About 270 aircraft to be on display
Berlin: The ILA Berlin Air Show this week will bring some long-awaited action to the city’s new airport, a source of embarrassment to Germany’s capital following multiple delays to its opening.
Berlin: The ILA Berlin Air Show this week will bring some long-awaited action to the city’s new airport, a source of embarrassment to Germany’s capital following multiple delays to its opening.
A spotless new runway, so far unused for commercial flights, will
finally feel the burn of rubber as flying displays show off aircraft
including the Eurofighter jet and Eurocopter’s new high-speed helicopter
X3.
Over 1,200 exhibitors are expected to attend the world’s oldest air and
space trade fair, half of them from outside Germany. Attendees include
European planemaker Airbus and US rival Boeing, whose civil aircraft arm
is returning to Berlin’s air show after a hiatus of more than 10 years.
Less touted as a deal-making event than the Farnborough or Paris
industry showcases, ILA will nonetheless draw a prominent crowd with
money to spend.
AirAsia, Asia’s largest low-cost carrier, is putting the finishing
touches to a deal to buy up to 100 Airbus jets, sources close to the
matter said on Friday, although they added an announcement was unlikely
in Berlin.
But as much as the deals, the chatter around the chalets is likely to
centre on fears the faltering global economy is finally catching up with
the civil aircraft industry.
Airbus and Boeing, which battle for the bulk of a jet market estimated
at $100 billion a year, have long trumpeted their resilience, arguing
airlines need to modernise their fleets to cope with high fuel costs and
that growth in Asia and the Middle East can offset weakness in the
United States and Europe.
Last week, Airbus raised its 20-year forecast for deliveries, citing strong Asia-Pacific markets.
But the Farnborough Air Show in July, the quietest for years, suggested
the good times might be coming to an end as the euro zone debt crisis
drags on, banks become wary of financing long-term, costly aircraft
orders and Chinese growth slows.
That has turned the spotlight on Airbus and Boeing’s ability to deliver
on a record backlog of orders, and on whether any of these might be
delayed or cancelled.
“If you look at ... some of the names of ordering companies, you have
to wonder whether they have the financing to pay for all these planes.
It just doesn’t seem credible, and I believe that some of that order
backlog will most certainly drop out,” KPMG aerospace expert James Stamp
told Reuters.
Tom Enders, the chief executive of Airbus’s parent company EADS, told
journalists on Monday that airlines in Europe were under “immense
pressure,” though he remained upbeat about demand from Asia and the
Middle East.
Boeing and Airbus have orders for over 8,000 aircraft, enough to keep
them busy for the next six years even without any new deals, and
analysts predict the industry must increase annual output volume by 45
percent by 2015 - a huge challenge.
PAST AND FUTURE
The newly-built ILA site is adjacent to Berlin-Brandenburg Airport,
which was originally due to open in 2011 but the opening has been
delayed three times already.
The scheduled opening for June 3 was scrapped at short notice earlier
this year due to problems with fire safety systems, and officials said
on Friday they were further pushing back the opening to October 2013.
More than 20 years since German reunification, the capital is still
making do with two small airports, Tegel and Schoenefeld, that date back
to the Cold War era.
“At least we will have the (new) south runway all to ourselves,” EADS’s Enders said.
About 270 aircraft will be on display at ILA, from an historic
Messerschmitt Bf 109 to the world’s two largest passenger aircraft,
Airbus’s A380 and Boeing’s 747-8.
All eyes will also be on whether EADS’s A400M military transport plane
will take part in the flying displays after engine problems forced it to
sit out the popular stunts at Farnborough in July for a second year
running.
Emirates, which has been lobbying unsuccessfully since 2004 for landing
rights in Berlin, said on Sunday it will bring one of its 23 A380
mammoth jets to the show, which runs from September 11 to 16.
The airline said the delays and cost overruns at the new airport only
strengthen its case for being allowed to fly to Berlin. “The new airport
needs to increase revenue to balance some unplanned costs,” Emirates
passenger sales boss Thierry Antinori told Reuters. “And we want to
spend money.”
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