FARNBOROUGH: Airbus 'has
Boeing's MoM market' with A321LR – Leahy
15
JULY, 2016 - BY: MAX
KINGSLEY-JONES – FARNBOROUGH 2016
Airbus's chief salesman John
Leahy has dismissed Boeing's view that there is a market opening up for an
all-new aircraft in the so-called middle-of-the-market (MoM) sector.
He argues that the capability of
the Airbus A321LR variant of the A320neo family, which is being marketed as a
757 replacement, was endorsed by the deal from Norwegian announced at
the Farnborough air show. The low-cost carrier switched 30 of its A320neo
orders to the larger A321LR, describing it as a "short long-haul"
aircraft. Norwegian will configure its A321LRs with around 220 seats
in a single-class layout and will use them on transatlantic services.
"You're seeing airlines
placing orders in record numbers for A321s, converting A320 to A321s. Even Norwegian,
a big Boeing operator, is saying 'I need A321s'," says Leahy. "I
think we know exactly where the market is, and it's probably where [Boeing]
wishes it wasn't, but we've got that market."
However, Boeing's head of
marketing Randy Tinseth dismisses the notion that the A321neo is the answer to
the MoM requirement.
"Frankly, when we talk
about the middle of the market, it's an airplane that the A321 doesn't serve
today or in the future, or that our 737 Max doesn't. It's a unique opportunity
and I can tell you that, just based on the response we've seen from our
customers," says Tinseth.
Tinseth says that based on
Boeing's studies to date, the MoM aircraft would be 20-25% bigger than the
Boeing 757-200 and able to fly 20-25% further. "No [current] airplane can
address either that size or range, so we've got some work to do."
Boeing estimates that a 20-year
market for at least 2-3,000 aircraft, and perhaps as many as 4-5,000 units
"if you build a really good airplane", says Tisneth
It's unclear exactly what engine
technology Boeing will adopt for the MoM project should it go ahead, but
Tinseth says he expects the aircraft "would come to the market around the
middle of the next decade. That's 10 years from now, so we'd expect [a step
change] from the engine manufacturers."
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