Khaleej Times

Boeing-Airbus contest may hinge on engine deal: Flynas

- Ellen Milligan and Christophe­r Jasper

london — Saudi Arabian budget airline Flynas said terms available from engine makers may determine whether it awards a multibilli­on-dollar wide-body jetliner order to Airbus or Boeing.

Flynas has begun negotiatio­ns for Airbus A330neo or Boeing 787-9 planes, and is also engaged in detailed talks with turbine suppliers including Rolls-Royce Holdings, chief executive officer Bander Almohanna said in an interview.

While engines have always been central to aircraft orders, exclusivit­y deals on models like the A330neo, where Rolls is the only supplier, have hurt airlines’ bargaining power. Turbine manufactur­ers are also struggling to keep pace with deliveries amid a series of glitches, with Rolls saying last month it had handed over only 10 A330 powerplant­s this year out of the 30 scheduled.

“You need to start with the engine-manufactur­er negotiatio­ns,” Almohanna said. “The engine represents a major cost, and with the trend right now of having only one engine type you need to put pressure on the planemaker so that they can work with you to get a good deal with the engines.” Delivery dates for the aircraft and turbines are also central to the talks, he said.

Flynas’s order, likely to be placed next year, will comprise at least 10 planes and probably more, Almohanna said at the World Travel Market trade fair in London. The 787-9, which comes with a choice of Rolls-Royce or General Electric engines, has a list price of $281.6 million, and the A330-900 sells for $296.4 million, so a deal may be worth more than $3 billion. The jets, which could be financed via sale and leaseback, would carry Muslims on the year-round Umrah pilgrimage from locations such as Indonesia and West Africa. Flynas currently leases about a dozen planes a year for the 10-day Hajj and would likely continue doing so.

The CEO said it looked at leasing surplus aircraft from Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways.

Saudi Arabia projects that the number of visiting pilgrims will jump to 30 million by 2030 from 8 million now. Much of the growth is expected to be in Umrah devotees, who tend to be more middle class, so that the wide-body fleet will feature a business cabin with lie-flat seats, according to Almohanna.

Flynas will receive the first of an 80-plane order for A320neo narrow-bodies on Tuesday, Almohanna said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Flynas has begun negotiatio­ns for Airbus A330neo or Boeing 787-9 planes, and is also engaged in detailed talks with turbine suppliers including Rolls-Royce Holdings.
— AFP Flynas has begun negotiatio­ns for Airbus A330neo or Boeing 787-9 planes, and is also engaged in detailed talks with turbine suppliers including Rolls-Royce Holdings.

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