News

Airbus Faces New Output Pressure Amid Parts Shortages, Sources Say

Airbus

Airbus is facing new pressure on its planned production ramp-up for passenger jets as the world’s largest planemaker struggles to overcome continued parts and labour shortages, industry sources said on Thursday.

It was not immediately clear whether the slowdown would put at risk overall delivery targets for 2024 since deliveries lag output decisions by months, but the sources said assembly of several dozen jets could be delayed in the second half.

Several airlines could see individual deliveries – already running an average of 1.5 months behind schedule – further delayed, the sources said, asking not to be identified.

A spokesperson for Airbus referred back to the group’s last quarterly results, in which it reiterated a 2024 delivery target of 800 airplanes, and declined further comment.

Airbus plans to raise output by about 50% to 75 narrowbody planes a month in 2026. Sources have previously said it hopes that any delays can be recovered in time to meet the medium-term goal, but the available buffer for delays is shrinking.

The supply chain is responsible for up to 80% of the content of Airbus jets and stretches as much as nine layers deep.

Parts are typically ordered 12-13 months ahead for standard narrowbody aircraft like the in-demand A321neo single-aisle, or longer for variants that require more customisation.

But lead times for some scarce parts like forgings have more than doubled to as much as two years, the sources said.

Airbus holds regular internal meetings to match industrial production to demand in a rolling forecast stretching several years ahead.

The rolling forecasts are translated into fixed production plans for each aircraft for the next three months and then final adjustments are made on a monthly basis, industry sources said.

Suppliers said these monthly requests known as “call-offs,” are being regularly deferred, which points towards more delays in putting aircraft onto the assembly lines later this year.

The mounting pressure comes as airline leaders are preparing to hold a high-profile industry summit in Dubai, with concerns about plane shortages expected to be voiced for a second year running by the International Air Transport Association.

On a positive note, Airbus is increasingly confident of winning certification for its A321XLR passenger jet in time for the Farnborough Airshow in July, industry sources said.

A spokesperson for the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said it expected to certify the aircraft by the summer and declined to comment on a specific date.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Mark Potter)

Tim Hepher
Related News
Related sized article featured image

Jurgen Maier’s comments come after energy secretary Ed Miliband vowed to take on ‘blockers’ of power schemes earlier this year.

Alex Daniel
Related sized article featured image

Automation is driving ‘dramatic change’ in the sector, says Make UK.

Alan Jones