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Liverpool has won the Premier League again. This time, fans can finally celebrate properly

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CNN
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Anfield stadium announcer George Sephton can count on one hand the number of Liverpool home games he has missed since his first day on the job on August 14, 1971.

During his first two decades in front of the mic, Sephton got used to announcing Liverpool as the champion of England – the club won a remarkable 11 First Division titles between 1973 and 1990 to add to the seven it had already won up to that point.

Had you told him then that it would be another 30 years before he could call the Reds champions of England again, you might have noted a hint of surprise in his response.

“I’d have said you were crackers!” he laughs in an interview with CNN Sports. “After the triumph in 1990, the following season we didn’t get anywhere. And then it goes on each season and you’re thinking, ‘It can’t go on much longer. It can’t go on. It just can’t go on.’

“And it went on…”

Had you told him the manner in which Liverpool would finally claim its 19th league title, that surprise would have turned to disbelief.

In March 2020, with the Reds 25 points clear at the top of the table under legendary manager Jürgen Klopp, they looked almost certain to become English champions for the first time since the First Division was rebranded as the Premier League. But then Covid-19 struck, the world went into lockdown and the league was halted.

It would resume three months later, but not as fans knew it. Sephton, reinstated in his box in one corner of Anfield, played music and made announcements, but did so to an empty stadium. With English soccer remaining behind closed doors and pubs still closed, fans watched from their homes as the players got their hands on the trophy that had eluded Liverpool for so long.

“It was spooky. I remember I came home from the last game when we picked up the trophy at Anfield behind closed doors,” Sephton recalls.

“I’d just been to a dinner where Peter Moore, who was CEO at the time, he stood up and said that Liverpool had a billion followers worldwide. Then on that night, there were 600 people inside Anfield, including all the Sky TV crew and whatever.

“I was so privileged to be there, but it was so disappointing for the rest of the Anfield faithful – people who have been coming for years and couldn’t get in to see it. It was awful.”

No fans were allowed into the stadium when Liverpool lifted the Premier League in 2020.

Among that Anfield faithful is Neil Atkinson, host and CEO of The Anfield Wrap.

“Of course, something was lost, and the whole situation is covered with sadness,” he tells CNN. “People made life decisions around wanting to be in Liverpool for the moment that Liverpool won the league. And then, effectively, it wasn’t the same.

“It wasn’t what it was meant to be.”

That’s not to say that Liverpool supporters spent that moment feeling sorry for themselves.

“I think that everyone made the best of the circumstance that they found themselves in,” says Atkinson, who spent the night with a small group of friends, social distancing “on the beach, drinking, setting off fireworks and listening to ‘Nessun Dorma,’” an aria from Giacomo Puccini’s opera Turandot, most famously sung by Luciano Pavarotti.

“I’ll remember that for the rest of my life in a really weird way,” he adds. “I hope that Liverpool win the next 10 league titles, and we’ll never celebrate any of them like that.”

Chris Pajak, co-founder of fan channel The Redmen TV, remembers hearing the news that the Premier League would be put on hold.

“We never really knew if it would start again,” he tells CNN Sports. “Were we ever going to win the Premier League? Were we that cursed that we’d never be able to lift it?”

When the league did resume, platforms like The Redmen TV and The Anfield Wrap became one of the only ways for supporters to experience the collective spirit that so many craved during one of the biggest moments in the club’s history. Pajak formed a Covid support bubble with best friend and fellow co-founder Paul Machin, and their live watchalongs garnered 25,000 viewers at a time.

“I got a different experience to probably a lot of other fans because I felt that togetherness,” Pajak reflects. “But I also felt a little bit hollow because we didn’t get to celebrate it as fans.”

It was a hollowness that many believe has extended into seasons since.

“I think it has affected fans, certainly. I think we kind of felt cheated, to be honest,” says Pajak. “We didn’t get a parade for a start. We didn’t get to congregate en masse and show our love for the side, the squad and everyone who works behind the scenes.

“And I think a lot of people felt a little bit jaded by that, and that may have been a bit of a hangover into the next few years as well.”

The pandemic did not stop Liverpool fans from showing their appreciation for Jürgen Klopp's team.

The following season would prove difficult at times. With stadiums still closed to supporters, an injury-ridden Liverpool would fall to a club-record six straight losses at home between January and March 2021. Sephton believes the absence of fans was felt more keenly at Anfield than anywhere else in the country.

“Liverpool have got the best supporters in the business, bar none,” he says. “So the fact that we didn’t have any supporters in the place meant that we lost more than all the other clubs in terms of background atmosphere.”

Atkinson is on the same page. “Some players suited empty stadia, some players didn’t suit empty stadia,” he says. “I would argue – because, of course I would, but I think there’s a fair body of evidence – that Jürgen Klopp had done an excellent job of building a squad of footballers who enjoyed emotional football.”

Fans were slowly allowed back into stadiums over the course of that 2020-21 season, and Liverpool was far from unsuccessful in the years that followed, winning an FA Cup and two EFL Cups as well as coming to within two games of an unprecedented quadruple in 2022.

But, by the time Klopp departed in May 2024, there was a nagging feeling among some supporters that arguably the greatest team in the club’s history had not managed to win – or celebrate – as much as it should have done.

After nearly nine years with its iconic manager, the club would now enter a new chapter under relative unknown Arne Slot.

The consensus among Sephton, Atkinson and Pajak is that the team Slot inherited cannot quite compare to the one Klopp had in 2019-20. There is the sense that this is a squad at the start of its journey, rather than one which had been on the verge of a league title for at least a year.

Preseason predictions from journalists and pundits reflected that sentiment, with very few forecasting Liverpool to finish above Manchester City or Arsenal.

Arne Slot has established himself as one of the most well-respected coaches in the world following his arrival from Dutch team Feyenoord in the summer.

In many ways, it is easy to see why there was a degree of uncertainty around Slot. Winning the league in your first season as a Premier League manager is, by all accounts, really hard. Only four managers prior to Slot – José Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti, Manuel Pellegrini and Antonio Conte – have ever managed to achieve the feat.

And yet, with Manchester City and Arsenal both suffering disappointing seasons in the league, no one has been able to get close to Liverpool this season.

“It is Jürgen’s squad, but Slot’s got more out of Jürgen’s squad than Jürgen could, and I didn’t think that would be possible at the end of the season last year,” says Pajak.

Sephton too has been “pleasantly surprised” by what he has seen from the Reds over the past nine months. But Atkinson sees it differently.

“I’m not surprised with Liverpool’s points total, after this many games. I am surprised at everyone else’s,” he says.

“For me, the players are everything, so if Arne Slot had done a reasonable job, I’d have expected them to get around 82 again (as the team managed in 2023-24). But if Arne Slot had done a very good job, which he has, then I think where Liverpool are isn’t unreasonable.”

In many ways, Liverpool is back where it was five years ago – it has again strolled to a league title powered by the likes of Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk.

And yet, for most supporters, the conclusion to this season feels like something else entirely.

“It’ll be completely different because there’ll be so many people who’ve never seen it before, never seen us win it,” says Sephton, speaking ahead of Sunday’s emphatic 5-1 victory against Tottenham which sealed the title with flair.

“There’ll be lots of people who missed out in 2020, and for them, it’ll be some sort of closure.”

Pajak shares the sense that Liverpool supporters are almost celebrating two league titles at once.

“When it did happen (last time), it wasn’t like that incredible release of emotion I think I expected it to be. I almost feel like, thinking about the present day, that actually this might give us that release after all these years,” he explains.

“I genuinely can’t wait for the last game of the season where we get to do a true lap of appreciation, with the players going around lifting the trophy and that. I think at that point you’ll be thinking about people who have been on the journey with you, some people who may have passed who won’t get to have seen them lift the Premier League,” Pajak adds.

“So yeah, I’m gonna be a mess by the sounds of it!”

For Atkinson, it isn’t so much about the moment the title is confirmed, or even the moment van Dijk lifts the trophy.

“We’ll get that moment, and that moment will be great,” he tells CNN ahead of the win against Tottenham. “But it’s more that sense of communal, peaceful satisfaction. That was what we lost – that long summer of meeting up, talking about it.

“You’ve not only won the league for one day,” he adds. “The winning of the league is the same (as 2019-20). The having won the league will be completely different. And that’s the thing I’m most excited about.”

The memories of 2020 – while they are tangled up with all the uncertainty and pain and ‘what-ifs’ of the pandemic – are not bad memories. The giddy joy of live watchalongs and “Nessun Dorma” remains mostly intact.

But there’s nothing quite like an entire city celebrating together.



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Spain and Portugal hit by unexplained power blackout, wiping out traffic lights and causing travel chaos

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CNN
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Spain and Portugal are racing the setting sun as they respond to a massive, unexplained power outage that knocked out traffic lights, caused chaos on roads and in airports, and threatened to plunge tens of millions of people into darkness on Monday.

Portugal’s grid operator Redes Energéticas Nacionais (REN) said electrical supply was lost across the entire Iberian Peninsula, and in parts of France, shortly after midday. It could be several hours until power is fully restored, Spain’s grid operator said, meaning families and businesses around the country could be without energy come nightfall.

The outage took out lighting and power sockets, and caused subway systems to suddenly fail. Some power began to trickle back across Spain hours later, but efforts to fully revive the grid and to identify the cause have not yet been successful.

In Madrid, traffic piled up on the roads after the lights went out. “I was driving and suddenly there was no traffic lights… It was a bit of a jungle,” Luis Ibáñez Jiménez told CNN. “I saw a massive bus coming, and I had to accelerate a lot to go past it.”

A dark metro station in Madrid. Passengers filtered out of stations after the outage stopped trains.

The cause of the blackout was unclear, but its impact was dramatic: transport hubs were shuttered and governments in both countries, which share a population of around 60 million people, hastily arranged emergency meetings to co-ordinate a response.

Madrid’s mayor José Luis Martinez Almeida asked people to minimize their movements and only call emergency services if it was truly urgent. He also called on people to clear the roads for emergency workers. Later in the day, Madrid’s emergency services provider urged the country’s government to declare a national emergency, and local leader Isabel Díaz Ayuso asked the country to deploy the army.

Portugal’s grid operator said restoring power was a “complex operation.” By Monday evening, both Portugal’s and Spain’s grid operators said the supply of energy was gradually being restored in pockets of both countries, although Portugal’s operator said it would still take several hours for Lisbon, the capital, to be reconnected.

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said authorities are still not sure what caused the power outage. Earlier, Antonio Costa – president of the European Council and Portugal’s former prime minister – said although the cause of the outage is not clear, there are “no indications” of a cyberattack.

An abandoned local market Vigo, northwest Spain. The Spanish government chaired at emergency meeting, but authorities warned it could take hours to restore power.

Efforts could stretch into the night. “The experience of other similar events that have taken place in other countries indicate to us that this process – the total reestablishment of the electrical supply – will take several hours, Eduardo Prieto, director of services for system operation at Red Eléctrica, Spain’s national grid operator, told broadcaster La Sexta.

Portugal’s prime minister blamed his neighboring nation for the scenes. Luis Montenegro said his government did not yet know what caused the cut, but that it “did not originate in Portugal” and “everything indicates” that the problem started in Spain.

João Faria Conceição, head of REN, said Portugal was badly affected because it imports electricity from Spain in the morning, because Spain is one hour ahead and electricity produced by its solar plants is cheaper than producing it internally, during those hours.

“We are peripheral,” Conceição told a news conference Monday evening. While Spain received support from France and Morocco, Portugal had no country to turn to for emergency supplies of electricity.

Passengers stand next to a halted train near Cordoba.

Monday’s blackout hit a huge and busy swathe of southern Europe. Dozens of Iberian cities, like Madrid, Lisbon, Barcelona, Seville and Valencia, are major hubs for transport, finance and tourism. Two of the five busiest airports in the European Union in 2023 were Madrid’s and Barcelona’s, according to EU data.

For a few hours, modern routines were suspended: cash replaced card payments, police officers used arm signals to direct traffic, and restaurants, supermarkets and stores closed their doors. Madrid’s firefighters carried out 174 “elevator interventions” across the city on Monday, its Emergency Information Office said, and some shoppers stocked up on essentials and on canned goods.

The worst-case scenarios appear to have been averted, at least in the first hours of the blackout. Spain’s nuclear sites were declared operational and safe, while Portugal’s National Institute for Medical Emergencies said it had “activated its contingency plan,” running its telephone and IT systems through a back-up generator. Spain’s health ministry said the same process happened in hospitals there.

A metro station in Madrid was closed off with tape on Monday; the subway shut down in the capital, leaving passengers stranded.

But travel was hit harder. Flights at major airports in the region were suddenly delayed or canceled, with travelers scrambling to adapt; online flight trackers reported that several airports saw their frequent departures suddenly halted after midday. Portugal’s flag carrier TAP Air Portugal told people not to travel to the airport until further notice.

Ellie Kenny, a holidaymaker inside Lisbon’s Humberto Delgado airport, said hundreds of people were stood in the dark in lines, with no air conditioning or running water. Shops were only accepting cash, she told CNN.

Trains were also suspended in Spain. And darkness suddenly descended in subway tunnels; video posted on social media showed blackened subway cars stuck in standstill on platforms in Madrid, where the metro was suspended and entrances to stations were taped off.

An online graph displaying real-time information on Spain's electricity demand shows a massive drop-off the moment power was knocked out in the country.

Sporting events were impacted too. Tennis fans at the Madrid Open filed out of courts after the outage caused play to be suspended.

Some parts of southern France, near the Spanish border, felt a more sporadic impact.

Emilie Grandidie, a spokeswoman for France’s electricity transmission operator RTE, told CNN there was “a small power cut” in the French Basque Country; “It lasted only a couple of minutes and was restored very quickly,” she said.

For several hours on Monday, tens of millions of people were asking each other when power would return, and why it was knocked out in the first place.

Neither question was easy to answer. But once power returns, it could still take days to untangle the damage caused by Monday’s worrying blackout.

Spain’s transportation minister said medium and long-distance trains won’t resume service until at least Tuesday, and the impact of a huge backlog in flights could stretch throughout the week.

In downtown Lisbon, and in cities across the Iberian peninsula, dark traffic lights led to confusion on the roads.



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Kim Kardashian Paris robbery: Trial for those accused of the 2016 crime to start this week

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Three of the suspected robbers fled on bicycles and two on foot, carrying between them almost $10 million worth of jewelry, a $4 million ring among the goods.

They had the benefit of the darkness of nighttime Paris, but the street would before sunup be buzzing with activity. Within minutes of their departure, police would descend upon Rue Tronchet, the address of a luxury accommodation where Kim Kardashian had retired earlier that evening after a busy day of Fashion Week events and before her life took a turn for the terrifying — bound and gagged at gunpoint — allegedly at the hands of a group referred to in French news media by monikers like “The Grandpa Gang” and “Grandpa Robbers” (despite one woman being among the accused.)

Like most places in central Paris, Rue Tronchet is full of history, even before it was the site of a high-profile heist. It was once depicted in a work by French painter Antoine Blanchard and is one of the streets that surrounds the iconic Church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, a Catholic church dedicated by Louis XV just before the start of the French Revolution.

On the night of the robbery in October 2016, police say the criminals, posing as policemen, entered through two large, unmarked red doors on Rue Tronchet and held the concierge at gunpoint to gain access to the apartment where Kardashian was staying.

If so much of Kardashian’s life to that point nearly a decade ago was the closest a former celebrity assistant could get to a fairytale in the online age — a television show empire, a stable of bustling businesses and a famous musician husband — that night, she was trapped in a nightmare.

Cameras are set up as officers stand guard at the entrance to a hotel residence in the Rue Tronchet on October 3, 2016, where Kardashian was robbed at gunpoint by assailants disguised as police.

Details of the incident, at the time, were prolific, examined and pieced together in intricate detail by media outlets around the world as one of the most visible celebrities of our time went uncharacteristically silent about the ordeal. Her family, some of whom were also in Paris for Fashion Week when the robbery happened, were also mum.

Time, of course, has caused memory of the incident — both the public’s and seemingly Kardashian’s — to fade from prominence. It would likely stay blurred in pop culture past if the group of alleged criminals responsible weren’t finally set to stand trial for the crime in Paris this week.

Of the 12 individuals originally charged in the case, 10 are on trial, beginning Monday. One of the suspects has since died and another, Pierre Bouianere, 80, will have his own trial. He has denied all of the charges and his case is expected to be dismissed for health reasons.

Eight of those on trial have denied the charges, which include armed robbery in an organized gang and criminal conspiracy.

In a statement to CNN, Kardashian’s personal attorney Michael Rhodes confirmed that she is expected to testify. “Ms. Kardashian is preserving her testimony for the Court and jury and does not wish to elaborate further on it at this stage. She has tremendous appreciation and admiration for the French judicial system and has been treated with great respect by the French authorities.”

The case — long delayed due to other high-profile trials, among other reasons — is anything but straightforward, with colorful characters and circumstances that seem out of a movie script.

This, however — like Kardashian’s specialty — is reality.

The robbers could not have asked for a better blueprint for their heist than Kardashian’s social media trail.

Investigators say one of the accused, Aomar Ait Khedache, who turns 69 this week, admitted to entering Kardashian’s room to steal jewelry, including her diamond ring.

“The evidence gathered during the investigation designates him as the organizer of these acts, even if he contests this,” investigators wrote in court documents.

During interviews with police, Ait Khedache said that everything was laid out perfectly — from her movements around town to the luxury inventory of jewels she carried with her to Paris, according to reporting from Le Monde.

“The case itself was given on the Internet, with everything. The jewelry presented on the Internet, specifying that she was not wearing fake jewelry. That there were no fakes, the times when she came to France … you just had to look on the Internet to know everything, absolutely everything,” he said in a police interview, Le Monde reports.

Kanye West and Kim Kardashian, wearing her engagement ring, at the MTV Video Music Awards in New York in August 2016.

Indeed, days before the robbery, Kardashian had posted an image showing her massive engagement ring, given to her by her now-ex-husband Kanye West. The ring – like most of the jewelry that was stolen that night – was never recovered by police, with Khedache telling authorities it was in someone’s possession but never resold due to its size and distinct characteristics, reports Le Monde.

The image, which boasts over 1.4 million “likes” today, is still on the reality star’s Instagram page, despite its connection to this dark chapter of her history.

The social media post has now also been entered into evidence and will be part of the trial.

Kardashian’s penchant for showcasing her wealth was criticized prior to the robbery but became a defense of sorts for both the accused thieves and some of her critics who have all but excused the alleged criminals.

In 2017, Khedache’s lawyer at the time, Jean-Yves Liénard, told Le Monde in part, “this case shows the state of decay in which we find ourselves, where a young woman who is nothing, neither an artist nor a writer, becomes a global phenomenon whose slightest mishap obsesses the international press.”

Even in the fresh aftermath of the incident, late former Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld was among those who joined the chorus of the critical.

“You cannot display your wealth and then be surprised that some people want to share it with you,” he told international news reporters days after the robbery.

Journalist Patricia Tourancheau provided some context on the backlash.

“In France, it’s still very badly perceived when people flaunt their wealth so much, and what was heavily criticized, for example, is Kim Kardashian’s selfie (with the ring). So they knew she had her jewelry on her, but she’s showing off, and her way of exhibiting her wealth in France is quite insufferable,” she recently told CNN’s Saskya Vandoorne.

Yunice Abbas, who authorities allege was one of the five people who entered the hotel on the night of the heist, has not minced words about his feelings about his involvement. He even wrote a book about the incident called “J’ai séquestré Kim Kardashian,” which translates to “I kidnapped Kim Kardashian.”

Yunice Abbas, here in 2021, admitted to robbing Kim Kardashian at her hotel in Paris in 2016.

“Since she was throwing money away, I was there to collect it, and that was that,” Abbas, now in his early 70s, told Vice in 2022. “Guilty? No, I don’t care. I don’t care.”

Abbas has downplayed the crime and has blamed Kardashian in interviews with multiple media for flaunting her jewelry.

He has promoted his book on French television.

“I have neither contempt nor a desire for revenge,” he told i24 news. “I am very happy for her. I ask her to forgive me. If she can’t, too bad, I will live with it.”

Police say he admitted taking part in the armed robbery, and to unlawful confinement, but denies participating in planning of the caper.

He was released from pre-trial detention in 2022 for health reasons.

Time has also revealed a surprising public reaction to the criminals, Tourancheau explained.

“I think there’s a part of the public that actually feels some sympathy for them,” she said. “They targeted a person, yes, but to steal valuables – money, jewelry – not to cause harm for harm’s sake.”

Kardashian’s first comments about the robbery wouldn’t be made public until a trailer for her reality show was released in January the next year, months after the theft.

In the episode itself, which aired in March 2017, she spoke about the robbery in detail, describing how she thought at the time that she was going to be raped and killed.

“Then (one of the armed men) duct tapes my face, my mouth, to get me to not yell or anything and then he grabs my legs and I wasn’t, I had no clothes on under (my robe) and he pulled me towards him at the front of the bed and I thought, ‘Okay, this is the moment. They are going to rape me.’” Kardashian tearfully recalled. “And I fully mentally prepped myself and then he didn’t, and he duct-taped my legs together.”

She added: “Then they had the gun up to me and I just knew that was the moment they are just totally going to shoot me in the head. I just prayed Kourtney (Kardashian, her elder sister) was going to have a normal life after she sees my dead body on the bed.”

Kourtney Kardashian, Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner attend the Givenchy show as part of the Paris Fashion Week on October 2, 2016. Kim Kardashian was robbed in the early morning hours of the next day.

Kardashian cooperated with the authorities on the scene. According to court documents translated from French, she had samples taken from her wrists, hair, and ankles.

DNA evidence, as well as CCTV footage, helped tie some of the accused to the crime, according to the French charging documents.

In the aftermath of the robbery, Kardashian has said she changed her approach to social media, speaking multiple times about her new aversion to posting locations and other sensitive information in real-time.

“I was just really scared of everything,” she told David Letterman of her feelings following the crime, as she recounted how the gun-toting robbers forced her to hand over her $4M engagement ring. “They kept on saying, ‘the ring, the ring,’” she said.

“I can’t sleep at night unless there’s half a dozen security guards at my house, and that has just become my reality.”

She also said the incident changed her priorities.

“I was definitely materialistic before,” she told Ellen DeGeneres in 2017. “Not that there’s anything bad with having things and working to get those things – I’m really proud of everyone around me that’s successful…But I’m not here to show off the way I used to. It’s just not who I am anymore. I just don’t care about that stuff anymore. I really don’t.”

That statement has followed Kardashian in the time since.

In a Season 6 episode of her family’s Hulu reality program, which aired in March 2025, Kardashian and her sister Khloé traveled to India to attend the lavish wedding of Anant Ambani, the son of Asia’s wealthiest man. Their trip full of elaborate costume changes for the multi-day celebration, which took place in July 2024, culminated with one evening look that had Kardashian wearing millions of dollars worth of jewels and making a video for social media about it in the car on the way to the event.

Kim and Khloé Kardashian attended the extravagant wedding of Anant Ambani in a 2024 episode of their reality TV show.

The show made light of the hypocrisy, with Kardashian sharing that a family member had sent her a meme that called back to her statements on DeGeneres’ show and juxtaposed them with some of her recent diamond-adorned social media posts.

“Lorraine Schwartz made this for the wedding tonight,” she said at one point as she recorded in the backseat, running her hand against the heavy diamond nose chain crafted by the famed jewelry designer she’d just name-checked. “How insane.”

An apt word, perhaps, for the entire tale itself.



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Airbus will carve up Spirit AeroSystems with Boeing by taking its US and UK assets

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Europe’s Airbus has finalized an agreement to take some assets from Spirit AeroSystems, both companies said Monday, completing a critical part of a transatlantic carve-up of the struggling supplier with US rival Boeing.

The US planemaker agreed last year to buy back the aerosructures giant it spun off two decades ago for $4.7 billion in stock, while Airbus moved to take on the supplier’s loss-making Europe-focused activities.

Two key plants involved in the transfer are Kinston, in North Carolina, where Spirit (SPR) makes a crucial part of the A350 fuselage, and a plant in Belfast, Northern Ireland, which makes carbon wings for the A220.

“Entering into this agreement is a significant milestone as we work towards the closing of the Boeing acquisition, to the benefit of Spirit, its stockholders and other stakeholders,” Spirit Chief Financial Officer Irene Esteves said.

Airbus would provide non-interest bearing credit lines worth $200 million to Spirit as a part of the deal, the companies said in separate statements. Airbus, meanwhile, will be compensated by payment of $439 million from Spirit, the planemaker said.

Letters sent this month to employees from Boeing Commercial Airplanes CEO Stephanie Pope and Spirit CEO Pat Shanahan suggest that some work in Belfast and a plant in Prestwick, Scotland, not absorbed by Airbus would go to Boeing (BA).

Spirit said in its statement that Airbus would acquire the production of A220 wings in Belfast. In case a suitable buyer isn’t found, Airbus would also take over the production of the A220 mid-fuselage.

Meanwhile, Airbus said it would acquire the production of wing components for A320 and A350 in Prestwick, Scotland.

While Boeing had previously considered buying back its former subsidiary, the decision to move ahead comes as the planemaker boosts production of its strongest-selling 737 MAX jet following a series of crises in 2024 that weighed on output.

Spirit, which produces the fuselage for the MAX, raised doubts last year about its ability to continue as a going concern, receiving financial help from both planemakers.

Wichita, Kansas-based Spirit Aero said in February it has total financial liquidity of $890 million but expects to burn $650 million to $700 million in free cash during the first half of 2025, without offering an explanation.

Airbus CFO Thomas Toepfer told shareholders earlier this month that the company expected to complete the agreement with Spirit by the end of April. The full deal with Boeing is expected to close in the third quarter.



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