YOUR COUNTY.
YOUR BUSINESS JOURNAL.
 









Published January 2001

Aerospace giant
hires ex-ambassador

By Bryan Corliss
Herald Economy Writer

SEATTLE — Boeing has hired a former U.S. ambassador to Russia and the United Nations to bolster the company’s overseas presence.

Thomas Pickering, now Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, will join Boeing this month after completing his duties for the Clinton administration, Boeing Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Phil Condit said recently.

“What we’re asking Tom to do is form a State Department for Boeing,” Condit said. “We need to bring greater focus to our global presence. ... He will help take our global vision for the company to a new level.”

Pickering’s title will be Senior Vice President for International Relations. He will report to Condit and will become a member of the company’s senior leadership team.

Boeing needs to focus more on international issues, Condit said. The company has customers in 145 countries and operates in 60.

Pickering has been a diplomat for five decades. He has been U.S. ambassador to India, Israel, El Salvador, Nigeria and Jordan, as well as the nation’s official representative at the United Nations and in Russia.

Condit announced Pickering’s hiring during a year-end media briefing at Boeing headquarters.

It was an impressive year for the company, Condit said.

The commercial airplane group was on track for 600 orders, delivering about 490 planes, he said. The group, at the end of last year’s third quarter, had orders for $123 billion worth of airplanes, which was $12 billion greater than the total for all of 1999, he said.

The group is pushing profit margins higher, he said, from 5.5 percent in 1999 to 7.3 percent during the first nine months of 2000.

Boeing will continue to push for new space business this year, Condit said. The company estimates there is about $90 billion a year to be made in the sector — right now Boeing has 4 percent of that market.

“We’ve got a lot of room to grow,” he said. And with Pickering’s hiring, “now we can open new frontiers globally.”

In other business, Condit:

  • Predicted employment levels will remain stable during 2001. “I can see some ups and downs, but nothing big.”
  • Said he is confident in the company’s response to Airbus’ drive to launch its A380 (formerly the A3XX) superjumbo jet. Airbus has received the 50 orders needed to launch the project, but Boeing received orders for 115 777s in 2000, Condit noted.

That reinforces Boeing’s view that the market is evolving toward larger fleets of 200- to 300-passenger planes, rather than the 550-seat-plus superjumbo, he said.

At the same time, Boeing is likely to launch its proposed 747X soon to compete with Airbus’ superjumbo.

“There’s a lot of interest,” particularly in a cargo version of the craft, he said.

Back to the top/January 2001 Main Menu

 

 

© The Daily Herald Co., Everett, WA