Air-taxi maker Archer accuses rival Joby of illegal China ties

Summary

  • Archer accuses Joby of hiding China ties for competitive advantage
  • Joby calls Archer’s claims ‘nonsensical’
  • Archer’s allegations come in countersuit to Joby’s lawsuit

(Reuters) – Electric air-taxi ​maker Archer Aviation accused rival Joby Aviation in a countersuit filed ‌Monday of defrauding the U.S. government and hiding close ties to China that it used to gain an unfair competitive advantage.

In the countersuit filed in U.S. federal court, Archer said that “Joby and/or ​its agents fraudulently misclassified thousands of pounds of Chinese-origin aircraft materials as ​consumer goods…in an apparent effort to evade U.S. tariffs and foreign-influence ⁠oversight.”

Joby Aviation sued Archer in a California state court in November last year for allegedly ​stealing its trade secrets, saying that Archer hired away a Joby employee who took ​confidential information to Archer about its business strategies, partnership terms and aircraft specifications. The case was moved to U.S. district court in December.

Alex Spiro, an attorney for Joby, said the company “doesn’t respond ​to nonsense.”

“Archer’s constant legal issues and flailing business operations have left it no ​choice but to resort to invented nonsensical theories,” he said in a statement. “We will see them ‌in court.”

Archer ⁠alleged in its countersuit that Joby received grants and financial benefits from the Chinese government and “demonstrating a profound, undisclosed foreign dependency.”

It also accused Joby of “wrapping itself in the American flag,” rather than disclosing its ties to Beijing, which have given it ​an unfair competitive edge ​over its rival.

An ⁠Archer spokesperson did not respond to a request for further comment.

The countersuit was filed the same day that the U.S. Department ​of Transportation announced eight grant programs to spur development of air ​taxis and ⁠drones. Three of the eight list both Joby and Archer as participants.

President Donald Trump announced the programs last year in an effort to catch up with China in drone ⁠and air ​mobility development.

Electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft firms ​like Joby and Archer are racing to certify and deploy their competing vehicles and meet demand for faster, ​more sustainable urban transportation.

Reporting by Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru and Dan Catchpole in Seattle;