A surge in
orders this fall has pushed net total orders for Boeing commercial
jetliners above the 15,000 mark, a milestone matched by no other
commercial jetliner manufacturer in history.
Pan American World Airways was the first airline to place an order for
Boeing jetliners, with a split order for 20 Boeing 707s and 25 Douglas
DC-8s on Oct. 15,1955. Boeing and Douglas were competing manufacturers
then, but were joined through the 1997 Boeing / McDonnell Douglas
merger.
Since then, Boeing has grown from those two pioneering models to the
most modern and complete range of airplane products and services in the
industry. Eight of every 10 commercial jetliners flying today with 100
seats or more were born in Boeing factories.
"This milestone is a testament to our customers, whose trust, guidance
and confidence helped us become the preferred provider of commercial
airplanes and services," said Alan Mulally, president - Boeing
Commercial Airplanes Group. "This is also a tribute to the employees of
Boeing and our extended enterprise around the world, from the beginning
of the Jet Age to the present, who possessed the vision, passion,
dedication and skill to build the world's best jetliners."
A 74-airplane order confirmed last month by GE Capital Aviation Services
caused cumulative orders to soar beyond 15,000. The package included
orders for 59 Next-Generation 737s, five Boeing 777-200ERs and 10 Longer
Range Boeing 777s. With nearly 500 net jetliner orders already placed in
2000, demand for Boeing Commercial Airplanes has increased 25 percent
over 1999's total. Cumulative net orders for Boeing jetliners as of Nov.
1 were 15,080.
The route to the 15,000th order was characterized by intense
competition, a changing regulatory environment, and even a few
surprises. Among them:
* When the first Boeing 747 was being developed, airlines believed that
supersonic transports would meet most of the demand for long-range
travel, leaving the 747 to spend the balance of its service life as a
freighter. Instead, the Boeing 747 became one of the most successful
passenger transports in history, with more than 1,300 orders to date.
Only 14 SSTs entered service.
* The Boeing 737 was launched amid concern that the market for airplanes
of its size and range was limited, and that Boeing had entered the
market too late, since Douglas Aircraft Company already had 200 orders
in hand for the competing DC-9. As it turned out, the Boeing 737 became
the best-selling commercial jetliner of all time, accounting for nearly
one-fourth of the world's commercial jets. Orders for the advanced
Next-Generation 737 models, which first entered service in 1998, account
for 35 percent of all orders ever placed for Boeing 737s.
* The initial Boeing 767 was intended for intra-continental service. But
the airplane's capabilities, taking advantage of technological advances
and progress in deregulation, has made it the world's No. 1 airplane for
trans-Atlantic travel.
The company's airplane products range from the short-haul, 106-passenger
Boeing 717 to the long-range, 416-passenger Boeing 747 jumbo jet - and
every market in between. A new generation of advanced, more capable and
larger Boeing 747s is being developed, as are ultra-long-range versions
of the popular Boeing 777 models. |