Farnborough Airshow Review, Days 1 and 2

By k. o. On Thursday, July 17, 2008 At 1:00 PM

The Farnborough 2008 Airshow, which runs from July 14 to 20, is the first major airshow to be held since the Paris Air Show last June. Boeing VP Randy Tinseth pointed out on his journal a few ways that the aviation world has changed since the Paris show:
  • There have been 2,678 commercial airplane orders (Boeing and Airbus)
  • Oil has gone from $67/bbl to $134/bbl
  • Jet fuel has gone from $2.12/gal to $3.92/gal
  • The U.S. dollar has gone from 0.75 euros/dollar to 0.64 euros/dollar, and from 123 yen/dollar to 107 yen/dollar
  • The market has continued to liberalize with “open skies” between the EU and the U.S.
  • And worldwide aviation traffic continues to grow
The economic situation that the airline industry's in has only gone downhill since last year, so some expect that, as a result, there will be fewer orders announced at this year's airshow. So here's a quick summary of the orders placed from days 1 and 2 (July 14 and 15). It should also be noted that Airbus tends to "save up" announcing orders until airshows, while Boeing tends to announce them on a more regular basis.

Boeing

  • Dubai-based low-cost startup FlyDubai ordered 50 737-800s, worth $3.74 billion at list prices.
  • Ethiad Airways ordered 35 787-9s and 10 777-300ERS, worth $9.4 billion.
  • Nigerian airline Arik Air announced an order for seven more 737s.
Airbus
  • Aeroflot ordered five A321s.
  • Dubai-based Aircraft lessor DAE Capital ordered 30 A350-900s and 70 A320s.
  • Aviation Capital Group ordered 23 A320 family aircraft.
  • Tunisair ordered three A350-800s, three A330-200s and ten A320s.
  • Qatar Airways ordered four A321s.
  • Ethiad Airways ordered 20 A320s, 25 A350 XWBs and 10 A380s.
  • Saudi Arabian Airlines ordered eight A330s.

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