Production date for Boeing's long-haul 777-8 up in air as Qantas
weighs options
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The date of entry into service of Boeing Co's
ultra-long-range 777-8 wide-body airliner will depend partly on customer demand,
an executive said, with the planemaker hoping to win an order from Qantas
Airways Ltd to supply the plane for Sydney-London flights.
Qantas
The airline on Friday plans a near 20-hour test flight non-stop from New
York to Sydney, another proposed route for the planes, with a limited number of
passengers on board a 787 as it conducts research into well-being on such long
journeys.
Qantas has said the plane order remains subject to a favorable business
case and reaching agreements with the pilot's union and Australia's aviation
regulator for unprecedented crew duty times.
Boeing and Airbus are vying for the prestigious order, which stretches the
limits of their longest-range planes.
Boeing said in August it had pushed back the entry into service of the
777-8 beyond its earlier plan for 2022. The larger 777-9, due to enter service
first with a shorter range, has faced engine-related delays.
"Our timetable on the 777-8 obviously is still under consideration for when
it actually enters service," Darren Hulst, a senior marketing executive at
Boeing Commercial Airplanes, told reporters in a telephone briefing from Sydney
on Wednesday.
"But it is really more of when (we have) the combination of the demand from
our customers and how it aligns with the design and production for the 777X as a
program."
He declined to comment on whether an order from Qantas would accelerate
Boeing's plans for the 777-8. To date, Emirates and Qatar Airways are Boeing's
only customers for the plane, having ordered 35 and 10 respectively.
Emirates President Tim Clark has said some 777X orders could be switched to
787s. Emirates and Qatar Airways did not respond to previous requests for
comment on their 777-8 orders.
Boeing has put forward a "compelling offer" to deal with any delays to the
777-8 in its contest against Airbus for planes for Sydney-London flights, Qantas
Chief Executive Alan Joyce said in August, without providing further
details.
The Australian and International Pilots Association, which represents
Qantas pilots, said on Wednesday it would help gather data on fatigue on three
planned research flights, starting with the New York-Sydney journey on Friday. A
London-Sydney flight is planned next month.
The union cautioned the flights would not replicate real-world conditions.
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