The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Honda Aircraft aims to increase sales with HondaJet Echelon

- By Yasuhiro Kobayashi Yomiuri Shimbun Correspond­ent

GREENSBORO, N.C. — The president of Honda Aircraft Co., a U.S. subsidiary of Honda Motor Co., said the aircraft manufactur­er aims to sell 60 HondaJet small business aircraft annually by 2028, about three times more than in 2023.

Honda Aircraft President Hideto Yamasaki said in an interview with The Yomiuri Shimbun that he plans for the company to have a surplus by 2028 when production of the new HondaJet Echelon private jet starts.

Since launching HondaJet in 2015, Honda Aircraft has sold about 30 aircraft a year on average worldwide and has made approximat­ely 250 deliveries in total.

The HondaJet Echelon can accommodat­e up to 11 people, up from eight for existing HondaJet models. It also has better fuel efficiency and can fly longer distances compared to competitor­s' small business jets.

The HondaJet Echelon has a range of about 4,860 kilometers — 1.7 times that of convention­al small business jets — making it the first small business aircraft capable of flying across North America nonstop.

Honda Aircraft plans to acquire a U.S. certificat­ion establihsi­ng the HondaJet Echelon's safety in 2028 and aims to sell 40 of the aircraft annually.

The aircraft manufactur­er plans to increase sales using both convention­al aircraft that cost about $7 million (¥1 billion) each and the Echelon. Yamasaki said Honda Aircraft will also increase the number of employees from 1,000 to 1,500 by 2028.

Yamasaki said the company also plans to focus on sales of used aircraft to broaden the base of small business jet users.

Honda Aircraft has been losing money since the company was establishe­d in 2006. Its sales volume declined from 2022 to 2023, mainly due to a global shortage of semiconduc­tors amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Yamasaki expects Echelon to be a “game changer.”

Honda Aircraft's competitor­s include Textron Aviation Inc., a

U.S. company that has Cessna, a brand well-known in Japan, as an affiliated company.

“The technology we have developed as an automobile company will be an advantage for us,” Yamasaki said, showing his intention to differenti­ate Honda Aircraft models from its competitor­s by focusing on comfort and other features. Entering new market In recent years, global sales of business jets often used by company executives and wealthy individual­s have stayed steady at around 700 a year. About 800 business jets were sold in 2019, but sales have been sluggish partly because of travel restrictio­ns imposed in various countries during the pandemic.

HondaJet enjoys a large share, or about 40%, of the market for very light jets that can accommodat­e four to eight people.

However, the annual sales volume of the very light jet market is about 60, which is less than 10% of the entire business jet market.

As the annual sales of light jets, which can accommodat­e about 10 people, is around 170, Honda Aircraft aims to increase its sales by entering the market with the HondaJet Echelon.

Honda Aircraft plans to invest $55.7 million (¥8 billion) to develop the Echelon.

“We would like to emphasize the Echelon's advantage in terms of high fuel efficiency and market it to those who are also interested in decarboniz­ation,” Yamasaki said. (March 24)

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? Honda Aircraft Co. President Hideto Yamasaki speaks during an interview in North Carolina on March 6.
Yomiuri Shimbun file photo Honda Aircraft Co. President Hideto Yamasaki speaks during an interview in North Carolina on March 6.

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