Boeing's
big decision: Whether to build its first all-new jet design in 15 years
Boeing CEO Dennis
Muilenburg has been meeting monthly with a team working on the company's first
all-new jetliner since 2004. (T.J. Kirkpatrick / Getty Images)
Boeing Co. executives are closing in on one of their most important decisions
of the decade: whether to plow an estimated $15 billion into a new jetliner
family.
The aircraft nicknamed the 797 would feature Boeing's first all-new design
since the 787 Dreamliner's unveiling in 2004, while shoring up its product line
against recent Airbus SE advances. The European plane-maker's incoming boss,
Guillaume Faury, says he's waiting for Boeing to tip its hand before revealing
counter moves. That sets up a likely showdown at the Paris Air Show in June.
Designed for economical flying on mid-range routes, the Boeing jet would have
the potential to transform air travel by spawning a new breed of
longer-distance budget carriers - think new flights from Chicago to Berlin, or
more economical hops from New York to Los Angeles.
But the decision on whether to move forward hasn't been easy. A misfire would
cannibalize sales of the 787 Dreamliner and endanger the cash bounty that has
made Boeing a darling of Wall Street.
"Every single other Boeing jet has been pretty much a guaranteed home run,
even if it wasn't clear at the time," said aerospace analyst Richard
Aboulafia. "This is different. They've got to be careful with this."
Boeing's board is expected to review the case for the new program by the end of
March, according to people briefed on the matter. For now, the team
spearheading the concept, led by former 787 program head Mark Jenks, has been
meeting monthly with Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg and Chief
Financial Officer Greg Smith.
Boeing's design features a slightly oval-shaped fuselage that saves weight and
fuel by devoting more space to passengers and less to freight in the plane's
belly. A smaller version would seat 220 travelers, while a larger model would
seat up to 270 people, with trip costs that are about 40% lower than today's
wide-body aircraft.
Airline entrepreneur David Neeleman is impressed by how Boeing designers
"innovatively turned the fuselage, so you aren't carrying all that structure
from cargo. They claim they're going to get the seat-mile costs of a
narrow-body and have two aisles, which would be sweet if they can pull it
off."
With some planes, the technology is the 'moonshot'; with this, it's the
business case.
The sales force has been fine-tuning the design with airlines for at least five
years, creating a "will it or won't it?" drama around the decision on
whether to make the plane, known internally at Boeing as the NMA, for new,
middle-of-market airplane.
"With some planes, the technology is the 'moonshot'; with this, it's the
business case," Aboulafia said. The word "moonshot" is the term
Boeing uses for quixotic gambles that it has vowed to avoid after loading the
787 Dreamliner with groundbreaking technology and an unproven production system
- then losing money on the first 500 or so planes after extensive delays.
For Boeing and Airbus, committing to an all-new aircraft is a once-in-a-decade
event. Costs are prohibitive, delays are the norm and payoff can take years to
materialize. Boeing could easily spend more than $15 billion on the NMA,
according to Ken Herbert, analyst with Canaccord Genuity, and Airbus may be
forced into a clean-sheet design if sales take off.
Neeleman, founder of JetBlue Airways and Azul in Brazil, underscores the
potential rewards, and risk, for Boeing. The NMA seems tailor-made for the
networks he is weaving together between the Americas and Europe with
affordable, yet comfortable flights that skip congested hubs.
"I had a briefing from Boeing and I thought it was great," Neeleman
said during a recent visit to Chicago to tout Portugal's TAP airline, one of
his holdings. That's noteworthy, coming from an executive who has mostly
favored Airbus jets at start-ups such as JetBlue, Azul and Moxy, the code name
for his latest U.S. project.
Unfortunately for Boeing, Neeleman is also impatient for Airbus to speed up a
cheaper alternative. "They should be at a lot bigger head start," he
said of the Toulouse, France-based aerospace giant.
It's a hint of the dynamics that can spoil aircraft bets that sprawl over
decades. The sales appeal for a plane family overlapping Boeing's largest
single-aisle, the 737 Max 10, and smallest wide-body, the 787-8, is just one
question mark.
Another is how much savings the company can reap from a new manufacturing
system. Muilenburg is increasingly confident Boeing can shave time and money
from development and final assembly through new digital tools that anticipate
and track how the plane is built, and then monitor how it is flown.
The plane-maker's new military training jet hints at the breakthrough it sees
for the NMA. For Boeing's Super Hornet fighter, factory workers in St. Louis
need 1½ days to rivet together the two main fuselage sections. On the new T-X
trainer, the components are joined in less than an hour, said Leanne Caret,
Boeing's defense chief.
If Boeing hesitates, Airbus will woo its customers with capable, if not
cutting-edge, jet upgrades. Delta Air Lines Inc. and United Continental
Holdings Inc., for example, need to replace hundreds of the aging Boeing 757
and 767 jetliners that once dominated mid-range flying.
The Airbus plane that sparked Neeleman's interest is a relatively simple
upgrade of the A321LR jet that would be ready by 2023, two years ahead of the
NMA. Redesigned fuel tanks would give it the longest range of any Airbus
single-aisle jet. Faury, who is slated to become Airbus' CEO in April, won't
say if a decision on the so-called A321XLR is imminent - or even if it's the
likeliest response.
"We don't feel under pressure to react, even before Boeing has
moved," he said earlier this month. "Market share for the A321 is
very big because there's no real competition, and we'll keep improving this
product to serve the low end of the middle-of-market space."
Boeing usually staggers the release of variants within an aircraft family by a
year or two. But the manufacturer has mulled certifying the NMA models
concurrently to avoid missing the replacement opportunity, according to people
familiar with the matter.
The 797 will need to be priced somewhere between Airbus's offerings to be
competitive. The A321LR goes for about $60 million with all the bells and
whistles, while a wide-body A330-800 is typically priced at about $100 million,
said George Dimitroff, head of valuations for Flight Ascend Consultancy.
"I have no doubt there will be demand for the aircraft," Dimitroff
said, pointing to "new opportunities for low-cost, long-haul service. I
think the NMA will take that a step further."
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