Ottawa
(AFP) - Canada said Thursday it was allowing Boeing to submit a bid to
replace the country's aging F-18 fleet, after an earlier trade dispute
between the American manufacturer and Ottawa.
The
announcement came a month after the US International Trade Commission
rejected a complaint filed by Boeing against its Canadian rival
Bombardier, demanding nearly 300 percent anti-dumping duties on the C
Series passenger plane.
Boeing,
which makes the Super Hornet, is one of five manufacturers invited to
submit proposals in spring 2019 for an order of 88 advanced fighter
jets, which are to be delivered in 2025, according to a Canadian
government statement.
The
other manufacturers are US-based Lockheed Martin (F35), France's
Dassault (Rafale), the Airbus group (Eurofighter Typhoon), and Sweden's
Saab (Gripen).
Ottawa
will evaluate the bids based on "cost, technical requirements and
economic benefits," the government said. The winning bidder will have to
invest in Canada an amount equal to the value of the contract.
Source: Yahoo News
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