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Aerospace group Boeing expects strong global airliner and services demand until 2037

A Boeing 737-800 of South African budget airline Kulula

A Boeing 737-800 of South African budget airline Kulula

Photo by Duane Daws/Creamer Media

18th July 2018

By: Rebecca Campbell

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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Global aerospace giant Boeing has predicted that 42 730 new jet airliners, worth $6.3-trillion, will be needed to meet demand over the next 20 years. This forecast was unveiled in the group’s 'Commercial Market Outlook', released at the Farnborough International Airshow, currently under way in the UK. This figure is 4.1% higher than that given in the company’s previous forecast. Adding the existing aircraft which will still be in service at the end of this period, and the global airliner fleet will amount to 48 540 in 2037 – effectively twice the size of the current fleet.

In parallel, over the same period there will be strong growth – 4.2% a year – in the commercial aviation services sector, which includes maintenance and engineering, flight operations, and data and data analytics. For example, Boeing expects the market for maintenance and engineering to be worth $2.3-trillion and that for flight operations to total $1.1-trillion. Altogether, the services sector is expected to be worth $8.8-trillion over this period. This means that the total commercial aviation sector will offer a market worth $15-trillion.

“For the first time in years, we are seeing economies growing in every region of the world,” highlighted Boeing VP: commercial marketing Randy Tinseth. “This synchronised growth is providing more stimulus for global air travel. We are seeing strong traffic trends not only in the emerging markets of China and India, but also the mature markets of Europe and North America.”

“The commercial airplane business fuels an enormous ecosystem of service providers,” he emphasised. “We see a market in which airlines outsource more and more, a market in which data and data analytics help aircraft and airline networks become more efficient and reliable, and a market in which new technologies provide new services solutions. All these trends drive greater demand for integrated solutions over the life of an airplane.”

The Asia Pacific region, including China, will be the main driver of demand, for both aircraft and services. It will account for 40% of new aircraft deliveries and 38% of the total value of services. North America and Europe will also form part of the top three market regions.

“Along with continued traffic expansion, the data show a big retirement wave approaching as older airplanes age out of the global fleet,” pointed out Tinseth. Today, more than 900 airliners in service are more than 25 years old. By the middle of the next decade, more than 500 a year will reach 25 years in age, which is twice the current rate. As a result, 44% of the demand for new aircraft will be to replace these ageing airliners.

In addition, Boeing expects demand for 980 new-build wide-body freighter aircraft during this period. This is 60 more than in the group’s previous forecast. These will be complemented by 1 670 freighters converted from airliners.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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