Quick Take: What 84 A320s and 737s per month mean

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Not oversupplying the market, you say?

Airbus is heading to 42 A320s per month by the end of 2012 with Boeing announcing today it  will follow suit with 42 737s in the first half of 2014. That means 84 narrowbody aircraft per month will be delivered with more than 1000 new narrowbody aircraft per year by the middle of decade.
The Boeing 2010-2029 Current Market Outlook forecasts a need for 21,160 narrowbody aircraft over the next 20 years. Assuming no new competitors, split between Boeing and Airbus equally, that figure should yield 44.5 deliveries per month to meet market demand. Airbus’s 20 year (2010-2029) Global Market Forecast sees 17,870 narrowbody aircraft being delivered, corresponding to a 50-50 market split with Boeing at 37 deliveries per month
The Boeing and Airbus definition of narrowbody is an aircraft 100 to 210-seats with a single aisle, which neither airframer covers this full spread in its current product line. This spans from the Embraer E-190 and E-195 all the way up to the Boeing 737-900ER, 757 and Airbus A321.
These rates assume that Bombardier’s CRJ1000, CS100, C300, Comac’s C919 and ARJ900, Irkut’s MS-21, Mitsubishi’s conceptual MRJ100X and Embraer’s E-190/195 and clean sheet jet will only deliver – at most – an additional 5 aircraft per month against the 42 aircraft per month from Boeing and Airbus.

The 2011-2030 figures from Boeing will revise this figures upward again, and will be released at the week’s end ahead of the Paris air show, but the assurances of sustainability at the beginning of this industry up cycle are far guaranteed. Airframer’s lament the commoditization of narrowbody aircraft, creating a crop of amorphous and indistinguishable products, a trend likely reinforced by an oversupply of aircraft.
The sustainability of these rate increases will be a central question in the coming years, and with the certainty of the industry’s exogenous events to try and throw it off course, the huge output growth decisions of Boeing and Airbus will guide the fortunes of the industry.

This post was originally published to the internet between 2007 and 2012. Links, images, and embedded media from that era may no longer function as intended.

This post originally appeared at Flightglobal.com from 2007 to 2012.