The Sun (Malaysia)

Asia’s biggest air show kicks off in Singapore

- – Reuters

SINGAPORE: The city-state yesterday kicked off Asia’s biggest air show – the first in six years unaffected by pandemic restrictio­ns – as the global aviation industry grapples with a rebound in travel demand in the face of severe supply constraint­s.

More than 1,000 firms from more than 50 countries are participat­ing in the biennial commercial and defence-focused Singapore Airshow, led by Western industry giants such as Airbus, Boeing and Lockheed Martin and their Chinese competitor­s such as Comac and AVIC.

Russian companies such as Russian Helicopter­s and Irkut that attended past editions of the show are not participat­ing this year amid the war in Ukraine.

The flying displays feature military aircraft from Singapore, Australia, India, Indonesia, South Korea and the United States, as well as the Comac C919 commercial jet’s first appearance outside Chinese territory and an Airbus A350-1000 powered by 35% sustainabl­e aviation fuel.

Comac posted the first aircraft orders of the show yesterday morning, with China’s Tibet Airlines finalising an order for 40 C919 single-aisle planes and 10 ARJ21 regional jets, and China’s Henan Civil Aviation Developmen­t and Investment Group ordering six ARJ21s.

By the end of 2023, travel demand had made a near-full recovery from pre-pandemic levels in 2019, with domestic travel running 4% higher than pre-Covid levels and the internatio­nal market lagging at 88% mostly because of China’s slower

rebound, according to Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n data.

“While it was easy to ramp down in response to the pandemic-induced demand crisis, the ramp up has been beset with challenges,“Alton Aviation Consultanc­y said in a report.

“Delays in returning aircraft into service, exacerbate­d by a shortage of manpower across the entire value chain, led to a slower pace of recovery in Asia-Pacific.”

Major suppliers, planemaker­s and engine producers have struggled to keep up with the rebound in demand after the sharp downturn during Covid-19 led to job losses, freight snarls and an industry skills shortage.

Christian Scherer, CEO of Airbus’ commercial aircraft business, said there were many “pinch points” in the aerospace supply chain.

“The production ramp-up putting pressure into the supply chain everywhere and it is our job to tackle it,” he told reporters, adding that Airbus had deployed several dozen supply chain engineers to unlock bottleneck­s.

The production issues are delaying the ability of airlines to replace older jets with more fuel-efficient models as the industry looks to meet its goal of “net zero” emissions by 2050.

 ?? REUTERSPIC ?? South Korean Air Force’s Black Eagles performing at the Singapore Airshow. –
REUTERSPIC South Korean Air Force’s Black Eagles performing at the Singapore Airshow. –

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