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this is why we are still borrowing money
the UK Government is considering plans to spend hundreds of millions of pounds on a replacement for the Nimrod spy planes that were axed last year the Ministry Of Defence may buy Boeing P-8s from America to solve the capability gap left by the cancellation of the Nimrods – a move that has already cost the country billions Defence Secretary Liam Fox pulled the plug on the £4 billion procurement deal after the project ran over budget and fell behind schedule. Private contractors for the MoD have since started the dismantling job at the BAE Systems site in Stockport, Lancashire.local jobs gone
t also provoked elements of the defence establishment to claim that scrapping the Nimrods left a hole in the UK’s national security. Nimrods can carry out a variety of duties, the most important being the protection of the UK’s Trident nuclear submarine fleet and the interception and destruction of enemy submarines. The aircraft’s range and flying capabilities also give it a vital role in air-sea rescue operations. It can also be deployed as a communications aircraft in support of operations by special forces thats more money leaving the british economy The cancellation of the Nimrods means the UK has no maritime patrol aircraft which, critics believe, leaves the country at risk. A joint letter condemning the decision was recently signed by former senior officers, including Lord Craig, Gulf War commander Major General Patrick Cordingley, Falklands naval task force commander Admiral Sir John Woodward, and Air Vice-Marshal Tony Mason They wrote: “Machine tools have been destroyed; several millions of pounds have been saved but a massive gap in British security has opened. “Vulnerability of sea lanes, unpredictable overseas crises and traditional surface and submarine opposition will continue to demand versatile responsive aircraft. “Nimrod would have continued to provide long-range maritime and overland reconnaissance ... and perhaps most importantly, reconnaissance support to the Navy’s Trident submarines.” |
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wouldn't worry to much about the Royal Navy , all they seem good for these days is handing out halal meals and ciggies to Somali pirates before releasing them and making sure all ratings have enough batteries for their IPods so they don't cry. Think I also read somewhere today that the RN has signed a "time share' contract with the Frence for the operation of an Aircraft Carrier ...... but you have to remember you are Europeans now :D :D :D
re .... protecting the 'valuable sea lanes' , one thing you can be sure of is that the Chinese Navy will keep them open, otherwise where will they sell all the cheap goods (that have destroyed millions of UK manufacturing jobs) that Britain has fallen in love with :D :D :D |
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There are two types of Nimrod's here, firstly the older MR2 and the newer MRA4 which was to be the replacement aircraft.
The MRA4 is not a new airframe, but a re working of the fuselage with larger super critical wings, larger air intakes for the newer Rolls Royce BR700 engines, the flight deck is borrowed form the Airbus A340. Its regarded as a bit of a cut and shut. The Nimrod a reworking of the de Havilland DH 106 Comet, a aircraft that first flew in 1949. There were a lot of problems with the new design, the most worrying being that it had "significant aerodynamic issues with flight control problems in certain regimes of flight", in other words it does not fly. It was nine years late in delivery and £789 Million pounds over budget. Now the MOD are looking at the Boeing P-8, a modified Boeing 737-800, (a aircraft I am very familiar with). It has the larger wings off the Boeing 737-900 with a strengthened fuselage. The Boeing 737-800 first flew in 1994. Bearing in mind that the Boeing 737 is the worlds most popular airliner, parts are freely available and so are engineers to repair it. The Nimrod would only have one operator world wide and spares etc would be strictly limited to the MOD, meaning that BAE could charge anything they wanted. The cost of the Boeing is expected to be £1 Billion as opposed to the Nimrods cost of £ 3.6 Billion. http://e-goat.co.uk/wiki//index.php?title=Nimrod |
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There is a interesting article here about the Nimrods AEW3, itself a mess up at the time:
BAe Nimrod AEW 3 |
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Not only was the Nimrod based on a 1949 design, its electronics were specified and designed over 10 years ago and were totaly obsolete before they even got into service. In fact they were still not ready for operation.
The sin is that the MOD kept changeing its requirements and with BAC already notorious for overuns on cost and time the delays were inevitable. And the Government allowed it to happen(which one?). If you ordered a cathode ray TV 15 years ago and the shop rang you up now to say it's ready, what would you say? Even if you lost your deposite you wouldn't have it. Having said that, with no aircraft carriers, no Harriers, no Nimrods, we can hardly claim to be a world power. Watch out, Falklanders! |
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War with conventional weapons (including nukes) is soooo 'old hat', and only serves to make populations fearful/more controllable.
Weather manipulation/earthquakes (HAARP), and engineered epidemics are more effective - your enemy is never sure whether you or 'mother nature' did it. |
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Hold on Cmonstanley, where are you. I and others responded to your very lucid argument, I am waiting for a response, you have time to have a further dig at the government, we wait you with baited breath.....
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so why buy a replacement from the u.s.a. ohh hold on this is another reason why this country is in a mess .we had a chance to build ,create jobs in this country .the extra money that would have been spent we would have clawed money back in tax and less money paid out in benefits .you need to spend money to create money;)
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You make me wait 3 days and then only to make ridiculous statements???
There was nothing to build here in the UK. Aerospace here went down the pan many many years ago. So the RAF should be given 60 year old aircraft to fly, wow that would scare anybody. If you were so interested in UK manufacturing why did you not protest at BAE's sale of their share in Airbus a few years ago while your mates were in power. Airbus will soon pull out of the UK thanks to that. |
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Actually we do have a aviation manufacturing case in the UK, we make the Hawk Trainer, make bits for the Joint Strike FIghter and bits for the Typhoon.
Oh and still make some Airbus wings. If it was not for Rolls Royce building Trent and RB engines we would be stuffed. Wow Boeing and Airbus should quake |
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i think you might find the rot started when the shareholder came in ;)back in 1987 when thatcher privatised it and her cronies made a packet then they sold it to the germans;) rolls royce deutschland or bmw ring any bells:rolleyes:
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Rolls-Royce Group PLC is a British owned company, they manufacture Aero engines and Marine engines, in 1999 they purchased BMW's share in them, then they renamed BMW Rolls Royce to BMW Deutschland. It was part of acquisitions totalling £1.063 billion, and Tony, Peter or even Gordon had nothing to do with it. They also have tie ups with General Electric in the USA. Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, is a Brand Name of BMW AG. The old Rolls-Royce site is now Bentley Motors Limited, part of the Volkswagen group. Both manufactured in the UK. Before you call anyone I think you better do some study, after all what happened to Rover???? Hummmmmm Where was your shinning knights then, or how about the Peugeot plant at Ryton in the Midlands, closed down not long ago. Anyway this is boring, you cannot string a decent argument together, good at cutting and pasting. so why don't you go and have a Deep Fried Mars Bar. I have had enough of your silly ramblings on this subject.:mosher: |
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but who privatised rolls royce:confused:
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Which Rolls Royce, Lesson time cmonstanley, get your books out. 1971 Rolls Royce Limited, Nationalised by the Heath Conservative Government. 1973 Rolls Royce Motors, privatised by the same government. 1987 Rolls Royce plc, Privatised by the Thatcher Conservative Government. I think my point has been made. Off to watch Lord Sugar now do some shouting. |
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It will be viewed with amazement, not only in Coventry but throughout the country and possibly even internationally, that a world-famous firm such as Rolls-Royce can be transferred from the public to the private sector, involving a transfer of about £1,300 million of public assets, with a mere 30 minutes of parliamentary debate.
This "piratisation" exercise—in reality, that is what it is — owes nothing to the Government's stated aims of increasing competition — Rolls-Royce has no British competitors—or of widening share ownership, especially given the terms and conditions for the flotation which were announced this week. Not that any widening will take place because, today, Rolls-Royce is owned by 55 million people, but in four weeks' time it will be owned by only a few thousand who will hold bits of paper and claim that they own that national asset. Yesterday the Secretary of State for Defence asserted that I had no knowledge of, or constituency interest in, the defence of the 2,000 workers and their families at Westland, who face the dole as a result of his anouncement yesterday. I refute that because my job in this place is to try to defend, to the best of my ability, all workers facing the horror and iniquity of unemployment, through which I had to live for four years. Such a claim will not be made today because I represent directly many thousands of Rolls-Royce workers and their families who work in Coventry, and many who work for the 61 local firms in Coventry, Nuneaton and Exhall who rely on major orders from Rolls-Royce and who are suppliers for the two plants at Parkside and Anstey. Certainly, at Parkside, the plant within my constituency of Coventry, South-East, there is overwhelming opposition to the privatisation. The Minister of State for Defence Procurement has even got the names and addresses of more than 80 per cent. of the shop floor manual workers who signed a petition opposing his allegation that most workers at Rolls-Royce relish its privatisation. Last Friday, 40,000 workers throughout the Rolls-Royce group took industrial action against this enforced sale, demonstrating with their feet their total opposition to the privatisation. That opposition runs wide and deep among the work force at Rolls-Royce. Early in 1971 I was an apprentice attending the Rolls-Royce technical college at Filton in Bristol. Like many others, I was called in to be told of the collapse of the company. I witnessed the way in which, in 24 hours of parliamentary time, the then Tory Prime Minister, the right hon. Member for Old Bexley and Sidcup (Mr. Heath) took Rolls-Royce into Government hands. That time scale, showing how quickly this place can operate to widen public ownership, is perhaps one lesson that I am prepared to absorb from that ex-Prime Minister. When Rolls-Royce was last in private hands it collapsed because it could not stand the strain of escalating research and development costs. It went bankrupt because of shortages of funds. Huge amounts of public money have been pumped into the firm during the past 16 years. The work force has been forced to make enormous sacrifices, especially in terms of the 20,000 jobs that have been lost during the past four or five years. Now that the company is again making a profit and taxpayers are just beginning 628 to get some of their money back, the Tory Government intend to plunge Rolls-Royce back into the doubt and uncertainty of private ownership. Such profits as there are will not now go to taxpayers who made it all possible but to the new speculators who hold the shares. There is doubt and uncertainty. The future for Rolls-Royce cannot be challenged. This week we have seen the difficulties with the new engine development and the Airbus project—potentially a major blow to the company's prospects. Moreover, there is in existence an "ice cream and banking" document that projects possible future plant closures. Although Ministers in the House have brushed it aside as only a draft and written by a junior member of management, the company describes it as having been superseded. If one of those projected plant closures—East Kilbride and Parkside in Coventry have been mentioned — was Coventry, Parkside, 3,000 jobs could be lost because 2,500 work there directly and 600 work in the component suppliers. A closure would mean the loss of £30 million worth of wages every year in the local economy. Even discounting the £10 million that finds its way to the Treasury each year, £20 million worth of purchasing power would be lost to Coventry. Therefore, a further 400 jobs could be at risk in shops and other businesses which rely on the trade of those who spend their wages from Rolls-Royce. The skill base of the city could deteriorate and the costs to the Treasury in dole and supplementary benefit could be huge. Even putting that aside, a company memorandum to its senior executives says that they should not worry about another 1971 crash as The institutions (clearing banks, insurance companies, merchant banks etc.) provide sophisticated recovery and rescue facilities which were not available in 1971. It is ominous that the company should even consider the implications of another collapse. Such threats hang like the sword of Damocles over the workers in Coventry and other Rolls-Royce plants and their families. They have watched past piratisation exercises and seen new shareholders take the short-term view and maximise profits as quickly as possible. They have seen job cuts at British Telecom and Associated British ports. When we talk about Coventry and privatisation in this Chamber we are often told to consider the expansion of Jaguar and, yes, in recent months employment has increased there. However, I remind the House that next door to the Rolls-Royce Parkside site is the Coventry Climax site, which was privatised in 1981. Under private ownership 80 per cent. of the original 3,000 jobs vanished and the company collapsed in the latter part of 1986. I remind the House of the haemorrhage of jobs following privatisation of Self-Changing Gears and Alvis, both of which are ex-publicly owned companies. Workers in Rolls-Royce and elsewhere have seen pay held back and even reduced in newly privatised companies. They have seen changes in and possibly raids on pension schemes, and worsening employment conditions. Those decisions have been taken largely by shareholders whose numbers rapidly dwindle following privatisaton as compression and concentration take place of the numbers who owned the original shares. Despite Government assurances, and even private assurances given to me by members of the board of Rolls-Royce in recent weeks, those fears are real for Rolls-Royce workers. The RB211 engine primarily caused the collapse 629 of Rolls-Royce in 1971. Today there are problems with the V2 500 and the Superfan engine developments. Pratt and Whitney has recently taken over engineering control and direction of the V2 500 project. Superfan, with its $3 billion research and development costs, seems ominously near to travelling the same path as the RB211 in the late 1960s and early years of the 1970s. The year 1971 was a tragedy and if the lessons of 1971 are not learned in the next three or four years of private ownership for all those who directly suffer job losses a repeat of history would be a farce. Above the many other industries within the British economy, the aerospace industry needs long-term planning, not just because of the scale of research and development costs but because of the immensely long lead times—up to 20 years for the development of a project. It is axiomatic within the Labour movement that one cannot plan what one does not control and one does not control what one does not own. It is my personal belief — I am one of a minority within the Labour party—supported by my union, TASS and the Confederation of Shipbuilding and Engineering Unions since 1982, that that industry requires co-ordinated planning and structured decision-making and full public ownership. This is necessary to defend Rolls-Royce against privatisation as a manufacturer of engines within the aerospace industry. Further public ownership should be extended to aerospace, to avionics and back into British Airways. If the sale is completed, workers in the Rolls-Royce plant face a future of insecurity and uncertainty. Rolls-Royce will be a prime target for asset-stripping. There are increasing plans within the United States for protectionist measures against Japan and Europe. There are pressures within the US economy—the effects of a newly elected Democratic Congress, the decline in the value of the dollar and the pressure on the two major competitors of Rolls-Royce, Pratt and Whitney and General Electric — to bring work in-house to save the jobs of American workers or even consciously to squeeze out their only mutual major competitor, Rolls-Royce, by action leading to a possible takeover or by elimination of that competitor. As we move towards a new world recession in the next couple of years, it is inevitable that those pressures in the American economy will be exacerbated. The Minister is smiling, but he should consider one fact. In 1985, the 140 members of the International Air Transport Association made between them a total profit of only $100 million. That would not buy even one Boeing 747. Think what a new world recession, even in the Minister's economic terms, and the cyclical nature of the aerospace industry, would mean to the future order books of firms such as Rolls-Royce. Both of Rolls-Royce's competitors are twice its size, and both are parts of larger multinationals, with the facilities of cross-subsidisation to assist the campaign to attempt to squeeze out Rolls-Royce. General Electric's attitude to the Airbus project in the next three or four weeks will be an important pointer to that direction. It will not be beyond the wit and wisdom of the Boeskys and Bests of this world to intervene in the sale that takes place in a month's time. I make it clear, not only to the work force and my constituents, that my position on the sale is equally strong whether the purchasers of Rolls-Royce shares are domestic or foreign. Speculation, 630 because essentially that is what trading in shares is in that City casino down the road, is rarely a respecter of national boundaries. It goes in the direction of profit alone and will find ways round the Secretary of State's rules. Job security and the well-being of working people, their families and communities, both directly with the 40,000 Rolls-Royce workers and indirectly with the 160,000 workers in the major components suppliers, are of no concern to the accountants in New York, London or Tokyo. Some 137 Labour Members of Parliament — significantly, not a single member of the so-called alliance — have signed early-day motion 85. On dozens of occasions, in lobbies organised by workers in the past 12 or 18 months, in business questions, in questions to the Department of Trade and Industry, demands have come from many Labour Members for a debate on this issue. This 30 minutes today is the only result of those demands, and that is because I had the luck to win a place in the ballot for this one minute to midnight affair. Why have the Government been so afraid in recent months to use their own time to put the case for the privatisation of Rolls-Royce? Could it be because of the escalating problems with engine development, which they want to keep under wraps for the next four or five weeks so that potential purchasers of shares are not frightened off? Could it be that the Government are embarrassed at having to cancel £645 million of company debt to provide a sweetener for institutions and speculators to buy shares? Once again, the Government are underpricing and selling cheaply a national public asset. They have already lost £1.5 billion through underpricing the sale of British Telecom, Jaguar and British Aerospace. Coventry city council has borrowed money over the past 60 years to build houses, schools, and community centres and now owes over £200 million to the banks and financial institutions. All local authorities owe a total of about £30,000 million. If it is OK for this Tory Government to cancel £645 million of Rolls-Royce debt as a sweetener for privatisation, that will be a precedent when I call on the next Labour Government to cancel the debts of local authorities such as Coventry. Cancelling Coventry's debt, in the same way as the Government have cancelled the debts of Rolls-Royce and other privatised concerns., would release £25 million a year of debt interest charges which could halve all domestic rents and rates in the city and leave £10 million a year for the building of new houses and the repairs of existing houses. Coventry's housing crisis could be half-axed in the lifetime of a Parliament. The whole sale stinks—from the debt cancellation to the refusal of the Rolls-Royce management, including the arch-proponent of privatisation, Sir Francis Tombs—who is not unconnected with the banks that will be profiting from the mechanics of the sale—to allow trade unions to discuss privatisation in work time, although videos and so on were used by the management to promote the sale. The sale is a kickback by the Tories to those who support them financially at elections. It owes nothing to a genuine desire to promote the future of the industry and merely seeks to return it to the uncertainties of the anarchy of capitalism and private ownership. I have no doubt that the debate will not stop the sale going ahead, but it gives me an opportunity to pledge to the workers and families in my constituency and to the workers in the whole of Rolls-Royce that under a future 631 Labour Government, I and other Labour Members will argue not only for the return of Rolls-Royce to public ownership, but for the co-ordinated planning of the aeroindustry, with wider public ownership of firms such as Westland and Lucas. When workers own their industries and, through their traditional union organisation, have a majority say in the planning, development and control of those industries and when there is genuine control and management of publicly owned industries by the labour movement instead of by Sir Michael Edwardes, Sir Kenneth Keith, Sir Robert Reid and the others who have run those industries in the past, the jobs of aerospace workers will look a great deal safer than they do today—four weeks before the butchery of Rolls-Royce. 1.48 pm §The Minister for Trade (Mr. Alan Clark)s: The title of the debate is the future of Rolls-Royce, and I welcome the positive nature of that title. As always, I greatly enjoyed listening to the hon. Member for Coventry, South-East (Mr. Nellist). §Mr. NellistWho wrote this? §Mr. ClarkI shall allow the hon. Gentleman to intervene if he wishes. With which of my remarks does he disagree? Does he seriously believe that a company should always be shielded by inexhaustible recourse to taxpayers' money? It is that which causes companies to shrink. Does the hon. Gentleman seriously believe that no company, even one with such a great tradition and as proud an achievement as Rolls-Royce, can afford to be exposed to the draught of international competition? §Mr. NellistDoes the tone and tenor of the past 30 seconds of the Minister's reply mean that, following privatisation, there will be no public money available to Rolls-Royce because it will then be exposed to the pressures of international competition and will have to stand on its own two feet? Is that what he is saying? §Mr. ClarkRolls-Royce is well able to stand on its own two feet, and has effectively been doing so for the past years. That is reflected in the enormous increase in its orders and the way in which its engines have spread across the world's airlines and defence forces, and in the increase in its profits over the past three years. It is for this reason that privatisation is so important. The company chairman, Sir Francis Tombs, said earlier this week, The Government's timescales and objectives arc different from those of a long-term capital goods company. So long as the company is owned by the Government, it will have another layer of decision making which cannot be helpful to it. §Mr. NellistWe have not seen the end result of privatisation. The Minister has mentioned the Jaguar 634 company, which is very much dependent on the American export market. As the falling price of the dollar works its way through the system over the next few months, there will be interesting developments in the company's future. Jaguar, like Rolls-Royce, has had huge amounts of public money pumped into it, and despite the sacrifices that have been made by the work force in bringing the company back on its feet, the rewards are to be given to the speculators. §Mr. ClarkThe hon. Gentleman has raised matters that are for the company and not for Ministers and has ignored the fact that the company is no longer, as it was in 1971, based heavily on the performance of one engine. It is much more widely based now with a wide product range. It has the opportunity to develop on several fronts at once and to ride individual storms. The Government will continue to have an important and direct relationship in a number of ways with Rolls-Royce. The Ministry of Defence will undoubtedly remain a major customer and both the Ministry of Defence and my Department will maintain a key interest in the company's research and development programmes and, no doubt, will continue to be involved directly with Rolls-Royce in those programmes. The partnership which we have enjoyed in recent years will still exist after privatisation.Back to Third-world Debt Forward to Business Debts (Late Payment) |
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Oh look ! More paste & copy ! :rolleyes:
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i have to. you say you dont understand me :D
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Blocks is spot on! CBA reading through all that.
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i rather watch a video than reading all of that
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It would have been easier to read(and understand) if the large dollop of text had been broken into paragraphs.
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Don't get me wrong, I lament the passing of our aerospace industry, no one in the world could have built some of the great aircraft, both Civil and Military that we have done.
Vulcan - Goatopedia - The Royal Air Force Wiki |
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I think if it had been in paragraphs, I might just have given it a go...after all you can hardly criticise a post if you don't understand it/haven't read it.
It did the poster no favours at all. |
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I have to plead that I CBA with it.........it isn't a subject that floats my boat anyway.(or maybe I should put 'flies my plane') :D:D:D
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Rolls Royce (1972) of Coventry, England, is a British blue chip company making high tech aeroplane engines, etc. which we the tax payers have owned and subsidised since Ted Heath saved part of the original company. The other part of the original Rolls Royce company made diesel engines for trains,tractors, etc. which was bought by Caterpillar (USA). The British competitor which also make diesel engines for trains,tractors, etc., is Perkins Engines, now also owned by the Americans.
Apparently the government is selling the prestigous Rolls Royce (1972) company and there's probably no guarantee that any new owner will keep the factory open. |
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Lucysgirl
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Rolls-Royce plc - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and this: Rolls-Royce I think you will find post #20 is from the 1980's, especially with reference to the then Minister for Trade being Alan Clark, who passed away back in 1999. Cheers BG |
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