Boeing to make aircraft seats to reduce delivery delays

Posted on 18 Jan 2018 by Jonny Williamson

Boeing and Adient announced the formation of Adient Aerospace, a joint venture that will develop, manufacture and sell a portfolio of seating products to airlines and aircraft leasing companies.


The joint venture Adient Aerospace will develop, manufacture and sell aircraft seats – image courtesy of Depositphotos.

The seats will be available for installation on new airplanes and as retrofit configurations for aircraft produced by Boeing and other commercial airplane manufacturers.

The joint venture between Boeing and Adient, an automotive seating manufacturer, addresses the aviation industry’s needs for more capacity in the seating category, superior quality and reliable on-time performance.

Kevin Schemm, senior vice president of Supply Chain Management, Finance & Business Operations and chief financial officer for Boeing Commercial Airplanes, said: “Seats have been a persistent challenge for our customers, the industry and Boeing, and we are taking action to help address constraints in the market.”

“This joint venture supports Boeing’s vertical integration strategy to develop in-house capabilities and depth in key areas to offer better products, grow services and generate higher lifecycle value.”

Adient chairman and CEO Bruce McDonald said: “Adient has a strong set of transferable competencies that will offer a unique opportunity to create value for our company and for Boeing, our shareholders and the broader commercial aircraft market.

“To enhance the customer experience for passengers, airlines and commercial airplane manufacturers, we will apply our unmatched expertise for comfort and craftsmanship along with our reputation for operational excellence.”

Adient Aerospace’s operational headquarters, technology centre and initial production plant will be located in Kaiserslautern, Germany. The joint venture’s initial customer service centre will be based in Seattle, Washington.

Adient Aerospace aftermarket spare parts distribution will be performed exclusively through Aviall, a wholly owned subsidiary of Boeing.

The seating manufacturer Adient is the majority stakeholder in the new company (50.01% share) and expects the joint venture to be included in its consolidated financial statements.

Boeing (as 49.99% partner) will receive a proportionate share of the earnings and cash flow. Both will have representation on Adient Aerospace’s board of directors.

Industry analysts forecast the commercial aircraft seating market to grow from approximately $4.5bn in 2017 to $6bn by 2026.