Boeing forecasts that air carriers in North
America will take delivery of 7,290 new airplanes over the next 20
years at a market value of $820 billion.
Taking retirements of airplanes into
account, the North America fleet will grow from 6,650 airplanes
today to about 8,830 airplanes by 2031.
"The North American commercial aviation market
is about to record a third consecutive year of profit, with modest passenger traffic growth," said Randy Tinseth,
vice president of Marketing, Boeing Commercial Airplanes. "The long-term
outlook for the North American airline industry is approximately 3% annual traffic growth through the forecast period. The
market is shaped by aggressive growth of low-cost carriers and the
need to replace aging airplanes in the fleets of the established
network carriers."
The network carriers are expected to
maintain strict capacity discipline. Low-cost carriers will
continue to outpace network carrier growth to accommodate
increased demand and fill some markets abandoned by network
carriers. Financial stability will also be a key indicator of
future growth. Several airlines have indicated growth planning to
be executed when returns are sufficient to fund their strategic
goals.
Boeing forecasts single-aisle airplanes will grow
to 69% of the total North America fleet by 2031. High fuel
prices are intensifying the need for new fuel-efficient airplanes,
prompting several airlines in the United States to accelerate
their fleet renewal programs.
Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest
and United have announced plans to replace some of their older,
less efficient airplanes with Next-Generation 737s or the new 737
MAX. Both the Next-Generation 737 and the 737 MAX offer
significant advantages in improved capabilities, fuel efficiency
and maintenance costs, as well as enhanced environmental
performance.
Long-haul international traffic to and from
North America is forecast to grow at an annual rate of
approximately 5%. The international growth is primarily
driven by anticipated passenger traffic to Southwest Asia, China,
the Middle East, Africa and South America.
Passenger traffic
between North America and those regions is forecasted grow at or
above 6% per year. This growth in the long-haul segment is
expected to result in demand for an additional 1,320 new
fuel-efficient, twin-aisle airplanes such as the
Boeing 787
Dreamliner.
Boeing says it does not forecast large airplanes (Boeing 747,
Airbus A380 etc) to
see significant demand in North America, with only about 40
airplanes, or 1% of the total investment.
See also:
Qatar Airways Boeing 787 Dreamliner Flight Display
and
Inside the Qatar Airways Boeing 787 Dreamliner
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