Airbus smashes orders at Dubai airshow, Boeing trails

Airbus SE bagged 265 firm orders at the Middle East event

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Airbus | Boeing | Airplanes

Reuters 

Airbus
A further 139 provisional orders lifted Airbus' Dubai tally above 400 jets

A slew of plane orders at this week's Dubai Airshow has added weight to Airbus' hopes of raising output, but the jetmaker is not yet ready to pull the trigger, its top executive said.

SE bagged 265 firm orders at the Middle East event, closing a gap with which had been leading this year as sales of its 737 MAX rebound from a safety crisis.

A further 139 provisional orders lifted Airbus' Dubai tally above 400 jets, while won a firm order for a comparitively less 72 MAX.

CEO Guillaume Faury said had definitively agreed to increase production to 65 single-aisle jets a month by summer 2023, from a planned average of 45 this quarter.

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Beyond that, has asked suppliers to explore rates of 70 in early 2024 and 75 by 2025, but has not made a decision. Some suppliers have criticised the plans, worried the pandemic recovery will remain patchy.

"We are in the phase of assessing demand," Faury told Reuters in an interview this week.

"What happened (in Dubai) is important, because together with other prospects or deals to come, it gives substance and ... evidence that the demand we see for rate 70, 75 will be sustained for many years."

That "inside-out" view of demand - based on orders Airbus is receiving and its own assumptions based on talks with airlines - matches the "outside-in" or top-down picture provided by new Airbus market forecasts published at the show, he said.

Not there yet

The forecasts cover 20 years and straddle categories, so cannot easily be used to gauge near-term output of a specific model. But Faury said the latest report was consistent with demand for "maybe 70, 75" A320-family jets a month this decade. "So if those simulation tools and those sensors continue to be as robust as they have demonstrated in the past, we think 70, 75 is reasonable, but we're not yet there," Faury said.

Industry sources say Airbus intends to take a decision by the middle of next year to leave time for suppliers to react. Faury said he had received encouraging signals during recent talks with French and German supplier groups.

Privately, some suppliers are less optimistic. "I think most still believe it will be bumpy," a senior industry source said. Airbus deliveries have flattened in the past three months, in part due to snags in the supply chain.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Fri, November 19 2021. 00:31 IST
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