International Business News: The airline, also known as Go First, had in May sought an emergency arbitration to prevent it from going out of business and blamed Raytheon Technolog
The airline, also known as Go First, had in May sought an emergency arbitration to prevent it from going out of business and blamed Raytheon Technologies-owned engine maker for its financial woes and bankruptcy filing.
India's Go Airlines was on Thursday denied a motion for emergency arbitration in its dispute with US engine maker Pratt & Whitney, a court filing with the US District court of Delaware showed. The airline, also known as Go First, had in May sought an emergency arbitration to prevent it from going out of business and blamed Raytheon Technologies-owned engine maker for its
Go First has said it needs an emergency arbitration in its dispute with Pratt & Whitney. The airline had blamed the Raytheon Technologies-owned engine maker for supplying faulty engines and failing to replace the same in time.
Go First has blamed Raytheon Technologies-owned Pratt & Whitney for its financial woes and recent bankruptcy filing, arguing that the US firm supplied "faulty" engines and failed to replace them on time, resulting in the grounding of half of its fleet.