Emirates gives up on A380Neo, pushes for Superjumbos

Emirates, the largest operator of Airbus Group SE’s A380 superjumbo, has all but given up on getting an upgrade of the double-decker with new engines and is instead making a more modest pitch to the planemaker: please don’t drop the program altogether. “I can’t force Toulouse to do anything,” Emirates President Tim Clark told reporters on Friday at a briefing in Dublin, referring to Airbus’s home base in southern France. “My main concern is that they stop producing the plane.” Clark has become a marketing champion for the world’s largest passenger plane, deploying the jetliner on both major trunk routes like Heathrow-Dubai as well as secondary airports like Manchester or Barcelona. While new engines would further enhance the model by providing greater flexibility with more range and higher takeoff weight, Clark conceded that talks with the manufacturer regarding an upgrade had “kind of lapsed.” Emirates is by far the largest customer for the aircraft, having ordered 142 in total. Emirates’ concern about Airbus keeping the plane on the production line is driven by the fact that few sizable buyers exist besides the Gulf operator. Airlines including Air France-KLM Group and Deutsche Lufthansa AG have actually trimmed their orders, and most customers have bought the airliner in relatively small numbers. Airbus itself says the production line has gaps from 2018. A total of 319 A380s have been ordered, fewer than the annual output of the best-selling A320 line of smaller planes. Airbus, after rushing 18 months ago to assure the airline community that it would look seriously at an A380Neo, has made increasingly clear that any such project is something for the long term. The emphasis for now is finding ways to improve the plane and carve out more space with simpler moves to better organize space on the plane. (By Andrea Rothman/Bloomberg with assistance from Christopher Jasper.)

More from Business

  • UAE, Ukraine Presidents witness CEPA signing

    President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine, on Monday attended the signing of the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the two countries.

  • New AED 25 hour event parking tariffs begin in Dubai

    Vehicle parking at major events in Dubai will be charged at AED 25 an hour coming into effect on Monday, parking company Parkin confirmed.

  • Abu Dhabi issues new endowment company rules

    Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development (ADDED), in collaboration with The Endowments and Minors’ Funds Management Authority (Awqaf Abu Dhabi), has issued a resolution on the establishment and licensing of endowment institutions in Abu Dhabi.

  • IDC 2025 discusses global disruptions, defence preparedness

    The International Defence Conference 2025 commenced on Sunday at Emirates Palace in Abu Dhabi, bringing together defence and security leaders, experts, and companies from around the world to discuss key challenges and opportunities in the sector.

  • Dubai Energy Council reviews carbon emissions progress

    Ahmed bin Saeed chaired the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy meeting on Sunday, which reviewed progress in carbon emission reduction technologies in alignment with the UAE’s Net Zero 2050 Strategy and the Dubai Carbon Abatement Strategy 2030.