Saturday, May 31, 2008

Aircraft-makers see strong demand for cargo carriers

Berlin: Aircraft manufacturers at the Berlin Air Show have forecast rising demand over the next 20 years for cargo planes as world trade grows, but signs mounted that the stumbling US economy might spoil the boom.
Airbus chief executive Thomas Enders said 1,700 air-freight aircraft were currently flying the world’s skies, but in two decades the number would more than double to 4,200.
He was speaking at the European Congress on Air Transport, an event during this week’s air show, known by its German initials as the ILA, at Schoenefeld international airport southeast of Berlin.
The show is a combination of hard sell in the exhibition booths and the romance of flying outside in the skies. Military pilots competed with one another on Wednesday to put on the best flying display at the air show.
Among them were HAL Dhruv helicopters sent by the air force of India, partner nation at this year’s show. Each painted with a stylised peacock, the four helicopters wheeled in formation over the airfield while releasing marker smoke.
Among signs of trouble for the aerospace industry was an announcement the same day by parcels company DHL that it would cease its own air-transport operations within the US and contract out the airlift job for 10 years to its rival, UPS.
DHL, a unit of German company Deutsche Post World Net, has struggled against the soaring cost of moving mail and parcels as the price of aviation fuel jumps and sales are squeezed by the slowdown.
DHL Express chief executive John Mullen justified DHL dispensing with its own yellow cargo planes in North America by arguing that the company did not need to maintain “infrastructure that customers don’t ask for.”
In another sign of trouble in the US market, Jet Blue Airways said in San Francisco it was postponing purchase of 21 Airbus jets because of soaring fuel prices. Jet Blue chief executive Dave Barger said the airline had to be financially cautious.
The original order foresaw delivery of the A320 jets between 2009 and 2011. Jet Blue, in which Lufthansa of Germany has a 20-per-cent stake, expects to accept the aircraft between 2014 and 2015 instead.
But Gulf Air of Bahrain ordered 35 jets on Wednesday from Airbus at the Air Show in a purchase package with a list price of 4.86bn dollars. The discount terms for the bulk order were not disclosed.
The state-owned airline will obtain 15 Airbus A320 jets and 20 Airbus A330-300 planes, the two companies said.
31/05/08 Gulf Times, Qatar
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