Why Airbus will dominate Paris Air Show
June 17, 2013 -- Updated 0445 GMT (1245
HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Airbus and Boeing both expected to make large order announcements at Paris Air Show
- French government is known to pressure Airbus to make a good showing on home turf
- Boeing has two large aircraft programs in the works
- Embraer has been working diligently to line up solid orders to announce at the show
Usually, however, Europe's Airbus comes up the winner.
This is particularly true at the
Paris Air Show (which
starts Monday and runs till Friday), where Airbus always makes a special push to
win the headlines war.
Airbus, of course, is
headquartered in Toulouse, France, an hour's flight south of Paris.
Government
pressure
Aside from the aggressive
competitiveness of Airbus Chief Operating Officer John Leahy, who can't tolerate
being second at any time and who rarely misses any opportunity to tweak Boeing, the French
government is also known to pressure Airbus to make a great showing.
This 2013 Paris Air Show takes place this week. It's the aviation
industry's most important event of the year.
Boeing conceded the point long
ago.
"We know Airbus sees this as a
competition on their home turf. In terms of orders, we see this as one week out
of 52," admits Boeing's Vice President of Marketing Randy Tinseth, the company's
most visible communications counterpart to Leahy. (Leahy's actual counterpart,
Ray Conner, CEO of Boeing Commercial Aircraft, tends to keep a low profile.)
"Despite the wave of orders our
competition rolls out at air shows, the market has still been roughly split down
the middle over the past decade," says Tinseth.
High
expectations
Leahy declined in a recent
interview to predict how many orders he'll have to announce at the air show, but
skipped the Airbus Innovation Days international media briefings on June 5 and 6
-- an unusual absence -- to go globe-trotting for orders in time for the
show.
He's expected to announce
hundreds.
The A350 XWB -- the new,
composite rival to the Boeing 787 and aging 777 -- is widely anticipated to make
a flyover at this year's event.
Some question the wisdom of even
a flyby, as the A350 will have few test flights under its wing at that
point.But the French government wants
to showcase the plane and so does Airbus.
Boeing strikes
back
Boeing is expected to announce hundreds of orders.
Boeing won't leave all its
pizzazz at home.
The formal program launch of its
787-10 is expected (although Boeing won't officially say so) and scores of
orders are expected to accompany the announcement.
Singapore Airlines has already
said it will take 30 of the airplanes.
British Airways is also presumed
to be a launch customer.
Boeing is also expected to
announce several customers who have signed up for "commitments" for the 777X,
although the program launch is considered likely for the Dubai Air Show slated for
November 17-21.
Emirates Airlines (headquartered
in Dubai) is assumed to be a launch customer for as many as 100 of the new
version of the venerable airplane.
Thus, with two new airplane
programs and hundreds of orders and commitments anticipated, Boeing could
conceivably "win" this year's show.
But video footage and pictures
of the flyby of the A350 will be hard for Boeing to beat with artist renderings
and sound bites.
Other
competitors
Embraer,
which makes the popular E-Jet in the 70-122 seat market, is expected to formally
launch its re-engined design of the E-175/190/195. (The 170 appears on its way
out.)
The upgraded E-Jet will feature
new wings, new systems, geared turbo fan engines by Pratt & Whitney and room
for an additional eight to 12 passengers.
Embraer has been working
diligently to line up solid orders to announce at the show.
Bombardier, on the other
hand, doesn't traditionally do well at air shows.
Orders for its CSeries have been
few and far between at these events, in part because Canadian securities laws
require announcements within 24 hours of the signing of even letters of intent,
making it virtually impossible for Bombardier to cluster announcements.
The first flight of the CSeries
will almost certainly miss the air show, but is expected the next week.
Bombardier will have to be
content talking about tests leading up to the first flight, revealing an
unidentified customer's identify (possibly Odyssey Airlines, based on an
executive's slip of the tongue at an industry event) and perhaps some small
order announcements.
So, with all this activity,
maneuvering and posturing, who will "win" the Paris Air Show?
Airbus, of course.
Scott Hamilton is an aviation
writer and managing director of Leeham Co., which provides
consulting services to the aerospace industry
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.