Hexcel is expanding into the north African marketplace, marking the ceremonial groundbreaking at a new facility in Casablanca, Morocco.
Casablanca
The new $20 million (€17.5 million) engineered core site at the MidPark Free Trade Zone Industrial Park will become fully operational in 2017 and will convert HexWeb honeycomb materials into engineered core parts that are used for structural reinforcement and lightweighting in aerospace applications.
Presiding over the groundbreaking ceremony on April 26th 2016 were Hexcel Vice-President and General Manager Thierry Merlot and Moroccan Minister for Industry, Commerce, Investment and Digital Economy Moulay Hafid Elalamy.
In the interim, Hexcel will occupy a temporary facility on the Midparc site that will begin operating in Q4 2016. The plant is expected to employ more than 200 people by 2020.
The Casablanca facility is part of Hexcel’s ongoing worldwide investment to create a diversified and robust global supply chain to support aerospace customers’ growing demand for engineered core. In recent years, Hexcel has increased capacity at existing plants to support its engineered core business and plans further expansions to capture additional opportunities in a global market with excellent growth potential.
"Morocco’s forward-looking industrial policy, economic growth plan and the establishment of industrial free trade zones influenced our choice of location," stated Merlot. "Morocco has a highly skilled, competitive workforce, is well situated geographically, and has a quality infrastructure - all of which are key logistical criteria for our industry. Other deciding factors were the local Mohammed V International Airport and the close proximity of several Hexcel customers including Safran (Aircelle), Airbus (STELIA), Daher, and Bombardier."
Executive Vice-President Performance and Competitiveness at Safran Jean-Jacques Orsini said: "We welcome Hexcel’s decision to invest in Morocco and build an engineered core facility at the Midparc Industrial Park. Hexcel’s new plant will be close to our own Safran (Aircelle) plant that we opened in 2005, and having a supplier at such close proximity will create a very efficient supply chain that will benefit both of our companies and the aerospace industry more generally, not only in Morocco but around the world."