Airbus Chasing Boeing For Largest Jet Plane -- Mulls its Own
400-Seater
As competition escalates with Boeing over the world's
largest two-engined jets, Airbus is seeking airline support for a new 400-seat
jetliner provisionally dubbed the A350-8000, airline and aviation industry
sources said.
After talking up the possibility of a new member of its
A350 family, the European planemaker has swung into an active pre-marketing
phase as it responds to a recent upgrade in the competing Boeing
777.
While Boeing has scored successes in the Gulf with its biggest-ever
twin-engined jet, the 406-seat 777-9, Airbus is expected to aim its design at
airlines that do not always require the performance needed for extreme Gulf
conditions.
A view of the inflight entertainment screen on the
back of economy class seats on the first of 67 new Airbus A350-900 planes
delivered to Singapore Airlines at Singapore's Changi Airport
"It
would have similar capacity and range (as the 777-9) and substantially lower
seat-mile costs," Airbus sales chief John Leahy said in an interview on the
sidelines of the Istat Americas air finance conference.
"We are showing
it to airlines right now."
The project is the latest move in a game of
leapfrog played by Airbus and Boeing over the past decade in the market for big
twinjets, valued at about $1.9 trillion over 20 years.
It marks a shift
in priorities after the oil price collapse eased pressure on Airbus to upgrade
its larger four-engined A380, the output of which is declining because of slow
sales.
Two airlines whose stance could be decisive in whether Airbus
launches the new jet are Singapore Airlines and British Airways. Singapore took
delivery of its first smaller A350-900 model this week and has long been
weighing up the 777-9. Both airlines declined to comment.
In Singapore,
where Airbus' planemaking president, Fabrice Bregier, stopped over on Thursday
after a China visit, a company spokesman declined to comment.
The A350
XWB (Extra Wide Body) family was launched after a string of setbacks in 2006 to
compete with Boeing's mid-sized 787 Dreamliner and the larger 777.
The
new, bigger A350 would use a derivative of the latest Rolls-Royce Trent XWB
planned for the A350-1000. One person briefed on the plans said it would boost
thrust to just over 100,000 pounds from the current 97,000. Airbus believes that
would compete well for a large majority of the industry's needs and eclipse the
heavier 777X.
Boeing dismissed the proposal. "We're not surprised that
Airbus is attempting to fill a hole in its product lineup after losing market
share to the 777X. At the end of the day, we'll still have the better airplane,"
Marketing Vice-President Randy Tinseth told Reuters.
Some analysts said a
key to the project would be how easily Rolls-Royce could expand a full slate of
projects, even without pushing performance to the limits needed by Mideast
carriers.
"This sounds like they are making a virtue of its lack of
hot-and-high performance compared to 777-9 when maybe it's the case that Rolls
can't afford, or doesn't want to, do a much bigger and substantially new
engine," said Nick Cunningham of UK-based Agency Partners.
One engine
expert estimated the upgrade could cost half a billion dollars and require a
bigger fan and new materials.
Rolls-Royce was not immediately available
for comment.
To give the new jet enough capacity and range, Airbus would
boost the maximum takeoff weight to just over 319 tonnes from 308 tonnes on the
A350-1000, the person briefed on the plans said.
But it would sacrifice
some range compared with the 8,000-mile A350-1000.
Airbus says it has not
made a final decision on whether to launch a new A350 and will provide an update
at the Farnborough Airshow in July.
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