Company type | Private Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Aerospace and defence |
Predecessor |
Aeritalia Selenia |
Founded | 1990 |
Defunct | January 2012 |
Fate | Merged |
Successor | Alenia Aermacchi |
Headquarters | , |
Number of locations | Pomigliano, Turin, Venice, Varese, Grottaglie, Casoria, Nola, Foggia |
Products | Combat and Defense Aircraft Trainer Aircraft ( Alenia Aermacchi) Military Air Lifters Patrol Aircraft Regional Turboprop ( ATR) Regional Turbofan ( Superjet-100) |
Services | Aero structures Overhaul and Modifications (Alenia Aeronavali) |
Revenue | € 2.53 billion ( FY2008) |
€250 million | |
Owner | Leonardo S.p.A. |
Number of employees | 13,910 |
Parent | Leonardo S.p.A. |
Divisions |
Alenia Aermacchi Alenia Aeronavali Alenia Composite Alenia SIA Quadrics |
Subsidiaries |
Alenia North America ATR Superjet 100 |
Alenia Aeronautica was an Italian aerospace company. Its subsidiaries included Alenia Aermacchi and Alenia Aeronavali.
Alenia Aeronautica was also the part-owner of ATR, a joint venture with European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS).
During January 2012, the company was reorganized as Alenia Aermacchi. [1] Three years later, it was fully merged into Finmeccanica, which has since reorganised itself as a more integrated business, adopting the Leonardo name for the group
Alenia Aeronautica was created during 1990 by merger of IRI's Aeritalia and Selenia subsidiaries. [2]
The new company was associated with several ongoing aircraft programmes and partnerships, including the multinational Eurofighter Typhoon fighter programme, the Panavia Tornado fighter-bomber. As a partner in Panavia Aircraft GmbH, Aeritalia manufactured the Tornado's wings while the other partners ( British Aerospace and MBB/ DASA) manufactured the rest of the airframe. [3] It also held a 20 per cent stake in Turbo-Union, a separate company formed to develop and build the RB199 engines for the aircraft. [4] [5] Production of the Tornado ended in 1998; the final batch of aircraft being produced was delivered to the Royal Saudi Air Force. [6]
Alenia had 19.5% a workshare stake in the Eurofighter Typhoon programme. [7] On 27 March 1994, the maiden flight of the Eurofighter prototype took place in Bavaria. [8] In September 1998, contracts were signed for production of 148 Tranche 1 aircraft and procurement of long lead-time items for Tranche 2 aircraft. [9]
During 1992, Aermacchi signed a cooperation agreement with Russian aircraft company Yakovlev to support a new trainer that the firm was developing for the Russian Air Force. Aermacchi secured the right to modify and market the aircraft for the Western market. [10] The resulting aircraft first flew in 1996 and by this point, the aircraft was being marketed as the Yak/AEM-130. [11]
In October 1998, it was reported that the venture was increasingly becoming an Italian-led effort due to a lack of Russian financial support. [12]
In mid-2000, it was announced that differences between the two firms and a lack of backing from the Russian participants had ended the partnership. Instead, each company would pursue independent development. Yakovlev received a final payment of US$77 million for technical documents. [13] [14] Yakovlev would be able to sell the Yak-130 to countries such as those in the Commonwealth of Independent States, India, Slovakia and Algeria, while Aermacchi had the right to sell the M-346 to NATO nations and others. [13] The M-346 is a highly modified version of the aircraft that developed under the joint venture, using equipment exclusively from Western manufacturers. [14] [15] [16] The first M-346 prototype rolled out on 7 June 2003, and conducted its maiden flight on 15 July 2004. [17]
In January 2005, the Greek Ministry of Defense signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to become a partner in the programme and an industrial cooperation agreement between Alenia and the Hellenic Aerospace Industry was signed the following year. [18]
In March 2008, the Chilean ENAER signed an MOU with Alenia at the FIDAE air show. [19] During May 2008, Boeing signed an MOU to cooperate on the marketing, sales, training and support of two Aermacchi trainers, the M-346 and the M-311. [20] On 18 December 2008, Aermacchi announced that the M-346 had attained a maximum speed of Mach 1.15 (1,255 km/h, 678 knots, 780 mph), claiming the occasion to be the first in which an all-Italian built aircraft had broken the sound barrier in 50 years. [21]
On 20 June 2011, a Military Type Certification was granted to Alenia Aermacchi for the M-346 Master by the General Directorate for Aeronautical Armaments of the Italian Ministry of Defence in Rome. [22]
In 1995, Alenia and Lockheed Martin began discussions to improve Alenia's G.222 utility transport aircraft using C-130J's glass cockpit and a more powerful version of the G.222's T64G engine and four-blade propellers. This became the C-27J and in 1997, Alenia and Lockheed Martin formed Lockheed Martin Alenia Tactical Transport Systems (LMATTS) to develop the C-27J. The design changed to use the C-130J's AE 2100 engine and six-blade propeller. [23] Other changes include a fully digital MIL-STD-1553 systems and avionics architecture, and an updated cargo compartment for increased commonality. [24] The C-27J has a 35% increase in range and a 15% faster cruise speed than the G.222. [23] Alenia Aeronautica paired with American defense specialist L-3 Communications to form the Global Military Aircraft Systems (GMAS) joint venture to market the C-27J; [25] Boeing also joined GMAS. [26] During 2007, it was announced that the C-27J had been selected by the US Defense Department for its Joint Cargo Aircraft programme; [27] the C-27J team was awarded an initial contract worth US$2.04 billion for 78 C-27Js in June 2007. [28]
During 2002, Alenia Aeronautica was incorporated when Finmeccanica restructured itself, spinning off its various divisions as independent companies. Finmeccanica has since reorganised itself into a more closely integrated business, adopting the Leonardo name for the group. [29]