ARTICLE 

Eurofighter Battling for Foreign Sales 

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by Roxana Tiron 

The much-maligned Eurofighter program must lower costs and prove that it can compete effectively against U.S. platforms, to regain credibility in the world markets, experts said. Eurofighter officials noted they are optimistic about prospects of new foreign sales, but nevertheless acknowledge that the competition is tougher than ever.

The Eurofighter funding partners—Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain—signed an agreement in 1998, committing themselves to buying 620 aircraft. The development cost for the airplane was estimated at $10 billion. In order to make it more marketable outside Europe, the fighter jet was also named the Typhoon.

The Eurofighter headquarters is in Munich. The program is owned and managed by a consortium of European firms—BAE Systems, of the United Kingdom; Alenia Aerospazio, of Italy; EADS, of Germany and EADS Spain (formerly CASA).

The Eurofighter’s largest customer, the U.K. Royal Air Force, is slated to deploy its first Eurofighter squadron in 2005. The United Kingdom’s original order was for 232 airplanes, with options for 65 more.

But observers now are questioning whether the four main partners will stick to their initial commitments, given the cost overruns and delays experienced in the program. Speculation among industry circles is that the U.K. order will be downsized to 150 aircraft.

Further, both the U.K. and the Italian defense ministries have made significant investments in the U.S. Joint Strike Fighter program. Even though both nations claim that their participation in JSF will not undercut their commitment to Eurofighter, industry experts don’t seem so sure.

The Eurofighter program is also colliding with other huge U.K. procurement projects planned for the next decade, such as the A400M transport aircraft, two aircraft carriers and the new Type 45 destroyers.

The British press reported that the U.K. Ministry of Defence is withholding part of its payments for the Eurofighter until ongoing problems are rectified. However, the MOD said that, despite the delay, the program is not in “deep trouble.”

The Eurofighter marketing team has set an ambitious goal of exporting 500 aircraft by 2022.

That goal is unlikely to materialize, said Bill Dane, an aerospace industry analyst at Forecast International DMS, a business intelligence research firm.

Making things tough for Eurofighter is the fact that most countries do not need, or have the money to buy expensive fighter jets. Some see the JSF as a better deal. The Pentagon, additionally, continues to lobby for countries to keep their F-16 fighters until the Joint Strike Fighter (called the F-35) enters service in 2008.

Eurofighter officials said they welcome the competition. The F-35 is only a prototype, whereas the Eurofighter already is in full-rate production, Erwin Obermeier, senior vice president for programs at EADS, told National Defense.

“It is hard for us, because there are not many data released with JSF,” he said. “I am not ready to blame somebody as a country or other company when I don’t know the details for it.”

Because the Typhoon is a mature aircraft, he noted, “we offer the spare parts, pilot and maintenance training, so there is a total system that we are going to offer.”

But the reality is that, to make sales, the Eurofighter team has to be able to offer economic incentives, or offsets, to the buying countries. Austria is a case in point. Currently, Austria is the only country outside the Eurofighter consortium that has inked a deal for the fighter jet. Austria decided to buy 24 aircraft for $1.76 billion. However, that decision comes with a 200 percent offset, which basically means that Eurofighter will generate 200 percent of the contract’s value in business for the Austrian industry.

“There are other nations that would require less, but different work,” said Obermeier. “Austria is on the very high side.” In Austria, he explained, the offsets would involve industrial work in composites, communication technology, traffic-management technology and machinery.

“It is all a part of negotiation,” he said. “What does the country where we sell the Eurofighter really want?”

Western countries usually seek to strike a balance between broadening their technological base and giving small to medium-sized businesses and universities a chance to expand their skills, he explained. Offset associated with defense sales does not always involve aerospace technology, Obermeier noted. “It could be automotive, even forestry.”

According to Dane, “A lot of these deals are clinched by the offset programs, and sometimes those are just as important as the program.”

To its credit, Eurofighter already has created 30,000 jobs and is projected to create as many as 120,000 in the coming years, sources said.

“What Eurofighter has to do is to get the cost down and give the program greater credibility,” said Dane. “They have to get out there and beat the bushes against the F-16, [Sweden’s] Gripen and [France’s] Rafale.”

The unit price for Eurofighter is between $45-50 million, depending on the features, said Andy Wilson, director of new business for the Eurofighter Typhoon.

Mission Focus
The Eurofighter is a single-seat, twin-engine, combat aircraft, which will be used in air-to-air, air-to-ground and tactical reconnaissance roles. Stealth technology was incorporated throughout the aircraft’s basic design.

“We have 11 weapons stations on the aircraft, and you can carry any mix, according to specified weapons,” said Obermeier. “Right now, we have focused first to develop the software for air-to-air missiles, and the second step is to develop the software for air-to-ground missions.”

However, the Eurofighter’s focus on the air-to-air mission has drawn criticism, given the post-Cold War emphasis worldwide on air-to-ground capabilities.

Obermeier emphasized that the Typhoon would be a multi-mission jet, capable of swing roles. “Let’s say if a pilot gets the request to change from an air-to-air mission to an air-to-ground mission, he can switch on the spot, because the software is designed to do that. It is inherent in the aircraft,” said Obermeier.

“The whole philosophy for the cockpit is to reduce pilot workload for the single-seat, swing-role weapons system,” said Archie Neill, a BAE Systems test pilot for the RAF. “The way that the cockpit deals with the information deluge and presents it to the pilot is such that everything is very easy to understand. That is what I call at-a-glance awareness—the pilot looks at the display and knows exactly what he is seeing.”

A voice-command feature means that “a lot of the functions are [executed], simply by talking into the cockpit,” Neill said.

Nagging Nora—as the pilots have facetiously named the voice in the cockpit—answers questions, such as the level of the fuel content. “Nagging Nora is a very effective way of passing on the information to the pilot,” Neill said. “She’s got a very strong English accent that is very good. There is also a male voice for easy things like non-flight safety critical aspects, but Nagging Nora kicks in when there is something really important.”

The BAE Systems helmet-mounted symbology and heads-up display show the flight reference data, weapon aiming and cueing data. Among the sensors is a forward-looking infrared.

“The radar and FLIR are capable of detecting targets outside of 100 miles, depending on the size of the target,” said Neill. “It is well outside the visual range.”

The aircraft is equipped with a multi-mode X-band pulse Doppler radar, which has three processing channels. The third channel is used for jammer classification.

The Typhoon has an internally mounted 27-mm Mauser gun and 13 hard points for weapon carriage. Four are under each wing and five under the fuselage. An armament control system manages the weapons selection and firing and monitors weapon status.

For air-to-air combat, the Typhoon has four beyond-visual-range air-to-air missiles (BVRAAM) and two short-range air-to-air missiles (ASRAAM). The plane also can carry a mix of up to 10 medium-and short-range missiles.

For air-to-surface missions, the Eurofighter can carry Brimstone and DWS 37 anti-armor weapons—three under each wing and one under the center fuselage, as well as laser-guided weapons.

The Typhoon is constructed of carbon-fiber composites, glass-reinforced plastics and lightweight alloys. The stealth technology includes low-frontal radar cross-section, passive sensors and super cruise. The airframe is unstable, said Neill, and it was designed as such for extreme agility. It can turn rapidly in the supersonic region and in the subsonic close, he said.

The aircraft also is designed to be able to operate in every kind of weather, said Wilson. “Spanish facilities are very hot and very dry; German facilities are very cold; in the U.K., we have rain.”

The program operates an environmental test chamber, he added, “where you can freeze the aircraft, you can bake it, you can put sun-lamps on it, spray ice.” Eurofighter engineers paid special attention to features such as air conditioning and a liquid cooling system for the pilots, said Wilson.

Worming, the test pilot, said the cooling system is a much valued feature. In Greece, for example, pilots sometimes stop flying at certain temperatures, because it gets too hot. He emphasized that pilot comfort is essential for successful missions.

Wilson explained that the Eurofighter testing program is designed in such a way that each of the participating countries gets to test certain features.

Worming stressed that tests are watched closely by the company’s top management. “We are managed by Eurofighter Central, and we have a chairman that makes sure that everything is singing on the same song-sheet,” he said.

“One of the things we have to recognize at the moment is that there is an enormous amount of aircraft in the export market,” said Wilson. “Countries are just starting to look at the capabilities. We don’t have, at the moment, the luxury to say, ‘well come over, and spend some time and look at the operations,’ because we are just at the beginning.”

Within the European Union, the Netherlands snubbed the Eurofighter in favor of the JSF, while an order of 60 jets for Greece is up in the air, because Greece is cash strapped as a result of the 2004 Olympics, according to Worming. Sweden has its own aircraft, the Gripen, while the French fly their Rafale jets.

Both the Gripen and the Rafale also have been bogged down with delays, cost and technical problems. The French originally had intended to join the Eurofighter program, but then decided to build their own airplane, said Worming.

The Gripen, he said, “is very good, but also very unique.” The specifications were designed for operations with Swedish ground stations and were not NATO compatible, he said.

Lars Campner, vice president for Gripen, explained that the aircraft was specifically designed for the Swedish Air Force, but the export version is NATO interoperable. The Swedish Air Force ordered 240 planes and so far received 121. The rest are going to be upgraded for NATO interoperability, he said.

South Africa is set to receive 28 jets; Hungary is leasing 14, and the Czech Republic recently agreed to acquire the Gripen, but had to withdraw its order this summer, in the aftermath of deadly floods that ravaged the country.

Gripen has also received a request from Poland and is competing for a possible sale in Brazil. Other potential customers that Eurofighter is courting include Norway, Singapore and Saudi Arabia, company officials said.

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