Spurned by airlines, first A380s to be stripped for
parts
SYDNEY (Reuters) - A German investment company said on
Tuesday it would strip two unwanted Airbus A380 superjumbo passenger jets for
parts after failing to find an airline willing to keep them flying following a
decision by Singapore Airlines to return them to their owner.
FILE PHOTO: General view shows an Airbus A380 at
the final assembly line at Airbus headquarters in Blagnac near Toulouse, France,
March 21, 2018. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
The decision by
Dortmund-based Dr Peters Group deals a fresh blow to the European planemaker's
efforts to maintain market interest in the double-decker jet, barely 10 years
after it went into service, hailed by politicians as a proud European
symbol.
Airbus had no immediate comment.
Despite its ample space
and excellent reviews for a quiet cabin, demand for the 544-seat jet has
crumbled as airlines ditch the industry's largest four-engined aircraft in favor
of smaller but ultra-efficient twin-engined models.
Singapore Airlines
launched A380 services in December 2007, but returned the first two aircraft to
their German financiers some 10 years later after deciding not to extend their
lease.
The two discarded aircraft were flown to Tarbes in the French
Pyrenees to be stored, and since then their fate has been uncertain as their
owner looked in vain for other takers.
"After extensive as well as
intensive negotiations with various airlines such as British Airways, HiFly and
IranAir, Dr Peters Group has decided to sell the aircraft components and will
recommend this approach to its investors," the company said in a statement
emailed to Reuters.
The planes will not be scrapped entirely, but their
huge frames will be combed for valuable components such as landing gears and
electronics, a Dr Peters official told Reuters.
Their engines are still
useful and have been leased back to their manufacturer Rolls-Royce for use as
spares. Dr Peters aims to extend this arrangement, the official
added.
U.S. company VAS Aero Services will be responsible for extracting
and selling parts, but will do so in Tarbes.
Dr Peters said the deal
would yield a positive result for equity investors in the jets. It operates a
number of boutique funds said to be targeted at well-off German retail
investors.
The planes now in the mortuary are not typical of models in
service, experts caution. Early examples of a new type tend to be less efficient
and Singapore Airlines recently ordered some new A380s. However, overall demand
is thin and Airbus recently agreed to cut production while renewing a search for
new buyers.
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