Khaleej Times

Boeing targets 2025 for new jet but won’t rush decision

- Cyril Altmeyer and Tim Hepher

paris — The head of Boeing jetliner sales said on Wednesday he was confident a possible new midmarket jet with the potential to carve out new routes would be ready to enter service in 2025, but stressed the planemaker would not be rushed into a decision.

Boeing is studying plans for what industry sources describe as a hybrid jet combining a wide cabin and a restricted cargo space, moulded to fly efficientl­y in a space between the industry’s single-aisle jets and wide-body longhaul aircraft.

But it has been taking longer than expected to resolve questions about how to build the jet at a low enough cost to fit the market niche, prompting some suppliers to urge a decision soon to avoid slipping past a desired 2025 debut date.

Ihssane Mounir, senior vicepresid­ent for commercial sales and marketing at Boeing, told French journalist­s Boeing would “protect” the targeted 2025 date for entry into service, which some analysts see as ideally suited to planned replacemen­t cycles.

He declined to say when Boeing could make a decision on the possible twin-aisle plane, which has been the source of speculatio­n among airlines and investors for around two years.

“We will take the time to do this right...but we will protect the date of introducti­on for the aircraft,” Mounir told the AJPAE French aerospace journalist­s’ associatio­n. “Based on where we are today, we are very comfortabl­e with the fact we can do it by 2025, but we haven’t made a decision.”

Experts say the call on whether to launch the plane is one of the most significan­t decisions Boeing will make in coming years, because it will prepare ground for the next generation of smaller singleaisl­e jets by pioneering new production methods.

The search for cheaper new ways of building planes at high volume to meet growing demand is fast emerging as a strategic battlegrou­nd between Boeing and European arch-rival Airbus, which unveiled more robots and automation last week.

Mounir deflected a question about future successors to the single-aisle 737, saying Boeing was comfortabl­e with its record order book for the current model.

But he said the new mid-market plane would focus on what he described as a “revolution­ary production system” incorporat­ing new digital technology. “It’s not a plane that will be technologi­cally much more advanced than what we have today. What will be very advanced is the production system,” Mounir said.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Ihssane Mouni says Boeing would protect the targeted 2025 date for entry into service.
— Reuters Ihssane Mouni says Boeing would protect the targeted 2025 date for entry into service.

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