Bangkok Post

Production date for 777-8 up in the air

- JAMIE FREED

SINGAPORE: The date of entry into service of Boeing Co’s ultra-long-range 777-8 wide-body airliner would depend partly on customer demand, an executive said, with the planemaker hoping to win an order from Qantas Airways to supply the plane for Sydney-London flights.

Qantas has said it could order Boeing’s 777-8 or the rival Airbus A350-1000 for the longest commercial flights in history by the end of this year, with hopes of delivery from late 2022.

The airline plans a near 20-hour test flight non-stop from New York to Sydney on Friday, another proposed route for the planes, with a limited number of passengers on board a 787 as it conducts research into well-being on such long journeys.

Qantas has said the plane order remains subject to a favourable business case and reaching agreements with the pilot’s union and Australia’s aviation regulator for unpreceden­ted crew duty times.

Boeing and Airbus are vying for the prestigiou­s order, which stretches the limits of their longest-range planes.

Boeing said in August it had pushed back the entry into service of the 777-8 beyond its earlier plan for 2022. The larger 777-9, due to enter service first with a shorter range, has faced enginerela­ted delays.

“Our timetable on the 777-8 obviously is still under considerat­ion for when it actually enters service,” Darren Hulst, a senior marketing executive at Boeing Commercial Airplanes, told reporters in a telephone briefing from Sydney yesterday.

“But it is really more of when (we have) the combinatio­n of the demand from our customers and how it aligns with the design and production for the 777X as a programme.”

He declined to comment on whether an order from Qantas would accelerate Boeing’s plans for the 777-8.

To date, Emirates and Qatar Airways are Boeing’s only customers for the plane, having ordered 35 and 10 respective­ly.

Emirates president Tim Clark has said some 777X orders could be switched to 787s.

Emirates and Qatar Airways did not respond to previous requests for comment on their 777-8 orders.

Boeing has put forward a “compelling offer” to deal with any delays to the 777-8 in its contest against Airbus for planes for Sydney-London flights, Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said in August, without providing further details.

The Australian and Internatio­nal Pilots Associatio­n, which represents Qantas pilots, said yesterday that it would help gather data on fatigue on three planned research flights, starting with the New York-Sydney journey on Friday. A London-Sydney flight is planned next month.

The union cautioned the flights would not replicate real-world conditions.

 ?? THE BOEING CO ?? An artist’s concept of the Boeing 777-8X.
THE BOEING CO An artist’s concept of the Boeing 777-8X.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand