Airlines in Germany
will require more than 1,000 new passenger aircraft (100 seats and
above) and freighters (above 10 tons of payload) over the next 20 years,
according to the latest Airbus Global Market Forecast (GMF).
These
new passenger and freight aircraft will include 690 single-aisle
aircraft, more than 230 twin-aisle medium to long-range wide-body
aircraft and close to 100 very large aircraft such as the A380. These
new aircraft are valued at ~US$148 billion at today’s list prices.
The
main drivers for this investment are the traffic growth between
advanced and emerging markets as well as continued strong demand from
the developed markets and the benefits that can be derived by operating
the most modern and eco-efficient fleets.
As
a result, Germany’s passenger aircraft fleet is expected to nearly
double, growing from over 670 aircraft in operation at the beginning of
2012 to more than 1,300 by 2031.
“In
terms of new passenger aircraft deliveries over the coming 20 years,
German airlines will take more aircraft than any other European country
and globally is one the top five countries. This demand is driven by
Germany’s position as a major aviation gateway for its own people and
for globally connecting passengers”, said Chris Emerson, SVP Future
Programmes and Market Strategy.
Germany’s
air travel has achieved 45% growth from 2000 to 2011 despite the three
worst downturns in aviation history. Intra-European traffic (including
domestic) grew by more than 30% and traffic to regions outside of Europe
by more than 50%.
Today, long-haul
traffic to the dynamic emerging regions accounts for more than 40% of
Germany’s total long-haul traffic, and is expected to rise up to almost
50% by 2031.
The Airbus GMF
predicts that over the next 20 years Europe will show an average annual
traffic growth rate of 4.1%. Routes to the Middle East (+5.4%), the CIS
(+5.3%) and Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America with a combined
growth rate of 4.6%, will be significant levers for growth.
Germany’s
strong and growing demand for air travel is based on its continued
economic development, the strong international orientation of its
economy, growing tourism, the continuing growth of low-cost-carriers and
the country’s position as a major air transportation gateway.
Seven
German civil aircraft operators (Air Berlin, Condor, Germanwings,
European Air Transport, Germania, Hamburg Airways and Lufthansa),
currently rely on the excellence of Airbus’ modern product range,
operating a combined total of more than 350 modern, fuel efficient
aircraft (245 A320 Family aircraft, 18 A300/A310s, 83 A330/A340s, and 10
A380s).
Overall, Airbus aircraft make up 55% of today’s fleet in
Germany. In addition, over 80 aircraft are still in the Airbus backlog
for delivery (80 A320 Family aircraft, 1 A330 and 7 A380s). Lufthansa is
Europe’s largest Airbus operator and the third largest in the world.
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