New Straits Times

Another blow to Airbus A380

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SYDNEY: Airbus SE’s A380 superjumbo suffered another blow after Qantas Airways Ltd formally cancelled an outstandin­g order for the outsized aircraft whose future is once again on the line.

The Australian airline scrubbed an order for eight aircraft, which has a list price in excess of US$445 million (RM1.8 billion). Qantas had been pushing back the 2006 commitment for the Airbus aircraft for years.

In a statement yesterday, Qantas, however, said it would upgrade its existing fleet of 12 A380s, starting this year.

“These aircraft have not been part of the airline’s fleet and network plans for some time,” Qantas said in its statement, referring to the 2006 order.

The formal scrapping of the order puts the future of the flagship programme in further doubt.

Gulf carrier Emirates, the primary operator of the superjumbo, may convert some or all of its most recent 20 orders for the jet into smaller A350s, people familiar with the matter have said.

That switch would slash Airbus’s order backlog of its largest passenger aircraft.

Qantas has had a fractured relationsh­ip with the A380. The airline made global headlines in late 2010 when an A380 en route from Singapore suffered a mid-flight engine explosion that ripped through the wing, though the aircraft returned to the airport safely and nobody was seriously hurt.

Qantas grounded its fleet of A380s for a few weeks immediatel­y after the incident.

For all its imposing size and commanding presence in the skies, the A380 hasn’t managed to leave much of an imprint with most airlines, relegated instead to an afterthoug­ht for carriers who built their stables around nimbler planes.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Qantas Airways has formally cancelled an outstandin­g order for Airbus A380 made in 2006 but will upgrade its existing fleet of 12 A380s starting this year.
AFP PIC Qantas Airways has formally cancelled an outstandin­g order for Airbus A380 made in 2006 but will upgrade its existing fleet of 12 A380s starting this year.

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