FlightGlobal reports that aircraft interiors suppliers “are seeing growing demand for multi-class cabins in single-aisle jets during the recovery from Covid-19.” During FlightGlobal’s Rethinking The Post-COVID Cabin webinar Wednesday, “three executives from the sector noted the increased use of narrowbodies on longer-haul routes – epitomised by JetBlue’s recent launch of transatlantic services using Airbus A321LRs.”
Full Story (Flight Global – Subscription publication)
Tag: Commercial Aviation
Qantas to Restart International Flights in December 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that Qantas announced Thursday “its plans to gradually bring back overseas flights once 80 per cent of the Australian population was fully vaccinated against Covid-19.” The first available travel routes “will be to first-world destinations with high vaccination rates including the United States, Canada, the UK, Singapore, Japan and New Zealand.”
Full Story (Daily Mail)
787 Delivery Pause Could Align With Low Demand
Aviation Week reports that The Boeing Company’s “struggles handing over 787s during much of the COVID-19-induced long-haul traffic collapse may have an unintended upside – a forced pause in deliveries during a temporary stretch of low demand when many customers do not want the aircraft.”
Full Story (Aviation Week)
Qatar Airways Grounds 13 Airbus A350s Over Fuselage Surface Deterioration
Reuters reports that Qatar Airways announced Thursday it grounded 13 Airbus A350 aircraft under instruction of its regulator due to deterioration of fuselage surfaces. Qatar Airways has been in a dispute with Airbus for months over the dispute and insisted that it would not take further A350 deliveries until the issue was resolved. Qatar Airways Chief Executive Akbar Al Baker said, “With this latest development, we sincerely expect that Airbus treats this matter with the proper attention that it requires…Qatar Airways expects Airbus to have established the root cause and permanently corrected the underlying condition to the satisfaction of Qatar Airways and our regulator before we take delivery of any further A350 aircraft.”
Full Story (Reuters)
Commercial Aviation: Rooted in Glory, Strained by Exponential Growth
Keynote speaker: Michael Delaney, vice president, Airplane Development, Boeing Commercial Airplanes
by Hannah Godofsky, AIAA Communications
From the first flight in 1903, the commercial aviation industry has grown swiftly and has achieved much, but that growth has brought challenges, which Michael Delaney, the vice president of airplane development with Boeing Commercial Airplanes, discussed June 13 during the opening session at the AIAA Aviation and Aeronautics Forum and Exposition 2016 in Washington, DC.
“The time that lapsed between Orville Wright’s first flight and Neil Armstrong’s giant leap was just a mere 65 years,” Delaney said. “The second World War served as a greater industrial stimulus that gave rise to the jet engine, rocket-powered propulsion, radar and long-distance airplanes. … The peacetime dividend was a masterful supersonic flight less than 45 years after Kitty Hawk and the birth of the commercial jet transport, ultimately, with man leaving the planet Earth in 1969.”
But, he said, as commercial aviation has grown into a massive global industry, success built upon these past achievements has brought infrastructure, security, and energy and environmental challenges.
“Sixty-five billion people flew in the first 100 years of flight,” Delaney said. “Sixty-five billion people are expected to fly between now and 2030. The congestion level is beginning to resemble the 405 freeway in California and Washington [State].”
Long security lines and high volumes of people are exacerbating the strain on outdated infrastructure that is already at capacity, he said, adding that security is also a major issue.
“Since 9/11, we have had to live with heightened level of security. I see this only getting harder,” Delaney said.
The threat of cyberattacks in the aviation world also looms large with more electronic systems and more sophisticated hackers seeking to exploit them, he said.
Delaney also discussed the energy and environmental challenges faced by an industry growing as quickly as the commercial aviation industry is. Commercial aircraft are so large and consume so much energy that they barely resemble the gliders and small planes of their lineage.
However, he said there are current projects that show promise in making the future of aviation leaner and greener. Delaney compared the Solar Impulse 2 to the Wright Flyer, which was also very small and very slow but “shows us what’s possible.”
“There is certainly no shortages of challenges that our industry needs to step up and address now and in the future,” he said. “We have a responsibility to set the path for the future.”
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