IN 20 years time Australian skies will be among the world’s busiest, abuzz with a fleet of low-cost carriers flying single-aisle planes at high frequency.
At least that is the picture Boeing has painted in its annual 20-year forecast that the aircraft manufacturer insists is “conservative”.
Among the predictions are a tripling of the aircraft fleet in the Asia Pacific by 2034, as the region morphs into the world’s largest travel market.
Worldwide, another 38,050 aircraft are tipped to be needed by 2034, worth a staggering $5.6 trillion.
“We saw six per cent traffic growth last year (worldwide) and that equated to 180 million more passengers travelling by air,” Mr Tinseth said.
“Of those 180 million, 100 million flew on low cost carriers. This is an area that’s especially growing strong in Asia today.”
Such aircraft already form the foundation of the world’s airline fleet carrying up to 75 per cent of passengers on more than 70 per cent of commercial aviation routes.
An estimated 26,730 orders are expected for single-aisle planes with about 35 per cent coming from low cost carriers seeking flight frequency and fast turnarounds.
“Our research shows that 78 per cent of the time, airlines chose to grow by adding additional frequencies, and 14 per cent of the time, they chose to grow by adding new routes,” he said.
“Only seven per cent of the time, did airlines actually choose to grow by putting bigger aircraft on their routes.”
“Our competition is sitting out there with a very large aircraft (A380) that has undersold their expectations by many fold, not to our surprise,” Mr Tinseth said.
“You look at opportunities for those planes going forward, they’re few and far between.”
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