A German investment company said on Tuesday it would strip two unwanted Airbus A380 superjumbo passenger jets for parts after failing to find an airline willing to keep them flying following a decision by Singapore Airlines not to keep them in service.
The decision by Dortmund-based Dr. Peters Group deals a fresh blow to the planemaker’s efforts to maintain market interest in the double-decker, barely 10 years after it went into service hailed by heads of state as a symbol of European ambition.
Small market
“Psychologically it is not good for Airbus, but this is a very large aircraft with a very small second-hand market,” said U.K.-based aerospace analyst Howard Wheeldon. Airbus did not respond to a request for comment.
Despite strong reviews for its quiet and spacious cabin, demand for the 544-seater has fallen as many airlines drop the industry’s largest four-engined aircraft in favour of smaller twin-engined ones that are more efficient, and easier to fill.
“It’s too big. There was a battle for airline fashions and it lost out,” the analyst said. Airbus says the iconic jet will eventually prove itself as travel demand saturates airport capacity at major cities.
Singapore Airlines launched A380 services in December 2007, but returned the first two aircraft to their German financiers some 10 years later after deciding not to extend their lease.
The two discarded aircraft were flown to Tarbes in the French Pyrenees to be stored, and since then their fate has been uncertain as their owner looked for other takers. “After extensive as well as intensive negotiations with various airlines such as British Airways, HiFly and IranAir, Dr. Peters Group has decided to sell the aircraft components and will recommend this approach to its investors,” the company said in a statement emailed to
Reuters
.
The planes will not be scrapped entirely, but their huge frames will be combed for valuable components such as landing gears and electronics, a Dr. Peters official told Reuters.