Airlines Face a Shortage of New Boeing, Airbus Jets


Boeing Co.

BA 4.67%

and

Airbus SE

EADSY 2.84%

are months behind handing over new single-aisle jets often used for U.S. domestic flights or other short-haul trips, constraining carriers’ ability to add flights to meet resurgent demand and plan their schedules, according to company executives and industry officials.

“It makes it really hard for our team to plan,”

Southwest Airlines Co.

LUV 1.57%

Chairman

Gary Kelly

said at an aerospace industry event in Washington, D.C., last month.

A Boeing spokeswoman said the company continues to work closely with suppliers to meet its commitments to customers.

In addition to supply problems, Boeing is facing regulatory challenges for its latest two iterations of the 737 MAX. Both face uncertain futures if Boeing can’t win Federal Aviation Administration approval for them by the end of the year. Current federal law would require a cockpit overhaul if the planes aren’t approved in 2022.

Airbus declined to comment but referred to recent statements by executives saying they are working through supply-chain difficulties. The company has noted that it expects meeting its delivery targets this year to be a challenge.

During the worst of the pandemic, demand for new planes plummeted. Would-be passengers stayed home during lockdowns and travel restrictions, prompting airlines to ground much of their fleets and cancel or defer deliveries of new aircraft. The rebound in travel since then has airlines racing to keep up with demand. Carriers have also been battling to get enough spare parts to keep all their existing planes in the skies.

Boeing’s delivery delays are particularly acute for

United Airlines Holdings Inc.

UAL 1.17%

The Chicago-based carrier had expected 53 of the new Boeing single-aisle jets this year to aid its plan to grow, but only seven new 737 MAX jets had arrived as of August, according to a securities filing and Boeing data.

Airbus expects challenges in meeting its delivery targets this year. An A320 passenger plane assembly line in Hamburg.



Photo:

Action Press/Morris Macmatzen/Zuma Press

The 737 shortage has prompted United to reduce frequencies on certain domestic routes and contributed to United’s decision to pull out of some smaller markets, people familiar with the matter said. Chief Executive

Scott Kirby

expressed the airline’s frustrations to Boeing executives in a phone call during the summer, people familiar with the call said.

American Airlines Group Inc.

AAL -0.28%

CEO

Robert Isom

this past summer also phoned Boeing executives to express dismay with about two dozen 737 deliveries getting delayed next year, people familiar with the call said.

Airbus appears to be about as far behind in deliveries this year, according to

Rob Morris,

global head of consultancy at aviation data provider Ascend by Cirium. Boeing had delivered 246 of its 737 MAX jets as of Sept. 23, compared with 315 of Airbus’s A320 family of jets.

Steven Udvar-Házy,

executive chairman of

Air Lease Corp.

, said he expects demand for single-aisle jets to exceed the plane makers’ supply for at least the next three years. Air Lease is a major buyer of Airbus and Boeing aircraft, which it leases to airlines around the world.

“It’s virtually impossible for them to get anywhere close to what they projected, say, 12 months ago,” Mr. Udvar-Házy said at a Sept. 7 conference.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What has been your experience with air travel this year, and how does that factor into your outlook on the airline industry? Join the conversation below.

Greece’s

Aegean Airlines SA

AEGN 1.13%

said it is conservatively planning its network for next year in anticipation of continued delays getting new Airbus jets. CEO Eftichios Vassilakis said the airline wants to try to avoid some of the problems it had this year after receiving only half of the eight new planes it was hoping to get in time for the busy summer travel season.

Airbus has been making ground on handing over aircraft that were parked at its factories waiting for engines. At the end of June the company had close to 30 so-called gliders. That is now down to single digits, the company said Sept. 23.

CEO

Guillaume Faury

said last month Airbus expects to face supply constraints in 2023. “It’s going to be a difficult year again,” he said.

Related Video: Boeing is typically nearly tied for orders with rival Airbus entering the annual Farnborough Airshow, but this year it’s well behind. WSJ’s George Downs reports from the show on how Boeing is trying to catch up and what it will take to restore balance to the aviation duopoly. Illustration: Rami Abukalam

While both plane makers are about equally behind on deliveries, Boeing is further behind on producing new 737 MAX jets than Airbus is with its comparable single-aisle aircraft, according to Mr. Morris at Cirium.

Boeing CEO

David Calhoun

said the plane maker is pausing its 737 production whenever suppliers run short on parts or provide defective components. Boeing, in contrast to Airbus, has said it wouldn’t produce new airplanes without engines.

In addition to newly minted jets, the manufacturer has been delivering from its inventory 737 MAX aircraft that were stored during a nearly two-year grounding that followed two fatal accidents in 2018 and 2019.

Eight of the 25 737 MAX jets Boeing delivered in August came from inventory, according to Cirium. Getting the stored MAX jets ready for delivery ”requires us almost as many hours to do that as it did to build one in the first place,” Mr. Calhoun said last month.

Boeing is also planning to remove engines from stored planes and use them for new jets rolling out of its Renton, Wash., factory, people familiar with the matter said. It was a topic of discussion by Mr. Isom in his call with Boeing executives, people familiar with the call said. The plan was earlier reported by the trade publication Leeham News and Analysis.

The regulatory challenges Boeing is facing with the new 737 MAX versions, the shorter 7 and longer 10 models, could be resolved if federal lawmakers grant the company an extension beyond the year-end deadline. Without more time, Mr. Calhoun has said Boeing may have to cancel the 737 MAX 10, which has been ordered by carriers including United and

Delta Air Lines Inc.

DAL 1.34%

Mr. Calhoun said Sept. 15 he expected the 737 MAX 7 to win approval by year’s end. But an FAA letter sent to Boeing indicated the company was in danger of missing the deadline for that jet, according to the Sept. 19 letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and an agency official.

As of Sept. 15, the agency had approved less than 10% of certain safety paperwork filed by Boeing, and the company hadn’t yet filed the initial versions of six such documents, according to the letter, which was earlier reported by the Seattle Times.

Boeing said it is focused on meeting all regulatory requirements and that being thorough and transparent with the FAA will be a priority.

Write to Andrew Tangel at andrew.tangel@wsj.com and Benjamin Katz at ben.katz@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8


Boeing Co.

BA 4.67%

and

Airbus SE

EADSY 2.84%

are months behind handing over new single-aisle jets often used for U.S. domestic flights or other short-haul trips, constraining carriers’ ability to add flights to meet resurgent demand and plan their schedules, according to company executives and industry officials.

“It makes it really hard for our team to plan,”

Southwest Airlines Co.

LUV 1.57%

Chairman

Gary Kelly

said at an aerospace industry event in Washington, D.C., last month.

A Boeing spokeswoman said the company continues to work closely with suppliers to meet its commitments to customers.

In addition to supply problems, Boeing is facing regulatory challenges for its latest two iterations of the 737 MAX. Both face uncertain futures if Boeing can’t win Federal Aviation Administration approval for them by the end of the year. Current federal law would require a cockpit overhaul if the planes aren’t approved in 2022.

Airbus declined to comment but referred to recent statements by executives saying they are working through supply-chain difficulties. The company has noted that it expects meeting its delivery targets this year to be a challenge.

During the worst of the pandemic, demand for new planes plummeted. Would-be passengers stayed home during lockdowns and travel restrictions, prompting airlines to ground much of their fleets and cancel or defer deliveries of new aircraft. The rebound in travel since then has airlines racing to keep up with demand. Carriers have also been battling to get enough spare parts to keep all their existing planes in the skies.

Boeing’s delivery delays are particularly acute for

United Airlines Holdings Inc.

UAL 1.17%

The Chicago-based carrier had expected 53 of the new Boeing single-aisle jets this year to aid its plan to grow, but only seven new 737 MAX jets had arrived as of August, according to a securities filing and Boeing data.

Airbus expects challenges in meeting its delivery targets this year. An A320 passenger plane assembly line in Hamburg.



Photo:

Action Press/Morris Macmatzen/Zuma Press

The 737 shortage has prompted United to reduce frequencies on certain domestic routes and contributed to United’s decision to pull out of some smaller markets, people familiar with the matter said. Chief Executive

Scott Kirby

expressed the airline’s frustrations to Boeing executives in a phone call during the summer, people familiar with the call said.

American Airlines Group Inc.

AAL -0.28%

CEO

Robert Isom

this past summer also phoned Boeing executives to express dismay with about two dozen 737 deliveries getting delayed next year, people familiar with the call said.

Airbus appears to be about as far behind in deliveries this year, according to

Rob Morris,

global head of consultancy at aviation data provider Ascend by Cirium. Boeing had delivered 246 of its 737 MAX jets as of Sept. 23, compared with 315 of Airbus’s A320 family of jets.

Steven Udvar-Házy,

executive chairman of

Air Lease Corp.

, said he expects demand for single-aisle jets to exceed the plane makers’ supply for at least the next three years. Air Lease is a major buyer of Airbus and Boeing aircraft, which it leases to airlines around the world.

“It’s virtually impossible for them to get anywhere close to what they projected, say, 12 months ago,” Mr. Udvar-Házy said at a Sept. 7 conference.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What has been your experience with air travel this year, and how does that factor into your outlook on the airline industry? Join the conversation below.

Greece’s

Aegean Airlines SA

AEGN 1.13%

said it is conservatively planning its network for next year in anticipation of continued delays getting new Airbus jets. CEO Eftichios Vassilakis said the airline wants to try to avoid some of the problems it had this year after receiving only half of the eight new planes it was hoping to get in time for the busy summer travel season.

Airbus has been making ground on handing over aircraft that were parked at its factories waiting for engines. At the end of June the company had close to 30 so-called gliders. That is now down to single digits, the company said Sept. 23.

CEO

Guillaume Faury

said last month Airbus expects to face supply constraints in 2023. “It’s going to be a difficult year again,” he said.

Related Video: Boeing is typically nearly tied for orders with rival Airbus entering the annual Farnborough Airshow, but this year it’s well behind. WSJ’s George Downs reports from the show on how Boeing is trying to catch up and what it will take to restore balance to the aviation duopoly. Illustration: Rami Abukalam

While both plane makers are about equally behind on deliveries, Boeing is further behind on producing new 737 MAX jets than Airbus is with its comparable single-aisle aircraft, according to Mr. Morris at Cirium.

Boeing CEO

David Calhoun

said the plane maker is pausing its 737 production whenever suppliers run short on parts or provide defective components. Boeing, in contrast to Airbus, has said it wouldn’t produce new airplanes without engines.

In addition to newly minted jets, the manufacturer has been delivering from its inventory 737 MAX aircraft that were stored during a nearly two-year grounding that followed two fatal accidents in 2018 and 2019.

Eight of the 25 737 MAX jets Boeing delivered in August came from inventory, according to Cirium. Getting the stored MAX jets ready for delivery ”requires us almost as many hours to do that as it did to build one in the first place,” Mr. Calhoun said last month.

Boeing is also planning to remove engines from stored planes and use them for new jets rolling out of its Renton, Wash., factory, people familiar with the matter said. It was a topic of discussion by Mr. Isom in his call with Boeing executives, people familiar with the call said. The plan was earlier reported by the trade publication Leeham News and Analysis.

The regulatory challenges Boeing is facing with the new 737 MAX versions, the shorter 7 and longer 10 models, could be resolved if federal lawmakers grant the company an extension beyond the year-end deadline. Without more time, Mr. Calhoun has said Boeing may have to cancel the 737 MAX 10, which has been ordered by carriers including United and

Delta Air Lines Inc.

DAL 1.34%

Mr. Calhoun said Sept. 15 he expected the 737 MAX 7 to win approval by year’s end. But an FAA letter sent to Boeing indicated the company was in danger of missing the deadline for that jet, according to the Sept. 19 letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and an agency official.

As of Sept. 15, the agency had approved less than 10% of certain safety paperwork filed by Boeing, and the company hadn’t yet filed the initial versions of six such documents, according to the letter, which was earlier reported by the Seattle Times.

Boeing said it is focused on meeting all regulatory requirements and that being thorough and transparent with the FAA will be a priority.

Write to Andrew Tangel at andrew.tangel@wsj.com and Benjamin Katz at ben.katz@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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