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Delta says it had no role in Airbus-Bombardier deal

Delta Air Lines Inc.'s chief executive says the carrier did not play a role in pushing an industry-changing deal between Airbus and Bombardier as a regulatory spat between the United States and Canada threatened the future of a Bombardier plane program.

CEO says he is 'mystified' why Boeing lodged trade complaint over Bombardier's CSeries program

A Bombardier CSeries 300 performs its demonstration flight during the Paris Air Show, at Le Bourget airport, north of Paris on June 15, 2015. (Francois Mori/Canadian Press)

Delta Air Lines Inc.'s chief executive on Wednesday said the carrier did not play a role in pushing an industry-changing deal between planemakers Airbus and Bombardier Inc., as a regulatory spat between the United States and Canada threatened the future of a Bombardier plane program.

Delta CEO Ed Bastian praised the deal between Europe's Airbus and Canada's Bombardier, which would see Airbus take an ownership stake of the troubled Bombardier CSeries program, as a net positive for the U.S. economy.

The agreement for Bombardier to cede 50.01 per cent stake in the CSeries to Airbus, and likely move the plane's final production stages from Canada to an Airbus facility in Alabama, secures the future of the jet and gives Bombardier a possible way out of a high-stakes trade dispute with rival Boeing.

An Airbus A320neo aircraft and a Bombardier CSeries aircraft are pictured on Tuesday in Colomiers near Toulouse, France, to announce a partnership between Airbus and Bombardier on the CSeries. (Regis Duvignau/Reuters)

"I'm optimistic that the Airbus-Bombardier investment will help minimize some of the political concerns," Bastian said at the carrier's media day in Atlanta.

Bastian maintained that he was "mystified" as to why Boeing has sought to oust the narrowbody jet program through a complaint against Bombardier to the U.S. Commerce Department.

The issue between the two manufacturers, in which Chicago-based Boeing alleged that unfair Canadian subsidies to Bombardier have allowed the planemaker to dump the CSeries in the United States at an "absurdly low" price, has pushed into a broader discussion between the United States and Canada over fair trade policies.

Delta has an order for 75 CSeries at a list price of more than $5 billion US.

However, the U.S. Commerce Department has proposed a stiff tariff of 300 per cent on the planes, which, if finalized in early 2018, would significantly raise the cost of the jets.

Both Delta and Bombardier have said they would not pick up the extra costs, but the Bombardier-Airbus agreement to move final production of the planes into the United States could potentially shield the plane from possible import duties.

Despite the disagreement, Bastian said that the spat between Bombardier and Boeing does not affect the likelihood that Delta would purchase Boeing planes in the future.