Aerospace manufacturer: Difference between revisions

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| [[Airbus]]{{refn|group=lower-alpha|name=MAXmud|In 2019, Airbus displaced Boeing as the largest aerospace company by revenue due to the [[Boeing 737 MAX groundings]], with $2 billion operating losses down from $12 billion profits the previous year.<ref name=Flight15sep2020/>}}
| 61.8 || 78.9 || 75.1 || 72.3 || 70.8 || 68.8 || 80.6 || {{flag|France}}{{flag|Germany}}{{flagcountry|UK}}{{flag|Spain}}
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| [[Northrop Grumman]]
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| [[Airbus]]<ref group=lower-alpha name=MAXmud/>
| 5.60 || 1.5 || 5.95 || 3.70 || 2.40 || 4.34 || 4.50 || {{flag|France}}{{flag|Germany}}{{flagcountry|UK}}{{flag|Spain}}
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| [[RTX Corporation]]
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=== Cities ===
 
Important locations of the civil aerospace industry worldwide include [[Seattle]], [[Wichita, Kansas]], [[Dayton, Ohio]] and [[St. Louis]] in the United States ([[Boeing]]), [[Montreal]] and [[Toronto]] in Canada ([[Bombardier Aerospace|Bombardier]], [[Pratt & Whitney Canada]]), [[Toulouse]] and [[Bordeaux]] in France ([[Airbus]], [[Dassault Aviation|Dassault]], [[ATR (aircraft manufacturer)|ATR]]), [[Seville]] in Spain and [[Hamburg]] in Germany ([[Airbus]], [[EADS]]), the North-West of England and [[Bristol]] in Britain ([[BAE Systems]], [[Airbus]] and [[AgustaWestland]]), [[Komsomolsk-on-Amur]] and [[Irkutsk]] in Russia ([[Sukhoi]], [[Beriev]]), [[Kyiv]] and [[Kharkiv]] in Ukraine ([[Antonov]]), [[Nagoya]] in Japan ([[Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Aerospace]] and [[Kawasaki Heavy Industries Aerospace]]), as well as [[São José dos Campos]] in Brazil where [[Embraer]] is based.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}
 
== Consolidation ==