
Vietnam's Vietjet Air to buy 20 Airbus A330s: airline statement
The budget carrier's chairwoman Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao signed the deal with Airbus as French President Emmanuel Macron looked on as he made an official visit to Hanoi.
The carrier said the order was part of its plans to expand its operations in Asia as well as introducing future long-haul services to Europe.
The announcement comes on top of the 20 A330-900s ordered by VietJet in February last year.
The airline said the A330s would enable it to "increase flights on high-capacity routes across the Asia-Pacific region, as well as to introduce future long haul services to Europe".
The list price of the aircraft was around seven billion euros ($8 billion), an Airbus source told AFP.
"Vietjet remains dedicated to delivering greater connectivity and sustainable air travel for millions of passengers in Vietnam and around the world," Thao said in the Vietjet statement.
Vietnam property tycoon bets big on new airline
The Vietjet fleet currently numbers 115 aircraft, all Airbus, including seven A330-300s operating to destinations in Australia, India and Kazakhstan.
The carrier has another 96 single-aisle A320s on order from Airbus.
The Vietjet deal is one of a raft of agreements expected to be signed between Vietnamese and French companies as Macron makes his official visit to the communist country, which was once ruled by France.
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