Airbus wins order battle at Paris Airshow
Airbus clinches deals for 90 more planes on Thursday to lift orders and commitments to 466 aircraft worth US$69 billion at list prices

Last-minute orders swept Airbus to victory over Boeing at a Paris Airshow marked by stormy weather and hot debate over the next generation of big jets.
European planemaker Airbus clinched deals for 90 more planes on Thursday, taking its orders and commitments at the world’s top aviation fair to 466 aircraft worth US$69 billion at list prices.
US arch-rival Boeing said it had won firm and provisional orders for 442 aircraft valued at more than US$66 billion.
The complexity of the US$100 billion-a-year jetliner industry, mixed with promotional tactics on both sides, blurred the number of genuinely new deals. But participants said Airbus won the day after losing ground to Boeing last year.
“The rain brought us some very good luck,” said Airbus Chief Executive Fabrice Bregier.
EADS-owned Airbus pushed back its traditional end-of-show roundup to enable it to squeeze out a final wave of orders from Hong Kong Aviation Capital, Spirit Airlines and United Airlines.