Hawaiian Airlines has signed a definitive
purchase agreement with Airbus, finalizing the Memorandum of
Understanding announced earlier this year to acquire six new
A330-800neo aircraft starting in 2019.
The agreement replaces Hawaiian's previous order
for six A350-800s, and includes rights to purchase an additional
six aircraft as part of the carrier's path to growth and increased
efficiency.
The A330-800neo wide-body, powered by the
recently launched Rolls-Royce Trent 7000 engine, is similar in
size to Hawaiian's A330-200 which seats 294 passengers in a two
class configuration (First and Coach), and will incorporate
aerodynamic enhancements that will increase range by up to
400-nautical miles and reduce fuel consumption by 14% per seat.
"The A330-800neo is an aircraft which meets all
of our needs," said Mark Dunkerley, president and CEO of Hawaiian
Airlines. "It is the right size, with the right range and costs,
and shares much commonality with our A330-200 fleet. Our customers
and crew love the aircraft and we are thrilled that it will
continue to be Hawaiian's wide-body mainstay for far into the
future."
Terms of the agreement were not disclosed, but
the aircraft have a total list-price value of approximately $2.9
billion if all of the purchase rights are exercised.
Hawaiian
Airlines' existing orders include an additional three new
A330-200s for delivery in 2015 and 16 narrow-body A321neo aircraft
starting in 2017.
Hawaiian Airlines currently operates a fleet of
50 aircraft, comprised of 29 wide-body, long-haul aircraft
(294-seat A330-200 aircraft and 252 to 264-seat Boeing 767-300
aircraft), 18 narrow-body 118- to 123-seat Boeing 717-200 aircraft
and three 48-seat ATR42-500 for Neighbor Island flights.
Hawaiian Airlines,
Airbus,
A330,
Hawaii
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