innsertnamehere
Superstar
private jets are the one thing Bombardier still does well on at this point, ironically.I'm fine with wiping private jets off the face of the earth. Absurd nonsense.
private jets are the one thing Bombardier still does well on at this point, ironically.I'm fine with wiping private jets off the face of the earth. Absurd nonsense.
Something that serves little benefit to the public...but where our provincial government needs show up in entourage to shake hands. /sighI'm fine with wiping private jets off the face of the earth. Absurd nonsense.
I don't think anyone is disputing that here.And a bit of a misnomer. No doubt a part of their market is the uber-rich, but some of their remaining products are owned by charter operators, freight carriers and governments including military.
Amen - not to mention the ENTIRE aviation industry is only 2% of global emissions.Private jets are environmentally egregious but people sure don't give much thought to where they focus their energies or the consequences that result. This is one of the few high valued added industries in the world where Canada not only has technological leadership but a dominant global player. We have 40% of the entire world market.
Do they go after throw away consumer electronics (iPhones, appliances) manufacturers in Asia? Do they go after the cattle or bottled water industry? Do they try to ban products from countries that commit human rights violations?
No, they target one of the few big tech wealth generators this country has left while offering no solutions as to how they plan to replace these very high paying jobs, how to prevent brain drain to foreign aerospace industries, and no ideas about how to use our technological know how in a more environmentally friendly and economically beneficial way.
Bombardier supports tens of thousands of well paying jobs in engineering, R&D, manufacturing, and professional services yet the wish is to just implode the whole thing? Where are they supposed to work instead, Tim Hortons? The kicker is that most of these people are the same who have no qualms about importing pasta sauce from Italy, fish from Vietnam, replacing their phone every 2 years, or flying to Puerto Vallarta in winter.
How about calling your MP saying you want to support Bombardier's efforts to develop an electric plane? That would actually be constructive.
In a way it's great to see a brand new facility like this being built but it's also so sad at the same time. Apparently its about 1/8th the size of the Downsview facility. I remember visiting the Downsview plant for a school project back in high school and I was amazed with all the Q400's they were pumping out and producing.
It's astonishing how badly the Bombardier family (more specifically Pierre Beaudoin) crippled and virtually self-imploded this company.
Hard to argue but the company might have garnered more support for government largesse had they run the company like, well, a company and not a plaything of Ottawa.Private jets are environmentally egregious but people sure don't give much thought to where they focus their energies or the consequences that result. This is one of the few high valued added industries in the world where Canada not only has technological leadership but a dominant global player. We have 40% of the entire world market.
Do they go after throw away consumer electronics (iPhones, appliances) manufacturers in Asia? Do they go after the cattle or bottled water industry? Do they try to ban products from countries that commit human rights violations?
No, they target one of the few big tech wealth generators this country has left while offering no solutions as to how they plan to replace these very high paying jobs, how to prevent brain drain to foreign aerospace industries, and no ideas about how to use our technological know how in a more environmentally friendly and economically beneficial way.
Bombardier supports tens of thousands of well paying jobs in engineering, R&D, manufacturing, and professional services yet the wish is to just implode the whole thing? Where are they supposed to work instead, Tim Hortons? The kicker is that most of these people are the same who have no qualms about importing pasta sauce from Italy, fish from Vietnam, replacing their phone every 2 years, or flying to Puerto Vallarta in winter.
How about calling your MP saying you want to support Bombardier's efforts to develop an electric plane? That would actually be constructive.
They're not really competing with each other, they're in entirely different segments. DeHaviland is focusing on regional passenger turboprops and specialized aircraft, Bombardier just private jets.The company that bought the rights to the Q400 is building an entirely new airport east of Calgary just to manufacture them. At least the Q400 jobs are staying in Canada and it will be good to have some competition between Bombardier and DeHaviland (Longview)
I'm pretty sure that was the only thing that came to mind when I stated, "serves little benefit to the public"...because without that, there would of been nothing. So I agree, there's least that.No, they target one of the few big tech wealth generators this country has left while offering no solutions as to how they plan to replace these very high paying jobs, how to prevent brain drain to foreign aerospace industries, and no ideas about how to use our technological know how in a more environmentally friendly and economically beneficial way.
Bombardier supports tens of thousands of well paying jobs in engineering, R&D, manufacturing, and professional services yet the wish is to just implode the whole thing? Where are they supposed to work instead, Tim Hortons?
They're the one thing Bombardier does period these days...private jets are the one thing Bombardier still does well on at this point, ironically.
They still have their recreational vehicles division, don't they? (ATVs, Sea-Doos, Snowmobiles, etc.). They do quite well in that realm as well.They're the one thing Bombardier does period these days...
Sorry, yes, they do have recreational vehicles. But the CRJ went to Mitsubishi in 2021: https://noreast.ca/news/mitsubishi-buys-bombardier-crj-series-aircraft-businessThey still have their recreational vehicles division, don't they? (ATVs, Sea-Doos, Snowmobiles, etc.). They do quite well in that realm as well.
They overstretched on the CSeries jets which ended up forcing them to liquidate both the entire project and their train division.. but they held onto their best performing assets, which is recreational vehicles and private jets.
Sorry, but they do not have the recreational vehicles component of the the original Bombardier any longer.Sorry, yes, they do have recreational vehicles...
Fireside story time.Sorry, but they do not have the recreational vehicles component of the the original Bombardier any longer.
If I recall correctly, the recreational components portion was spun out a number of years ago, in 2003, when Bombardier ran into financial problems with the costs associated with the C series jet program development. The Bombardier Beaudoin family members led a leveraged buyout with funding from the Quebec Caisse and Bain Capital. The recreational products company is know as BRP (Bombardier Recreational Products) and is listed on the TSX as DOO with Bain Capital and the Quebec Caisse as controlling shareholders.