxic Airlines contained evidence that vital data was withheld from a 1999–2000 Australian Senate Inquiry into the health and flight safety issues relating to oil fumes on the British Aerospace 146. The film also contains an Australian Senator’s speech about money being paid by BAe for silence on the fumes issue.[72]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "." British Aerospace. Retrieved 31 August 2011. "British Aerospace plc Warwick House, Farnborough Aerospace Centre, Farnborough, Hampshire GU14 6YU."
  2. ^ Certificate of Incorporation on Re-Registration as Public Limited Company
  3. ^ a b "British Aerospace UK Heritage".
  4. ^ "Written Answers — British Aerospace". Hansard. 17 December 1980. Retrieved 23 March 2008. col. 179
  5. ^ Long, Wellington. "Swing-Wing Wonder Weapon Is Going Into Production." Ludington Daily News,24 August 1976.
  6. ^ Segell 1997, p. 124.
  7. ^ Morris, Joe Alex Jr. "Messerschmitt Back in Business". St. Petersburg Times. 30 April 1969.
  8. ^ "Nations – United Kingdom". Panavia Aircraft GmbH. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  9. ^ Middleton, Drew. "Military Analysis: West Germany Is Modernizing Military Forces." The New York Times, 23 September 1979. Retrieved 23 September 1979.
  10. ^ Parsons, Gary. airsceneuk.org.uk. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  11. ^ Taylor 1987, p. 58.
  12. ^ Jackson et al. 1998, p. 241.
  13. ^ Lake 2002, pp. 446, 455.
  14. ^ Hewish 1982, p. 857.
  15. ^ Velupillai 1981, p. 1244.
  16. ^ Hewish 1982, p. 858.
  17. ^ "Coming: Smaller Jetliners." Popular Mechanics, September 1984. 161(9), p. 98.
  18. ^ . Velocity. May 2007. Archived from the original on 29 June 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2008.
  19. ^ "Commercial Aircraft Directory – Avro RJ-85ER." Flight Global, Retrieved 14 November 2012.
  20. ^ Bull 2004, p. 120.
  21. ^ Grove 1987, pp. 319–320.
  22. ^ Ford, Terry (1981). "Sea Harrier – A New Dimension". Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology. Bradford, England: Emerald Group Publishing. 53 (6): 2–5. doi:10.1108/eb035729. ISSN 1758-4213. from the original on 5 April 2012.
  23. ^ Sloyan, Patrick J (23 May 1982). "Sea Harrier changes face of air warfare". Tri City Herald.[dead link]
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  25. ^ Hoyle, Craig (9 May 2006). "Harrier high". Flightglobal. from the original on 1 January 2014. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  26. ^ a b Wilson 2000, p. 26.
  27. ^ Gaines 1985, p. 148.
  28. ^ "Aerospace, Volume 20." Royal Aeronautical Society, 1993, p. 14.
  29. ^ Nordeen 2006, p. 68.
  30. ^ Rinearson, Peter (19 June 1983). "A special report on the conception, design, manufacture, marketing and delivery of a new jetliner—the Boeing 757". The Seattle Times.
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  40. ^ Cowton, Rodney (7 June 1986). "Eurofighter partners: West Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain". The Times.
  41. ^ "Impressum: Eurofighter Jagdflugzeug GmbH Am Söldnermoos 17 D-85399 Hallbergmoos Germany". Eurofighter. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
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  43. ^ BBC "Euro-fighter contracts signed." BBC News, 30 January 1998. Retrieved: 18 September 2007.
  44. ^ Donne, Michael (12 August 1987). "BAe Hands Over First Part of Saudi Aircraft Order". Financial Times. p. 6.
  45. ^ Fildes, Nic (19 August 2006). "BAE confirms £5bn Eurofighter sale to Saudi Arabia". The Times. London. Retrieved 19 August 2006.
  46. ^ Steiner, Rupert (10 September 2006). "BAE clinches new £2.5bn Tornado deal with Saudis". The Business. Retrieved 12 September 2006.[permanent dead link]
  47. ^ Cassell, Michael (February 22, 1991). "The Rover Report; 'British Aerospace drove a hard bargain'". Financial Times.
  48. ^ a b (PDF). na.baesystems.com. p. 107. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 January 2007. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  49. ^ a b (PDF). 22 June 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 May 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2012.
  50. ^ . licensing.ofcom.org.uk. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  51. ^ Betts, Paul (26 September 1991). "Leader toppled by unstoppable momentum". Financial Times. p. 28.
  52. ^ Harrison, Michael (26 September 1991). "Roland Smith ousted by boardroom coup at BAe". The Independent. Newspaper Publishing plc. p. 1.
  53. ^ Evans, Richard (1999). Vertical Take-off, p. 2. London: Nicholas Brealey Publishing. ISBN 1-85788-245-8.
  54. ^ a b Stone, Chris (16 September 1993). "BAe soars out of the red". The Herald. Caledonian Newspapers Ltd. pp. 3, 7. Retrieved 7 December 2006.
  55. ^ Evans, Richard (1999). Vertical Take-off, p. 6. London: Nicholas Brealey Publishing. ISBN 1-85788-245-8.
  56. ^ BAe confirms Matra venture, Financial Times (London), August 17, 1996
  57. ^ August, Oliver (June 19, 1997). "BAe in JSF link with Lockheed". The Times.
  58. ^ Karin Backlund; Madelene Sandstrom (August 1996). The Integration of Acquired Companies Into the Defence Industry: Experiences from Western Europe. DIANE Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7881-4859-0.
  59. ^ "'The DECCA Legacy' A view from inside the RADAR company -DECCA - BAE SYSTEMS (1949 - 2009)". Retrieved 16 July 2012.
  60. ^ Competition Commission (1995) British Aerospace Public Limited Company and VSEL Plc: A report on the proposed merger 2 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine p. 28.
  61. ^ "Business: The Company File: Defense merger on the radar". BBC News. 10 July 1998. Retrieved 15 September 2007.
  62. ^ "BAe and Dasa discuss proposals for merger: Aerospace groups still have 'important issues to resolve'". Financial Times. 24 July 1998. p. 1.
  63. ^ a b Spiegel, Peter (17 July 2004). "The largest aerospace companies gather next week for the Farnborough air show but the event will be without its long-time unofficial host". Financial Times. p. 11.
  64. ^ Spiegel, Peter (17 July 2004). "End of an era at BAE: how Sir Richard Evans changed the UK defence industry". Financial Times.
  65. ^ BAE Systems Annual Report 1999 22. BAE Systems plc (2000). Retrieved on 27 October 2006.
  66. ^ Turpin, Andrew (4 March 2000). "BAE eyes US targets after profit rockets". The Scotsman. The Scotsman Publications. p. 26.
  67. ^ White, David; Nicoll, Alexander (12 June 1999). "DaimlerChrysler wins fight for Spain's Casa: Deal boosts aerospace industry consolidation in Europe". Financial Times.
  68. ^ Nicoll, Alexander; Skapiner, Michael (15 October 1999). "Flying in formation: The merger of DaimlerChrysler Aerospace and Aérospatiale-Matra may pave the way for a larger European grouping or the first transatlantic defence tie-up, argue Alexander Nicoll and Michael Skapinker". Financial Times.
  69. ^ . EADS. Archived from the original on 3 June 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
  70. ^ "BAe set to sign A8bn GEC deal with merger". The Guardian. 19 January 1999.
  71. ^ . Campaign Against Arms Trade. September 2000. Archived from the original on 19 June 2006. Retrieved 19 August 2006.
  72. ^ Michealis, S (2010), PHD 11 November 1900 Health And Flight Safety Implications From Exposure To Contaminated Air In Aircraft.docx - UNSWorks (Thesis), unsworks.unsw.edu.au, doi:10.26190/unsworks/23524, hdl:1959.4/50342, retrieved 23 January 2021[permanent dead link]

Bibliography

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  • Gaines, Mike (26 May – 1 June 1985). . Flight International. London, UK: Reed Business Information. 127 (3962): 148–151. ISSN 0015-3710. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2011..
  • Grove, Eric J (1987). Vanguard to Trident; British Naval Policy since World War II. London, UK: The Bodley Head. ISBN 978-0-370-31021-3..
  • Hewish, Mark. "Britain's First New Airliner for 18 years." New Scientist, 94(1311), 24 June 1982. pp. 857–859.
  • Jackson, Paul, Kenneth Munson, Lindsay Peacock and John W. R. Taylor, eds. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1997–98. London: Jane's Information Group, 1998. ISBN 0-7106-1788-7.
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  • Nordeen, Lon O (2006). Harrier II, Validating V/STOL. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2006. ISBN 1-59114-536-8..
  • Segell, Glen (1 January 1997). Wither or Dither: British Aerospace Collaborative Procurement with Europe. Staffordshire, UK: Glen Segell Publishers, 1997. ISBN 1-901414-03-5..
  • Velupillai, David. "British Aerospace 146 Described." Flight International, 2 May 1981. pp. 1243–1253.
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External links

  • (Archive)
  • British Aerospace UK at BAE Systems website
  • British Aerospace Australia at BAE Systems website

british, aerospace, this, article, about, former, company, successor, systems, british, aircraft, munitions, defence, systems, manufacturer, head, office, warwick, house, farnborough, aerospace, centre, farnborough, hampshire, formed, 1977, 1999, purchased, ma. This article is about the former company British Aerospace For its successor see BAE Systems British Aerospace plc BAe was a British aircraft munitions and defence systems manufacturer Its head office was at Warwick House in the Farnborough Aerospace Centre in Farnborough Hampshire 1 Formed in 1977 in 1999 it purchased Marconi Electronic Systems the defence electronics and naval shipbuilding subsidiary of the General Electric Company plc to form BAE Systems British Aerospace plcTypeStatutory corporation 1977 1980 Public limited company 1980 1999 IndustryAerospacePredecessorBritish Aircraft CorporationHawker SiddeleyScottish AviationFounded29 April 1977 45 years ago 1977 04 29 Defunct30 November 1999 23 years ago 1999 11 30 FateMerged with Marconi Electronic SystemsSuccessorBAE SystemsHeadquartersFarnborough Hampshire United KingdomProductsAircraftSubsidiariesRover Group 1988 1994 Britten Norman 1998 Websitebae co uk archived British Aerospace Act 1980Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to provide for the vesting of all the property rights liabilities and obligations of British Aerospace in a company nominated by the Secretary of State and the subsequent dissolution of British Aerospace and to make provision with respect to the finances of that company Citation1980 c 26Introduced byunknownTerritorial extent England and Wales Scotland Northern IrelandDatesRoyal assent1 May 1980Commencement1 May 1980Other legislationAmended by Relates toAircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977Status Current legislationText of statute as originally enactedRevised text of statute as amendedText of the British Aerospace as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and privatisation 1 2 Programmes 1 3 Acquisitions and restructuring 1 4 Transition to BAE Systems 2 Products 2 1 Aircraft production 2 2 Airliner wing production 2 3 Missiles 2 4 Unmanned Air Vehicles 2 5 Space hardware 2 6 Security Systems 3 Corruption investigation and criticisms 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory EditFormation and privatisation Edit The company has its origins in the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 which called for the nationalisation and merger of the British Aircraft Corporation Hawker Siddeley Aviation Hawker Siddeley Dynamics and Scottish Aviation On 29 April 1977 the new entity was formed in the United Kingdom as a statutory corporation Under the provisions of the British Aerospace Act 1980 on 1 January the statutory corporation was transferred to a limited company which then re registered as a public limited company plc under the name British Aerospace Public Limited Company on 2 January 1981 2 BAe was privatised in two main phases the first in February 1981 involving 51 6 shares of the company during which the public sale was 3 5 times subscribed and at the end of the first day s trading share prices were 14 above the original offer price 3 The second phase occurred in May 1985 in which 48 4 shares were sold this sale was 5 4 times subscribed and the first day closing price was 11 above the initial offer price 3 Despite this privatisation the British Government maintained a 1 golden share which allowed it to veto foreign control of the board or company 4 Programmes Edit A German Air Force Tornado IDS in flight 2007 Prior to the formation of British Aerospace its predecessors were involved in several aircraft programmes Scottish Aviation was working on a project for a 19 seat turboprop airliner an upgraded version of the Handley Page Jetstream BAe continued development and placed the Jetstream 31 into production after the first flight of the prototype in March 1980 At the same time production of Hawker Siddeley s HS 125 business jet Harrier VTOL jet fighter and HS 748 turboprop airliner continued under BAe as did the that of the Trident jet airliner for a short time Similarly low rate production of the British Aircraft Corporation s One Eleven jet airliner and Strikemaster two seat military jet trainer attack aircraft and the iconic Concorde supersonic airliner also continued On 29 July 1976 less than a year prior to BAe s formation the contract for production of the first batch of the Panavia Tornado an advanced nuclear capable fighter bomber was signed 5 It was developed and produced via a multinational company Panavia Aircraft GmbH of which BAe was one of several companies to be heavily involved 6 7 On 10 July 1979 the maiden flight of a production Tornado occurred 8 On 5 and 6 June 1979 the first aircraft were delivered to the RAF and German Air Force respectively 9 On 25 September 1981 the first Italian Tornado was delivered 10 The Tornado would be produced in large numbers the 500th aircraft to be completed was delivered to West Germany on 19 December 1987 11 Production of the Tornado ended in 1998 the final batch being delivered to the Royal Saudi Air Force that had ordered a total of 96 IDS Tornados 12 Aviation author Jon Lake noted that The Trinational Panavia Consortium produced just short of 1 000 Tornados making it one of the most successful postwar bomber programs 13 In 1978 BAe relaunched the BAe 146 a short haul regional airliner that had been previously worked on by Hawker Siddeley The company marketed it as a quiet and economic turbofan powered compact airliner that could replace the previous generation of turboprop powered feeder aircraft 14 In 1982 the first completed aircraft made its first flight 15 16 Upon its launch into service the following year it was hailed as being the world s quietest jetliner 17 In 1993 an upgraded model of the BAe 146 referred to as the Avro RJ series superseded the original changes included the replacement of the original Lycoming ALF 502 turbofan engines by higher thrust LF 507 turbofan engines which were housed in redesigned nacelles The Avro RJ series also featured a modernised cockpit with EFIS replacing the analogue ADI HSI and engine instrumentation 18 Production of the Avro RJ ended with the final four aircraft being delivered in late 2003 a total of 173 Avro RJ aircraft was delivered between 1993 and 2003 19 A 800 NAS Sea Harrier FRS1 from HMS Illustrious in post Falklands War low visibility paint scheme BAe developed several advanced models of the Harrier family In 1978 the Royal Navy received the first BAe Sea Harrier of an initial order for 24 20 21 The Sea Harrier was declared operational three years later being initially embarked on both the first Invincible class aircraft carrier HMS Invincible and the older HMS Hermes 22 Following their decisive role in the 1982 Falklands War 23 several of the lessons learnt from the conflict shaped a new upgrade programme for the fleet authorised in 1984 resulting in the Sea Harrier FRS 2 later known as FA2 The first flight of the prototype took place in September 1988 and a contract was signed for 29 upgraded aircraft in December of that year 24 The Sea Harrier FA2 was fitted with the Blue Vixen radar which was described as one of the most advanced pulse doppler radar systems in the world 25 In August 1981 BAe and the American aircraft manufacturer McDonnell Douglas signed a memorandum of understanding regarding the McDonnell Douglas AV 8B Harrier II 26 Under this agreement BAe was effectively a subcontractor rather than a full partner receiving 40 percent of the airframe s work share in terms of man hours 26 Production took place at McDonnell Douglas facilities in suburban St Louis Missouri and manufacturing by BAe at its Kingston and Dunsfold facilities in Surrey England 27 The variant procured for the RAF which was known as the BAe Harrier II featured many differences including avionics fit armaments and equipment the wing of the GR5 featured a stainless steel leading edge giving it different flex characteristics from the AV 8B 28 In December 1989 the first RAF squadron to be equipped with the Harrier II was declared operational 29 In 1979 BAe officially joined the multinational aircraft manufacturer Airbus and acquired a 20 share in the venture 30 31 the move effectively reversed a decision made ten years prior in which the UK government had withdrawn its support for the Airbus consortium Airbus first aircraft the A300 had been received with little initial demand 32 but orders for the airliner had picked up in the late 1970s 33 34 By 1979 the consortium had 256 orders for A300 35 and Airbus had launched its second airliner the A310 less than 12 months prior to BAe formally joining the consortium 31 As time went on it was becoming clear that Airbus was no longer a temporary collaboration to produce a single design as per its original mission statement it had become a long term brand for the development of further aircraft By the late 1980s work had begun on a pair of new wide body airliners the biggest to be produced at this point under the Airbus name these would be launched in the 1990s as the Airbus A330 and the Airbus A340 36 37 A British Aerospace EAP at the Farnborough Air Show 1986 During the 1983 Paris Air Show the launch of the Experimental Aircraft Programme EAP to develop and fly an advanced fighter technology demonstrator was announced at this point the effort was intended to be a partnership between Britain and several of its European neighbours including West Germany and Italy 38 39 The resulting aircraft the British Aerospace EAP ended up being primarily developed by BAe as a private venture it formed the basis for the multinational Eurofighter Typhoon In 1986 in conjunction Alenia Aeronautica CASA and DASA BAe formed Eurofighter GmbH for the development and production of the Eurofighter 40 The multinational organisation s head office was established in Hallbergmoos Bavaria Germany 41 The maiden flight of the Eurofighter prototype took place in Bavaria on 27 March 1994 flown by DASA chief test pilot Peter Weger 42 On 30 January 1998 the first production contract for the Eurofighter was signed between Eurofighter GmbH engine manufacturer Eurojet and the NATO Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency the organisation set up to manage the procurement of the aircraft 43 On 26 September 1985 the UK and Saudi Arabian governments signed the Al Yamamah arms deal with BAe as prime contractor The contracts extended in the 1990s and never fully detailed involved the supply of Panavia Tornado strike and air defence aircraft BAe Hawk trainer jets Rapier missile systems infrastructure works and naval vessels 44 The Al Yamamah deals are valued at anything up to 20 billion and still continue to provide a large percentage of BAE Systems profits 45 46 Acquisitions and restructuring Edit On 22 April 1987 BAe acquired Royal Ordnance the British armaments manufacturer for 190 million Subsequently the German armaments specialist Heckler amp Koch was folded into this division following its acquisition by BAe four years later In 1988 BAe purchased the Rover Group from the British government of Margaret Thatcher for 150 million The sale was controversial due to opaque financial arrangements between the government and BAe however the House of Commons Trade and Industry Committee was said to believe that in spite of a catalogue of complaints the committee concludes that the sale to BAe may well have been the best solution for the government 47 In 1991 BAe acquired a 30 interest in Hutchison Telecommunications through a stock swap deal where Hutchison was given a controlling stake of 65 in BAe s wholly owned subsidiary Microtel Communications Ltd 48 49 50 In August 1991 BAe formed a naval systems joint venture BAeSEMA with the Sema Group 48 BAe acquired Sema s 50 share in 1998 That year also saw BAe begin to experience major difficulties BAe saw its share price fall below 100p for the first time On 9 September 1991 the company issued a profits warning and later that week bungled the launch of a 432 million rights issue 51 On 25 September 1991 BAe directors led by CEO Richard Evans ousted the Chairman Professor Sir Roland Smith in a move described by The Independent as one of the most spectacular and brutal boardroom coups witnessed in many years 52 Evans described the troubles as a confluence of events 53 our property company Arlington Securities was hit with a lousy market Sales of the Rover Group sank by about a fifth and losses mounted The government s defence spending volumes underwent a major review Losses in our commercial aerospace division increased dramatically with the recession in the airline industry In mid 1992 BAe wrote off 1 billion of assets largely as part of redundancies and restructuring of its regional aircraft division 54 This was the largest asset write off in UK corporate history General Electric Company GEC later to sell its defence interests to BAe came close to acquiring BAe at this time 54 BAe cut 47 of its workforce 60 000 out of 127 000 40 000 of which were from the regional aircraft division Evans decided to sell non core business activities which included The Rover Group Arlington Securities BAe Corporate Jets BAe Communications and Ballast Nedam Although the rationale of diversification was sound to shield the company from cyclical aerospace and defence markets the struggling company could not afford to continue the position We simply could not afford to carry two core businesses cars and aerospace At one point Rover was eating up about 2 billion of our banking capacity 55 BAe Corporate Jets Ltd and Arkansas Aerospace Inc were sold to Raytheon in 1993 In 1994 the Rover Group was sold to BMW and British Aerospace Space Systems was sold to Matra Marconi Space In 1998 BAe s shareholding of Orange plc was reduced to 5 49 The Orange shareholding was a legacy of the 30 stake in Hutchison Telecommunications UK Ltd In 1994 BAeSEMA Siemens Plessey and GEC Marconi formed UKAMS Limited as part of the Principal Anti Air Missile System PAAMS consortium UKAMS would become a wholly owned subsidiary of BAe Dynamics in 1998 In 1995 Saab Military Aircraft and BAe signed an agreement for the joint development and marketing of the export version of the JAS 39 Gripen In 1996 BAe and Matra Defense agreed to merge their missile businesses into a joint venture called Matra BAe Dynamics 56 In 1997 BAe joined the Lockheed Martin X 35 Joint Strike Fighter team 57 The following year BAe acquired the UK operations of Siemens Plessey Systems SPS from Siemens while DASA purchased SPS German assets 58 59 In the 1990s BAe was the largest exporter based in the United Kingdom a Competition Commission report released in 2005 calculated a ten year aggregate figure of 45 billion with defence sales accounting for approximately 80 60 Transition to BAE Systems Edit In the late 1990s European defence consolidation became a prevailing practice European governments wished to see the merger of their defence manufacturers into a single entity a European Aerospace and Defence Company 61 This ambition led to numerous reports linking various European defence groups mainly with each other but also with American defence contractors In July 1998 merger discussions began between BAe and DASA 62 Terms for such a merger had been reportedly agreed between British Aerospace Chairman Richard Evans and DASA CEO Jurgen Schrempp in December 1998 63 64 However when the British General Electric Company GEC put its defence electronics business Marconi Electronic Systems MES up for sale on 22 December 1998 BAe s management opted to abandon the DASA merger in favour of purchasing its British rival 65 66 During 2004 Evans stated that his fear was that an American defence contractor would acquire MES and challenge both British Aerospace and DASA 63 Schrempp was angered by BAe s reversal and opted to pursue other partner companies for DASA to merge with On 11 June 1999 the Spanish aircraft company CASA a memorandum of understanding for such a merger 67 On 14 October 1999 DASA agreed to merge with Aerospatiale Matra to create the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company EADS 68 10 July 2000 was day one for the new company which became the world s second largest aerospace company after Boeing and the second largest European arms manufacturer after BAE Systems 69 The GEC merger to create a solely British company compared to the prospective Anglo German company that would have resulted from merging with DASA was promoted as having superior prospects for further penetration of the lucrative defence market of the United States The newly combined company which was initially referred to as New British Aerospace was officially formed on 30 November 1999 it is named BAE Systems 70 Products EditAircraft production Edit A buzz BAe 146 300 Harrier GR5 BAe Nimrod MRA4 Sea Harrier FA2 hovering A BAe built Eurofighter development aircraft British Aerospace 125 British Aerospace 146 Series 100 200 and 300 aircraft Also includes Avro RJ series British Aerospace P 125 British Aerospace P 1216 British Aerospace ATP British Aerospace EAP British Aerospace Harrier II British Aerospace Hawk British Aerospace Hawk 200 BAe Hawker 800 British Aerospace Jetstream British Aerospace Jetstream 41 British Aerospace Nimrod AEW 3 BAE Nimrod MRA 4 BAE Replica British Aerospace Sea Harrier BAe Aerospatiale Concorde BAe Avro 748 BAe Avro vulcan BAC BAe Strikemaster BAe Buccaneer BAe Canberra BAe Lightning BAe Jetstream BAe Victor Hawker BAe Hunter Hawker BAe Harrier Harrier jump jet Hawker BAe Nimrod Hawker BAe Nimrod R1 BAe Hawker Trident BAe Provost Mcdonnel Douglas BAe HarrierII BAe McDonnell Douglas Goshawk BAe Saab Gripen BAe Bulldog BAe Vickers VC10 Eurofighter Typhoon Panavia Tornado Panavia Tornado ADV SEPECAT JaguarAirliner wing production Edit An example of a wing of the first Airbus model the A300 Airbus A300 Airbus A310 Airbus A320 family Airbus A330 Airbus A340 Airbus Beluga Avion de Transport Supersonique Futur projectMissiles Edit A vertically launched Sea Wolf Skylark sounding rocket ALARM Rapier Sea Dart Sea Eagle Sea Skua Sea Wolf Skyflash PAAMS Skylark sounding rocket S225XRUnmanned Air Vehicles Edit BAe Flybac BAE Systems Phoenix BAE SkyEye BAe StabileyeSpace hardware Edit An artist s depiction of HOTOL Giotto probe HOTOL Olympus 1 Orbital Test Satellite Skynet satellites Security Systems Edit CONDOR CONtraband DetectOR Vehicle Cargo X Ray SystemsCorruption investigation and criticisms EditMain article Al Yamamah arms deal There have been allegations that the Al Yamamah contracts were a result of bribes douceurs to members of the Saudi royal family and government officials Some allegations suggested that the former Prime Minister s son Mark Thatcher may have been involved he has strongly denied receiving payments or exploiting his mother s connections in his business dealings 71 The National Audit Office investigated the contracts and has so far never released its conclusions the only NAO report ever to be withheld The BBC s Newsnight observed that it is ironic that the once classified report analysing the construction of MI5 s Thames House and MI6 s Vauxhall Cross headquarters has been released but the Al Yamamah report is still deemed too sensitive citation needed The 2007 documentary film Welcome Aboard Toxic Airlines contained evidence that vital data was withheld from a 1999 2000 Australian Senate Inquiry into the health and flight safety issues relating to oil fumes on the British Aerospace 146 The film also contains an Australian Senator s speech about money being paid by BAe for silence on the fumes issue 72 See also Edit Hampshire portal Companies portal Aviation portalAerospace industry in the United Kingdom Hawker Siddeley Company Rover GroupReferences EditCitations Edit Sites British Aerospace Retrieved 31 August 2011 British Aerospace plc Warwick House Farnborough Aerospace Centre Farnborough Hampshire GU14 6YU Certificate of Incorporation on Re Registration as Public Limited Company a b British Aerospace UK Heritage Written Answers British Aerospace Hansard 17 December 1980 Retrieved 23 March 2008 col 179 Long Wellington Swing Wing Wonder Weapon Is Going Into Production Ludington Daily News 24 August 1976 Segell 1997 p 124 Morris Joe Alex Jr Messerschmitt Back in Business St Petersburg Times 30 April 1969 Nations United Kingdom Panavia Aircraft GmbH Retrieved 5 March 2019 Middleton Drew Military Analysis West Germany Is Modernizing Military Forces The New York Times 23 September 1979 Retrieved 23 September 1979 Parsons Gary TTTEnd of an era airsceneuk org uk Retrieved 19 January 2011 Taylor 1987 p 58 Jackson et al 1998 p 241 Lake 2002 pp 446 455 Hewish 1982 p 857 Velupillai 1981 p 1244 Hewish 1982 p 858 Coming Smaller Jetliners Popular Mechanics September 1984 161 9 p 98 VLM Introduces Jet Aircraft Velocity May 2007 Archived from the original on 29 June 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 Commercial Aircraft Directory Avro RJ 85ER Flight Global Retrieved 14 November 2012 Bull 2004 p 120 Grove 1987 pp 319 320 Ford Terry 1981 Sea Harrier A New Dimension Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology Bradford England Emerald Group Publishing 53 6 2 5 doi 10 1108 eb035729 ISSN 1758 4213 Archived from the original on 5 April 2012 Sloyan Patrick J 23 May 1982 Sea Harrier changes face of air warfare Tri City Herald dead link First Flight for Sea Harrier FRS2 10 13 Janes Defense Weekly 1 November 1988 767 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link Hoyle Craig 9 May 2006 Harrier high Flightglobal Archived from the original on 1 January 2014 Retrieved 31 December 2013 a b Wilson 2000 p 26 Gaines 1985 p 148 Aerospace Volume 20 Royal Aeronautical Society 1993 p 14 Nordeen 2006 p 68 Rinearson Peter 19 June 1983 A special report on the conception design manufacture marketing and delivery of a new jetliner the Boeing 757 The Seattle Times a b History Technology leaders Airbus Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 30 September 2009 Now the Poor Man s Jumbo Jet Time 17 October 1977 Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 Witkin Richard 7 April 1978 Eastern accepts 778 million deal to get 23 Airbuses The New York Times Carman Gerry 11 December 1979 Airbus funds flow on The Age Australia dead link The Airbus fight to stay ahead BBC News 23 June 2000 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Frawley Gerald Airbus A330 200 Airbus A330 300 The International Directory of Civil Aircraft 2003 2004 Aerospace Publications 2003 ISBN 1 875671 58 7 Airbus faces critical decision in coming months Reuters 26 December 2001 BAe EAP ZF534 Museum Accession Number X005 5992 Royal Air Force Museum Cosford Retrieved 22 June 2019 BAe EAP BAE Systems Retrieved 22 June 2019 Cowton Rodney 7 June 1986 Eurofighter partners West Germany Britain Italy and Spain The Times Impressum Eurofighter Jagdflugzeug GmbH Am Soldnermoos 17 D 85399 Hallbergmoos Germany Eurofighter Retrieved 17 September 2011 1994 Maiden flight for future fighter jet BBC News 27 February 1994 Retrieved 19 March 2008 BBC Euro fighter contracts signed BBC News 30 January 1998 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Donne Michael 12 August 1987 BAe Hands Over First Part of Saudi Aircraft Order Financial Times p 6 Fildes Nic 19 August 2006 BAE confirms 5bn Eurofighter sale to Saudi Arabia The Times London Retrieved 19 August 2006 Steiner Rupert 10 September 2006 BAE clinches new 2 5bn Tornado deal with Saudis The Business Retrieved 12 September 2006 permanent dead link Cassell Michael February 22 1991 The Rover Report British Aerospace drove a hard bargain Financial Times a b The Facts 2004 PDF na baesystems com p 107 Archived from the original PDF on 25 January 2007 Retrieved 9 June 2012 a b BAe s record breaking sterling Eurobond issue PDF 22 June 1999 Archived from the original PDF on 7 May 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2012 History of Cellular services licensing ofcom org uk Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Betts Paul 26 September 1991 Leader toppled by unstoppable momentum Financial Times p 28 Harrison Michael 26 September 1991 Roland Smith ousted by boardroom coup at BAe The Independent Newspaper Publishing plc p 1 Evans Richard 1999 Vertical Take off p 2 London Nicholas Brealey Publishing ISBN 1 85788 245 8 a b Stone Chris 16 September 1993 BAe soars out of the red The Herald Caledonian Newspapers Ltd pp 3 7 Retrieved 7 December 2006 Evans Richard 1999 Vertical Take off p 6 London Nicholas Brealey Publishing ISBN 1 85788 245 8 BAe confirms Matra venture Financial Times London August 17 1996 August Oliver June 19 1997 BAe in JSF link with Lockheed The Times Karin Backlund Madelene Sandstrom August 1996 The Integration of Acquired Companies Into the Defence Industry Experiences from Western Europe DIANE Publishing ISBN 978 0 7881 4859 0 The DECCA Legacy A view from inside the RADAR company DECCA BAE SYSTEMS 1949 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2012 Competition Commission 1995 British Aerospace Public Limited Company and VSEL Plc A report on the proposed merger Archived 2 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine p 28 Business The Company File Defense merger on the radar BBC News 10 July 1998 Retrieved 15 September 2007 BAe and Dasa discuss proposals for merger Aerospace groups still have important issues to resolve Financial Times 24 July 1998 p 1 a b Spiegel Peter 17 July 2004 The largest aerospace companies gather next week for the Farnborough air show but the event will be without its long time unofficial host Financial Times p 11 Spiegel Peter 17 July 2004 End of an era at BAE how Sir Richard Evans changed the UK defence industry Financial Times BAE Systems Annual Report 1999 22 BAE Systems plc 2000 Retrieved on 27 October 2006 Turpin Andrew 4 March 2000 BAE eyes US targets after profit rockets The Scotsman The Scotsman Publications p 26 White David Nicoll Alexander 12 June 1999 DaimlerChrysler wins fight for Spain s Casa Deal boosts aerospace industry consolidation in Europe Financial Times Nicoll Alexander Skapiner Michael 15 October 1999 Flying in formation The merger of DaimlerChrysler Aerospace and Aerospatiale Matra may pave the way for a larger European grouping or the first transatlantic defence tie up argue Alexander Nicoll and Michael Skapinker Financial Times History of EADS EADS Archived from the original on 3 June 2008 Retrieved 7 October 2009 BAe set to sign A8bn GEC deal with merger The Guardian 19 January 1999 Submission from the Campaign Against Arms Trade to the International Development Committee s Inquiry into corruption Campaign Against Arms Trade September 2000 Archived from the original on 19 June 2006 Retrieved 19 August 2006 Michealis S 2010 PHD 11 November 1900 Health And Flight Safety Implications From Exposure To Contaminated Air In Aircraft docx UNSWorks Thesis unsworks unsw edu au doi 10 26190 unsworks 23524 hdl 1959 4 50342 retrieved 23 January 2021 permanent dead link Bibliography Edit Bull Stephen 2004 Encyclopedia of Military Technology and Innovation Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing ISBN 978 1 57356 557 8 Gaines Mike 26 May 1 June 1985 AV 8B mean Marine V Stol machine Flight International London UK Reed Business Information 127 3962 148 151 ISSN 0015 3710 Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 6 July 2011 Grove Eric J 1987 Vanguard to Trident British Naval Policy since World War II London UK The Bodley Head ISBN 978 0 370 31021 3 Hewish Mark Britain s First New Airliner for 18 years New Scientist 94 1311 24 June 1982 pp 857 859 Jackson Paul Kenneth Munson Lindsay Peacock and John W R Taylor eds Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1997 98 London Jane s Information Group 1998 ISBN 0 7106 1788 7 Lake Jon Great Book of Bombers Minneapolis Minnesota Zenith Imprint 2002 ISBN 0 7603 1347 4 Nordeen Lon O 2006 Harrier II Validating V STOL Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2006 ISBN 1 59114 536 8 Segell Glen 1 January 1997 Wither or Dither British Aerospace Collaborative Procurement with Europe Staffordshire UK Glen Segell Publishers 1997 ISBN 1 901414 03 5 Velupillai David British Aerospace 146 Described Flight International 2 May 1981 pp 1243 1253 Wilson Stewart 2000 BAe McDonnell Douglas Harrier Airlife 2000 ISBN 1 84037 218 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to British Aerospace British Aerospace Archive British Aerospace UK at BAE Systems website British Aerospace Australia at BAE Systems website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Aerospace amp oldid 1118788019, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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