Las Vegas Review-Journal

Dubai Air Show lifts aviation trade

Industry event opens with military aircraft

- By Aya Batrawy and Isabel Debre

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Dubai’s biennial Air Show opened Sunday to a world still reeling from the pandemic and an aviation industry hard-hit by the coronaviru­s, but on the mend.

Boeing and Airbus have traditiona­lly been the stars of the aviation trade show, competing for multibilli­on-dollar Gulf-based airline purchases and hammering out final details minutes before back-toback news conference­s. This year, however, the five-day exhibition is expected to be more muted than in the past due to the subdued state of flying and travel amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Rather, the air show’s first day drew eyes toward defense and military hardware from countries like Russia and Israel.

The day’s blockbuste­r commercial deal by Airbus was a sale of 255 new aircraft to Indigo Partners’ various low-cost carriers. The agreement sees budget carriers Wizz Air purchase 102 new planes, U.S. Frontier with 91, Mexico’s Volaris with 39 and South American Jetsmart with 23. The package includes a mix of A321neo and A321XLR aircraft. At Airbus’ pre-pandemic list prices, the order would clock in at well above $30 billion. The company declined to provide any details on the sale price.

Airbus also secured an order for two additional A330 aerial refueling aircraft with the United Arab Emirates’ Air Force, bringing to five the country’s Airbus multirole tanker transport fleet.

The star on the tarmac outside the exhibition hall was Russia’s Checkmate fighter jet, which was shown to the media in a custom-built hangar with a display of laser lights bouncing off a mirrored ceiling. The jet, with a baseline $35 million price tag, is a less costly competitor to the U.S. F-35, which the UAE has been trying to acquire since formally recognizin­g Israel last year in a deal brokered by the Trump administra­tion. That sale has slowed under President Biden.

In a dramatic promotiona­l video, the Checkmate soared through burnt orange skies, blasting away targets in the desert as music blared in the background and a thundering voiceover rattled off the plane’s features.

 ?? Jon Gambrell The Associated Press ?? The Russian Knights perform a stunt Sunday after releasing chaff at the Dubai Air Show in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The biennial Dubai Air Show opened Sunday as commercial aviation tries to shake off the coronaviru­s pandemic.
Jon Gambrell The Associated Press The Russian Knights perform a stunt Sunday after releasing chaff at the Dubai Air Show in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The biennial Dubai Air Show opened Sunday as commercial aviation tries to shake off the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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