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Sanctions fail: Russia acquires $1B spare parts for Boeing & Airbus

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Sanctions fail: Russia acquires $1B spare parts for Boeing & Airbus
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Webp embraer
Embraer | Official Website

When Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, the international community responded with sanctions that severely restricted Russia's access to aviation resources. This included cutting off access to the Global Distribution System (GDS), limiting international flights, halting new Western plane acquisitions, and ceasing the supply of parts for existing aircraft. Despite these measures, Finnish news outlet Yle reports that Russia has managed to acquire nearly one billion euros ($1.173 billion) worth of aircraft parts.

The sanctions specifically prohibit companies like Airbus and Boeing from selling aircraft or services to Russia. Even Comac and Embraer face similar restrictions. To maintain their fleet, Russian airlines have turned to alternative methods involving allied or neutral countries.

Reports indicate that Russia has obtained approximately €600 million ($703 million) in parts for Airbus aircraft and about €400 million ($468 million) for Boeing planes. These transactions occur through third-party nations such as China, Türkiye, and the United Arab Emirates. Companies based in these countries purchase parts from Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) and sell them to Russian airlines. Indian firms have also reportedly joined these activities.

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Boeing reiterated its compliance with regulations and stated it no longer maintains business relations with Russian carriers. Airbus emphasized that "there is no legal method for aircraft, parts, documentation or services to be exported into Russia." The company added that while they can track genuine parts and specify end-user commitments, policing non-genuine parts remains a challenge.

Yle's investigation revealed over 4,000 shipments of various components have reached Russia since February 2022. These range from small cabin fittings to electronics and even entire powerplants. Hundreds of firms are involved in these transactions.

Most parts are sold to civilian companies like Aeroflot or S7 Airlines; however, given many Russian carriers are government-owned, supplying them indirectly benefits the government financially. There is also concern about technology being used directly in military applications.

Countries involved in facilitating these imports have not joined the sanctions against Russia. In response, Western nations have sanctioned specific companies but acknowledge it's nearly impossible to completely halt this operation.

During the Soviet era, most commercial flights within the USSR were operated by locally designed airliners. In recent years though, Russian carriers primarily use Airbus and Boeing models. With new Western plane purchases blocked due to sanctions, efforts are underway to revitalize domestic aircraft production—evidenced by a recent flight of an all-Russian variant of the MC-21 narrowbody jet.

Many airliners worldwide operate on leases; hundreds in Russia were leased from foreign companies who sought repossession under international law via the Cape Town Convention—a treaty requiring cooperation with lessors for repossessions—but were thwarted when Russian authorities instructed airlines to retain planes by re-registering them domestically.

Russia's airline industry now faces challenges akin to those experienced by Iran: severe sanctions prevent new orders forcing reliance on older fleets beyond typical service lives while focusing more on repairs than replacements amid difficulties acquiring necessary components despite ongoing imports or potential new models emerging soon.

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