Company says unless Emirates buys more of the jet then ‘there is no choice but to shut down the programme’

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

Airbus said on Monday that it might have to end production of the double-decker A380 superjumbo jet, having booked no new orders for the plane in two years.



The European aerospace group had been banking on another big order from main client Emirates in November, but the Dubai-based airline decided instead to buy 40 of Boeing’s Dreamliners.

Airbus’s decision in 2007 to pursue the A380, capable of packing in 853 seats, was diametrically opposed to Boeing’s bet on the Dreamliner, marketed as a more efficient plane that could be used for both medium and long-distance flights.

Turbulence continues for Airbus as one of first A380s exits service Read more

But the economics of the A380 have proved daunting, with airlines having to fly every flight at full capacity to make a profit.

“We are still talking to Emirates, but honestly, they are probably the only one to have the ability right now on the market place to take a minimum of six per year on a period of eight to 10 years,” Airbus’s sales director, John Leahy, said.

“If we can’t work out a deal with Emirates there is no choice but to shut down the programme,” he said.

Jon Ostrower (@jonostrower) The man who birthed the A380 just put it officially on death watch. https://t.co/gWytQwiqO5

The A380 has a 2018 list price of US$446m (£324m), and as of December it had booked 317 orders for the plane from 18 airlines. Of those, 222 have been delivered.

But the last order, for three jets by Japan’s ANA, goes back to January 2016 – and that was the first after nearly three years since a huge order for 50 A380s by Emirates in 2013.

So far, the A380 has cost Airbus €18bn to €20bn, and the company says it needs to build at least six a year for the programme to remain viable.

“We will deliver 12 aircraft as planned in 2018,” chief operating officer Fabrice Bregier said, down from 27 in 2015.

“The challenge will be to maintain at least this level in the years to come” before customers start placing replacement orders for the A380s they currently have in service, and “potential new markets” start opening up, he said.

He said the fact the program could exist with just six planes built each year was a testament to its efficiency, adding that the “magnificent plane” was widely acclaimed by passengers.

In many ways, the A380 programme is a race against time: Airbus is hoping China will lead a revival in orders once demand for long-haul planes picks up, arguing the plane is ideally suited for mass-market travel and for heavily congested airports.

China is expected to become the world’s biggest air travel market in 2022, surpassing the US, according to the International Air Transport Association.

Bregier said the company’s overall deliveries could rise to 800 this year given the increased pace of production of the A320neo.

Deliveries have been slowed by problems with the plane’s engines made by US firm Pratt & Whitney and by CFM, the joint venture of General Electric and Safran, but Bregier said these were being worked out.

Overall, Airbus said it booked a total 1,109 aircraft orders and a record 718 deliveries in 2017, outpacing Boeing’s 912 orders but falling short of its rival’s 763 deliveries.