BERLIN (Reuters) - Airbus (PA:AIR) has signed an agreement to sell 140 aircraft to China, it said on Wednesday, in a deal worth almost $23 billion (17.81 billion pounds) at list prices.
The agreement, signed during a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Germany, is for 100 A320 family aircraft and 40 A350 planes, Airbus said.
"It's one of the biggest deals that we've signed in a long time," Airbus Group Chief Executive Tom Enders told journalists after signing the deal in Berlin.
The planes will be purchased by state-owned China Aviation Supplies Holding Company, which will then allocate them to Chinese airlines.
The A320 planes will be a mixture of the older CEO and the new NEO version with revamped engines, while the majority of the A350 orders are for the -900 model. The deal is flexible pending negotiations with the airlines.
Enders said he expected up to 50 percent of the A320 family planes would come from the Airbus final assembly line in China.
Enders was making his first public appearance since Airbus rolled out a new structure, completing a recent merger between its parent company and its dominant planemaking arm, changes which included a shift in the reporting line for its commercial sales team to Enders.
Enders said the shift in reporting lines for the sales team reflected the fact that commercial aircraft head Fabrice Bregier had been given more tasks in his new role as group-wide chief operating officer.
With orders slowing and the focus shifting to the backlog, Enders said the shake-up allows Bregier to concentrate on deliveries.
"This is merely a burden sharing mechanism because the focus should be on execution and this is what it's all about," Enders said.
"We have plenty of challenges on the execution side, be it the transition to the NEO, the ramp-up of the A320 family, the 350 family, not to mention the A400M, which is not entirely solved," he said.
Enders also said the group was in talks with the Chinese over the A380 superjumbo, which has suffered slow sales.
"It won't happen overnight. It has to be intensively discussed," he said.