European Manufacturer Fights Back With Bigger,
Better A350
After losing the sales crown to Boeing for 2006 -- due in
large part to the American planemaker's widebody offerings --
Airbus is striking back with its redesigned A350 XWB as the
company aggressively seeks a 60-plane US Airlines aircraft
order.

The Chicago Tribune reports US Airways is about to place
one of the largest US carrier aircraft orders since the 2001
industry collapse... and that marks a significant decision for
the future of Airbus, as it endeavors to rebound for 2007.
Expect the purchase to be closely observed by American Airlines,
Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines and United Airlines; all are
expected to purchase planes over the next two years as their
finances strengthen.
The stakes for Airbus are high. Airbus must start winning
head-to-head competitions to draw close to Boeing in the
highly-profitable larger, long-range market.
"If they want to compete in the 200- to 400-seat segment, this
is their future," aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia said of
Airbus. "This is the strongest wide-body [airplane] market ever,
and it's largely Boeing's."
Airbus' A350 is targeted at two midsize Boeing planes: the 787,
due to be delivered next year, and the 777, which rolled out in the
1990s and was recently overhauled so it could fly halfway around
the world.

"They [Airbus] need to show that they have a strong product they
can bring to the market, and with very competitive pricing," said
Scott Daniels, vice president of asset management for Back Aviation
Solutions, a CT-based consulting firm.
"I think they [Airbus] need to get their A350 either in the game
or out in a big way," added Jon Bogaard, partner in the
equipment-finance group at Chicago law firm Vedder Price Kaufman
and Kammholz. "The jury's still out on whether they are going to do
that."
"This year, yes, there's a lot to play for," agreed Chris Jones,
vice president of marketing with Airbus North America. "There's a
big wave of [aircraft] replacement coming up in the next two to
three years, which positions us well."
Additionally, as reported by ANN, Dubai-based
carrier Emirates is also considering the A350 XWB, as
it reassesses its fleet requirement that may include "possibly
more than 100 aircraft," as originally projected in the category,
reports the Khaleej Times.
The A350 XWB is the latest iteration of Airbus' concept for a
medium-capacity, long-range, extra wide-body (thus the XWB
designation) passenger liner that started as the A350. Airbus hopes
the A350 XWB will better compete with Boeing's 787 Dreamliner.
Emerites' Senior
Vice-President, Corporate Communications, Mike Simon, said the
carrier is looking at both aircraft models, Airbus' A350 XWB and
Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, and a decision would not be made until
Emirates was satisfied with the final details of both planes.
Confirmed reports, however, indicate Emirates president Tim
Clark expressed satisfaction at the new design of the Airbus A350
XWB when he recently visited Toulouse. Simon said Emirates will
choose between the Boeing 787 Dreamliner or A350 XWB to replace its
existing Airbus A330 and Boeing 777 aircraft by 2012-2013.
"Tim Clark has said the performance gap between the two models
are [sic] closing and the look and feel of both models are getting
very similar," Simon said.
On Wednesday, Bloomberg reported that Airbus might secure the
100-plane order, valued at $24 billion, from Emirates after
developing a wider body and more efficient wing.
"With Emirates revising its fleet requirements to more than 100
planes, the stakes would be higher for the transatlantic aircraft
makers," said an airline industry analyst.
According to Clark, choosing between the two planes will be
difficult "because they both do brilliant jobs."
"The A350 is "essentially going to be a good airplane. The only
problem is that it is so much behind the 787," which is to go into
service next year."
Boeing, which has begun major assembly of the 787, is on
schedule to deliver the first one in May 2008 and is working with
suppliers on how to build more to meet demand. The plane is sold
out until the "back end" of 2013, program manager Michael Bair said
last month. The A350 XWB will enter service in 2013.
Emirates is the biggest customer of Airbus' 555-seat A380, with
45 planes on order. The airline will take delivery of the first
next year, 21 months late, due to manufacturing delays.
The only firm order for the A350 XWB from an airline has been an
11-plane contract from Finnair Oyj, Finland's state-controlled
carrier. In December, US-based leasing company Pegasus Aviation
Finance ordered two of the planes, while Singapore Airlines agreed
to buy 20 A350 XWBs last June, with options to buy 20 more,
although a firm order has yet to be signed.
On March 22, Airbus also won a pledge from Russia's OAO Aeroflot
to buy 22 A350s, a deal worth worth $4.4 billion, with Airbus
offering Russian industry a 5 percent stake in building the
aircraft. Aeroflot, Eastern Europe's largest airline, signed a
preliminary agreement March 22.