Between January and November, Airbus sold
646 aircraft, or a net total of 585 after adjusting for cancellations.
Airbus delivered 516 aircraft in the same
period.
The European planemaker announcement
confirms figures reported by Reuters on Monday.
Airbus has set a target of 650 plane sales
in 2012.
It also aims to sell more planes than it
delivers, a milestone that it reached in the first 11 months of the
year.
Airbus is poised to lose its crown as the
world's largest planemaker to Boeing this year as the U.S. company catches up
with demand for a new type of fuel-saving medium-haul jet.
Demand for the revamped A320neo handed
Airbus a record 64 percent market share in 2011, but Boeing has raced past its
rival in 2012 with strong sales of its competing 737 MAX.
When 2011 and 2012 years are combined,
analysts say the two aircraft planemakers are expected to maintain a roughly
equal share of the $100 billion global passenger jet market.
The two planemakers are locked in an advertising
war fuelled by conflicting claims about the merits of the upgraded
aircraft.
Boeing sold 1,156 jets between January 1
and December 4 and took cancellations for 104, leaving net orders of 1,052,
according to latest available data on the company's website.
Boeing delivered 537 aircraft in the first
11 months.
Airbus last lost the annual order race in
2006 and has outdelivered its rival for the past nine years.
November's new business for the EADS (EAD.PA) subsidiary is
worth at least $16 billion at list prices and includes 100 orders for Airbus
A320-family jets from an undisclosed buyer.
It also includes a final agreement to buy
36 single-aisle planes from China Aircraft Leasing Company, provisionally announced at
the Farnborough Airshow in July.
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