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Airbus order discussions progressing and likely to be announced next month: Capital A Group

Airbus order discussions progressing and likely to be announced next month: Capital A Group

CNBC18-06-2025
Tony Fernandes, the CEO of Capital A Group discusses Airbus orders and global market expansion from the Paris Air Show.
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See inside a JetBlue Airbus A220, the versatile jet now running its longest route yet for the airline
See inside a JetBlue Airbus A220, the versatile jet now running its longest route yet for the airline

Business Insider

timea day ago

  • Business Insider

See inside a JetBlue Airbus A220, the versatile jet now running its longest route yet for the airline

Airbus exhibited a JetBlue A220 at June's Paris Air Show. The same month, JetBlue began its longest route using an A220 — between Boston and Vancouver. Vancouver and Boston are about 2,500 miles apart, and the flight can take up to six hours. JetBlue previously operated this route until last September using the larger Airbus A321. According to data from the aviation analytics firm Cirium, this is also the fifth-longest A220 route in the world. The title belongs to Air Baltic's 2,684-mile journey between Dubai and Latvia. A splash of colour and the airline's logo made boarding feel more welcoming than a barebones plane. Blue lighting throughout the cabin also added to the atmosphere on board. JetBlue says the custom mood lighting changes through the day. With a more spacious cabin than competing aircraft, the A220 is configured in a rare 2-3 layout. Cabins like this used to be more common on old airplanes like those made by McDonnell Douglas, which merged with Boeing in 1997. There are fewer than 100 Boeing 717s still in service, a jet which was originally known as the MD-95. Other than the A220, Russia's Superjet 100 is the only jet still being built with a 2-3 layout. And yet, the seats are still quite large. JetBlue says the A220 has the widest coach seats of any single-aisle aircraft, measuring 18 inches. Couples or solo travelers might also like the fact that there are fewer middle seats. The first four rows are dedicated to premium seats. In addition to up to seven inches of extra legroom, "EvenMore" comes with early boarding, free alcoholic drinks, and priority security at some airports. There are also another couple of rows by the overwing emergency exits, for a total of 30 premium seats. The relatively large cabin also means there's plenty of overhead bin space — with more improvements on the way. The coach seats offered fairly generous legroom. The pitch, which is the distance between the same spot on one seat and the one in front, is 32 inches. That's typically among the most you can find in economy. I was also impressed by JetBlue's in-flight entertainment system. JetBlue also offers free WiFi, and its A220s have USB-C, USB-A, and AC power for charging. It also has live TV on all of its planes, although this type has only 18 channels compared to over 100 on its A321s. Delta only has live TV on select planes, excluding its A220s. Two bathrooms at the rear were also more spacious than I expected. The A220 was first built by Bombardier, but Airbus bought the program for 1 Canadian dollar. Before it was the A220, it began as Bombardier's CSeries program, which launched in 2008. The plane entered service in 2016. It was already facing financial difficulties due to overspending, development delays, and stiff competition with the Boeing 737-700. Then, in 2017, Boeing accused Bombardier of unfairly trying to increase its market share by selling dozens to Delta for less than their production cost, a practice known as dumping. The US government then imposed duties totaling 292%. It said around 80% was due to the dumping petition and the rest due to subsidies by the Canadian government. Bombardier rejected the allegations at the time and said: "The magnitude of the proposed duty is absurd and divorced from the reality about the financing of multibillion-dollar aircraft programs." In October, Airbus paid 1 Canadian dollar to take a controlling stake in the program in 2017, renaming it the A220 a year later. It also agreed to build many of the planes at its production line in Mobile, Alabama. Since Donald Trump announced his tariff plan, trade deals with the UK, European Union, and Brazil have included exemptions for planes.

Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades
Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades

(Bloomberg) -- In 1981, the year Airbus SE announced it would build a new single-aisle jetliner to take on Boeing Co., the 737 ruled the roost. The US-made narrowbody, already in use for more than a decade, had reshaped the airline industry by making shorter routes cheaper and more profitable to operate. By 1988, when Airbus began producing its upstart A320, Boeing had built a formidable lead by delivering some 1,500 of its cigar-shaped best-seller. The US-Canadian Road Safety Gap Is Getting Wider Festivals and Parades Are Canceled Amid US Immigration Anxiety A Photographer's Pipe Dream: Capturing New York's Vast Water System To Head Off Severe Storm Surges, Nova Scotia Invests in 'Living Shorelines' Five Years After Black Lives Matter, Brussels' Colonial Statues Remain It's taken the better part of four decades, but Airbus has finally caught up: The A320 series is poised to overtake its US competitor as the most-delivered commercial airliner in history, according to aviation consultancy Cirium. As of early August, Airbus had winnowed the gap to just 20 units, with 12,155 lifetime A320-family shipments, according to the data. That difference is likely to disappear as soon as next month. 'Did anyone back then expect it could become number one – and on such high production volumes?' Max Kingsley-Jones, head of advisory at Cirium Ascend, wrote of the A320 in a recent social-media post. 'I certainly didn't, and nor probably did Airbus.' The A320's success mirrors the European planemaker's decades-long rise from fledgling planemaker to serious contender, and finally Boeing's better. By the early 2000s, annual deliveries of the A320 and its derivatives had surpassed the 737 family; total orders eclipsed the Boeing jet in 2019. But the 737 stubbornly remained the most-delivered commercial aircraft of all time. At the outset, Airbus faced an uphill battle. The European planemaker, an assemblage of aerospace manufacturers formed in 1970 with backing from European governments, didn't yet offer a full aircraft lineup. Infighting hindered everything from product planning to manufacturing, and leadership decisions had to finely balance French and German commercial and political interests. Yet it was clear even then that Airbus needed a presence in the narrowbody segment to firmly establish itself as Boeing's top rival. Those aircraft are by far the most widely flown category in commercial aviation, typically connecting city pairs on shorter routes. Higher fuel costs and the deregulation of the US aviation industry in the late 1970s had given the European planemaker an opening with American airline executives, who clamored for an all-new single-aisle, according to a history of Airbus written by journalist Nicola Clark. To set the A320 apart, Airbus took some risks. It selected digital fly-by-wire controls that saved weight over traditional hydraulic systems, and gave pilots a side-stick at their right or left hand instead of a centrally mounted yoke. The aircraft also sat higher off the ground than the 737 and came with a choice of two engines, giving customers greater flexibility. Airbus's gamble paid off. Today, the A320 and 737 make up nearly half of the global passenger jet fleet in service. And the A320's success contrasts with strategic blunders like the A380 behemoth that proved short-lived because airlines couldn't profitably operate the giant plane. Boeing maintained that smaller, nimbler planes like the 787 Dreamliner would have an edge — a prediction that proved right. Yet the longtime dominance of the two narrowbody aircraft raises questions about the vitality of a duopoly system that favors stability over innovation. Both airplane makers have repeatedly opted for incremental changes that squeeze efficiencies out of their top-selling models, rather than going the more expensive route of designing a replacement aircraft from scratch. Airbus was first to introduce new engines to its A320, turning the neo variant into a huge hit with airlines seeking to cut their fuel bill. Under pressure, Boeing followed, but its approach proved calamitous. The US planemaker came up with the 737 Max, strapping more powerful engines onto the aircraft's aging, low-slung frame. It installed an automated flight-stabilizing feature called MCAS to help manage the higher thrust and balance out the plane. Regulators later found MCAS contributed to two deadly 737 Max crashes that led to a global grounding of the jet for 20 months, starting in 2019. More recently, Airbus has been bedeviled by issues with the fuel-efficient engines that power the A320neo. High-tech coatings that allow its Pratt & Whitney geared turbofans to run at hotter temperatures have shown flaws, forcing airline customers to send aircraft in for extra maintenance, backing up repair shops and grounding hundreds of jets waiting for inspection and repair. With both narrowbody families near the end of their evolutionary timeline, analysts and investors have begun asking about what's next. China, for its part, is seeking to muscle into the market with its Comac C919 model that's begun operating in the country, but hasn't so far been certified to fly in Europe or the US. Boeing Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg said in July that the company is working internally toward a next-generation plane, but is waiting for engine technology and other factors to fall into place, including restoring cash flow after years of setbacks. 'That's not today and probably not tomorrow,' he said on a July 29 call. Airbus's healthier finances give it more flexibility to explore design leaps. CEO Guillaume Faury toyed with rolling out a hydrogen-powered aircraft — potentially with a radical 'flying wing' design — in the mid-2030s but has since pushed back the effort to focus on a conventional A320 successor. The Toulouse, France-based company is considering an open-rotor engine that would save fuel through its architecture rather than the current jet turbines that push the limits of physics to eke out gains. Speaking at the Paris Air Show in June, Faury called the A320 'quite an old platform' and affirmed plans to launch a successor by the end of this decade, with service entry in the mid-2030s. 'I have a lot of focus on preparing that next-generation of single aisle,' Faury said. 'We are very steady and very committed to this.' --With assistance from Jinshan Hong. What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Americans Are Getting Priced Out of Homeownership at Record Rates Bessent on Tariffs, Deficits and Embracing Trump's Economic Plan How Syrian Immigrants Are Boosting Germany's Economy Twitter's Ex-CEO Is Moving Past His Elon Musk Drama and Starting an AI Company ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades
Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades

Bloomberg

time2 days ago

  • Bloomberg

Airbus Is About to Eclipse a Record That Boeing Held for Decades

In 1981, the year Airbus SE announced it would build a new single-aisle jetliner to take on Boeing Co., the 737 ruled the roost. The US-made narrowbody, already in use for more than a decade, had reshaped the airline industry by making shorter routes cheaper and more profitable to operate. By 1988, when Airbus began producing its upstart A320, Boeing had built a formidable lead by delivering some 1,500 of its cigar-shaped best-seller.

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