(15 Feb 2022)
Airbus has forecast that the Asia-Pacific region
will require 17,620
new passenger and freighter aircraft by 2040, nearly 30% of which will
replace older less fuel efficient models.
In a region which
is home to 55% of the world’s population, China, India and
emerging economies such as Vietnam and Indonesia will be the principal drivers of growth in Asia-Pacific.
GDP will grow at 3.6%
per year compared to the world average 2.5% and double in value by
2040. The middle class, who are the likeliest to travel, will
increase by 1.1 billion to 3.2 billion and the propensity for
people to travel is set to almost triple by 2040.
Airbus has forecast that the Asia-Pacific region will require 17,620 new passenger and freighter aircraft by 2040
Of the
demand for 17,620 aircraft, 13,660 are in the small category like
the A220 and A320 Family. In the medium and long range categories,
Asia-Pacific will continue to drive demand with some 42% of global
requirement. This translates to 2,470 medium and 1,490 large-category aircraft.
Cargo traffic in Asia-Pacific is also expected to
increase at 3.6% per annum, well above the global 3.1% average and
will lead to a doubling in air freight in the region by 2040.
Globally, express freight boosted by e-commerce will grow at an
even faster pace of 4.7% per year. Overall, reflecting that strong growth over the next 20 years, there will be a need for some 2,440
freighters, of which 880 will be new-build.
“We are seeing
a global recovery in air traffic and as travel restrictions are
further eased the Asia-Pacific region will become one of its main
drivers again. We are confident of a strong rebound in the
region’s traffic and expect it to reach 2019 levels between 2023
and 2025,” said Christian Scherer, Chief Commercial Officer and
Head of Airbus International. “With an ever greater focus on
efficiency and sustainable aviation in the region, our products
are especially well positioned.”
Globally, in the next 20 years,
Airbus has forecast a need for some 39,000 new-build passenger and
freighter aircraft, of which 15,250 will be for replacement.
As a
result, by 2040 the vast majority of commercial aircraft in
operation will be the latest generation, up from some 13% today, considerably improving the CO2 efficiency of the world’s
commercial aircraft fleets.
The global aviation industry
has already achieved huge efficiency gains, as shown by the 53%
decline in aviation’s CO2 emissions per revenue passenger kilometre since 1990.
“Our modern portfolio
offers a 20-25 % fuel burn and therewith CO2 advantage over older
generation aircraft and we pride ourselves that all our aircraft
products are already certified to fly with a blend of 50% SAF, set
to rise to 100% by 2030. In addition, our newly launched A350F
offers efficiency gains of 10 to 40% compared to any other large
freighter, existing or expected, both in terms of fuel consumption
as in CO2 emissions,” said Scherer.
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