Over 10,000 passenger jets to be replaced by newer fuel efficient models
Airbus’ latest Global
Market Forecast (GMF) identifies a need for some 28,200 passenger and
freighter aircraft (of 100 seats or more) between 2012 and 2031 worth
nearly US$4.0 trillion, reconfirming an upward trend in the pace of new
aircraft deliveries. Of these over 27,350 will be passenger aircraft
valued at US$ 3.7 trillion.
Passenger traffic will grow at an average annual
rate of 4.7 percent in the next 20 years, during which some 10,350
aircraft will be replaced by new efficient models. By 2031 the world’s
passenger fleet will have expanded by 110 percent from slightly over
15,550 today to over 32,550. In the same period, the world’s freighter
fleet will almost double from 1,600 to 3,000 aircraft.
Emerging economic regions will represent more than
half of all traffic growth in the next 20 years. Increasing urbanisation
and the doubling of the world’s middle classes to five billion people
is also driving growth. By 2031 mega cities will more than double to 92
and over 90 percent of the world’s traffic will be between or through
these points.
“Aside from growth in international traffic, by 2031
four of the world’s biggest traffic flows will all be domestic - US,
China, Intra Western Europe and India – and these account for a third of
world traffic,” says John Leahy, Airbus Chief Operating Officer
Customers. “In 20 years from now, China’s domestic passenger traffic
will overtake the US domestic traffic to become the number one traffic
flow in our forecast. Aviation is not just essential for international
commerce, but also for domestic economies too.”
Asia Pacific will account for 35 percent of all new
aircraft deliveries, followed by Europe and North America with 21
percent each. In value terms, the single biggest market is China
followed by the US, UAE and India.
Over 1,700 Very Large Aircraft (VLA - 400 seats and
above) like the A380 will have been delivered by 2031, valued at US$600
billion. Of these over 1,330 are passenger aircraft valued at some
US$500 billion (13 percent by value of passenger deliveries, 5 percent
of units). Asia Pacific leads demand (46 percent) for these high
capacity aircraft, followed by the Middle East (23 percent) and Europe
(19 percent).
Demand for twin-aisle aircraft (250 to 400 seats),
like the A330 and the A350 XWB, some 6,970 new passenger and freighter
aircraft will be delivered valued at some US$1.7 trillion. Of these,
6,500 are passenger aircraft valued at US$1.6 trillion (44 percent by
value of passenger deliveries, 24 percent of units). Leading demand is
Asia Pacific (46 percent), Europe (17 percent) and the North America (13
percent).
In the next 20 years, over 19,500 single-aisle
aircraft worth over US$1,6 trillion will be delivered (43 percent of
passenger deliveries by value, 71 percent by units). A third of
deliveries will be in Asia Pacific followed by North America (25
percent) and Europe (22 percent). Some 30 percent of all deliveries in
this category will be for Low Cost Carriers.
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