"Our customers around the world face very tough budget environments. While the desire for the C-17's capabilities is high, budgets cannot support additional purchases in the timing required to keep the production line open," Dennis Muilenburg, president and chief executive officer of Boeing Defense, Space & Security, said in a statement yesterday.
"What's more, here in the United States the sequestration situation has created significant planning difficulties for our customers and the entire aerospace industry."
"Despite strong international interest, we did not receive sufficient orders" to continue production, she said.
Boeing said it expects the announcement to result in a charge of less than USD 100 million this quarter, and that will not impact financial guidance for the year.
With modernisations and upkeep, the big planes are expected to last for decades, she said.
The massive, four-engine C-17 made its first flight in 1991, and military deliveries began about two years later. The plane is used to airlift tanks, supplies and troops as well as performing medical evacuations. It quickly became a war and disaster workhorse, prized for its ability to operate from basic airstrips and cover intercontinental distances with a full load without refueling.
Design work on the plane began at the million-plus square-foot Long Beach facility in 1981, when it was a McDonnell Douglas facility. Boeing merged with McDonnell Douglas in the 1990s. Boeing has so far delivered 257 planes worldwide, at a cost of about USD 311 million each when research, development and construction costs are included.
The Long Beach plant has about 2,000 employees.
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