Air industry braves record UK heat as Farnborough airshow returns
Visitors walk past planes at the Farnborough International Airshow in Farnborough, England, July 18, 2022. (AP Photo)


Aviation bosses gathered for the return of the Farnborough International Airshow (FIA) on Monday, aiming for a display of confidence after the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic, even though the only records likely to be broken at the event are for sweltering temperatures.

A national emergency has been declared in Britain for Monday and Tuesday, with temperatures set to rise above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time.

Despite warnings people should not travel unless absolutely necessary, delegates battled crowded trains and shuttle buses to reach the show in Hampshire, southern England.

Travel problems were exacerbated by climate protesters holding a mock funeral for the Earth on the main road outside the show, and delegates could face a tough return journey home, with warnings of train cancellations and delays.

The industry has been reeling from its own travel disruptions and the president of Dubai’s Emirates, which has clashed with London’s Heathrow over enforced capacity cuts, said at the show that a badly disrupted air travel industry would return to equilibrium in 2023 and must "tough it out" until then.

The event at Farnborough is the first edition of the air show, which alternates with Paris, since 2019, and rising defense spending will be in focus amid the war in Ukraine.

Separately, three sources told Reuters last week that Britain and Japan were close to an agreement to merge their next-generation Tempest and F-X fighter jet programs to help save costs.

"The future combat aircraft system is not just a plane. It is a whole platform for technological change, and industrial spin-offs of all kinds," British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in opening remarks at the show.

Turkish fighter jet, chopper

At the showcase for tens of billions of dollars of business deals, Turkey is showcasing its breakthrough in the defense industry and is displaying some of its multiple vehicles.

Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) is exhibiting a mock-up, as well as a simulator, of its National Combat Aircraft (MMU), marking a debut for Turkey’s landmark national fighter jet in the U.K.

TAI’s close air support and the training aircraft, Hürkuş, and its T129 Tactical Reconnaissance and Attack Helicopter (ATAK) were to stage a show as part of the expo.

The first TF-X MMU will be unveiled on March 18, 2023. It is scheduled to make a maiden flight in 2026, before it enters service in 2029.

A fifth-generation jet of similar features to Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Lightning II, the indigenous aircraft is being developed to replace the Turkish air force’s F-16 fighters as the 2030s gradually phase them out.

ATAK is a twin-engine, tandem seat, multi-role, all-weather tactical reconnaissance and attack helicopter.

TAI is also showcasing Turkey’s first indigenous multi-role helicopter, the T625 Gökbey. Its unmanned combat aerial vehicles Anka and Aksungur are also on display.

On the civilian side, Boeing, under pressure to make up ground lost to rival Airbus, unveiled broadly stable underlying passenger jet forecasts on Sunday.

It is seeking to shore up its troubled 737 Max 10 and 777X jetliners with orders worth over $15 billion at list prices from Delta Air Lines and Lufthansa starting on Monday, sources familiar with the matter said.

Delta confirmed on Monday it would buy 100 737 Max 10 and had an option to buy another 30.

Frustration

Demand for jets peaked in 2016 but remained buoyant until the pandemic crippled air transport. Now, travel is rebounding, passengers face long lines and some jets are back in demand.

But the big-ticket orders that dominated past events are rarer as airlines repair balance sheets weakened by COVID-19 travel restrictions.

Aerospace firms came under pressure from customers at the start of the show to stabilize fractured supply chains and feed resurgent jet demand, even as airlines and airports are struggling to smooth their own operations after the pandemic.

Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury told Flightglobal in an interview published on Monday that engine delays holding back plane deliveries would peak at mid-year.

But the head of the body representing global airlines, IATA Director General Willie Walsh, said manufacturers had wasted chances to shore up their assembly lines.

"Airlines are frustrated by the delays around the delivery of aircraft; they’re frustrated around issues like access to spare parts," Walsh told Reuters.

"I think (manufacturers) should have taken better advantage of the lull in demand over the past two years to have been better prepared for this recovery."

Industries worldwide are facing gaps in supply chains and labor shortages. Even the Farnborough Airshow itself has had trouble recruiting enough hospitality staff, insiders said.

Aviation is also under pressure to build greener planes and stop adding to what Johnson called the "carbon tea cosy" heating the planet. "We know that we must fix it. We know that time is running out," he said.