EMPTY COCKPITS
The chief salesman for Airbus says his company already has the technology to fly passenger planes without pilots at all.
LE BOURGET, FRANCE: The chief salesman for Airbus SE says his company already has the technology to fly passenger planes without pilots at all — and is working on winning over regulators and travellers to the idea.
Christian Scherer also said in an interview with the Associated Press on Monday that Airbus hoped to be selling hybrid or electric passenger jets by around 2035.
“While Airbus is still far from ready to churn out battery-operated jumbo jets, the company already has the technology for autonomous flying and for planes flown by just one pilot,’’ he said.
“This is not a matter of technology — it’s a matter of interaction with the regulators, the perception in the traveling public,’’ Scherer said. “When can we introduce it in large commercial aircraft? That is a matter we are discussing with regulators and customers, but technology-wise, we don’t see a hurdle.’’
Several manufacturers are presenting unmanned aircraft at the Paris Air Show, primarily for military purposes — and some are also proposing pilotless “air taxis’’ of the future.
When it comes to autonomous passenger jets, safety is an obvious concern. It’s an issue that is on many minds after two deadly crashes of the Boeing 737 MAX jet that have implicated problematic antistall software.
Scherer said the crashes “highlighted and underlined the need for absolute, uncompromising safety in this industry, whether from Airbus, Boeing or any other plane.’’
While he said Airbus’ sales streategy hasn’t changed as a result of the crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia, “there is a capacity need that materialised as a result of this, and naturally you have airlines that are frustrated over capacity, that are looking for answers.’’
Airbus announced several orders on Monday as the air show kicked off, while Boeing had an anaemic day as it works to win back trust from customers.
Scherer forecasts continued growth in the aviation industry, predicting the world will need at least 37,000 new aircraft in the next 20 years, especially in Asia — and that eventually the whole industry will stop creating emissions and “decarbonise.’’