Airbus CEO details broad post-crisis industrial hurdles

Airbus, Boeing are both struggling to keep up with demand and blame supply chain snarls, government policy

Aerospace is grappling with a slower-than-expected industrial recovery from the pandemic, with disruption spreading beyond its core supply chain and exposing fragile links with other sectors, the head of the world's largest planemaker said on Thursday.

Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said the situation had also been aggravated by recent COVID restrictions leading to capacity closures in China, a major supplier.

"There is an enormous problem in bringing the industrial supply chain back to strength worldwide, in the aviation world but not only in aviation," Faury told French journalists.

Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury

Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury speaks during a visit of German Economy and Climate Protection Minister Robert Habeck at Airbus research facilities in Hamburg, Germany, January 18, 2022. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer/Files (Reuters Photos)

"There is a lot of interdependence between the aerospace supply chain and electronic cards and components, raw materials and the availability of energy and skills at a worldwide level," Faury told the AJPAE French aerospace media association.

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"We see these problems spreading through the supply chain and what we, our suppliers and industrial partners ... imagined we could do at the start of the year when we built our production plans for 2022 - that didn't work out as expected."

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EADSY AIRBUS SE 36.86 +1.21 +3.39%

Faury was speaking broadly on behalf of French companies in his role as head of aerospace association GIFAS, but the comments shed further light on supply chain problems days after Airbus abandoned a delivery target and softened an output goal.

Energy shortages weigh more heavily in Europe whereas the U.S. industry is more concerned about shortages of labor, he added. Airbus assembles some aircraft and derives a large proportion of parts from suppliers in the United States.

Virgin Atlantic Airbus A350-1000

A Virgin Atlantic Airbus A350-1000 aircraft taking off. (Photo by Alexandre Doumenjou via Airbus)

Airbus is now studying the impact of this on 2023 after cutting output 40% in the immediate aftermath of lockdowns and then partially resuming pre-COVID production levels.

"Getting things back into order after COVID is taking a lot longer that we thought we could reasonably do," Faury said.

"That doesn't mean production is not increasing - we are going up quite sharply - but it wasn't 'off-on'. We were able to cut output very strongly, very quickly that was obviously easier than getting it going again."

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The disruption in supplies is squeezing deliveries just as demand is also picking up faster than some economists expected.

After a brisk recovery in demand for narrow-body jets like the Airbus A320neo and Boeing 737 MAX families, Airbus expects stronger demand for wide-body jets in 2023 and 2024.

American Airlines Airbus A321 Los Angeles

An American Airlines Airbus A321-200 plane takes off from Los Angeles International airport (LAX) in Los Angeles, California, U.S. March 28, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake (Reuters/Mike Blake / Reuters Photos)

Faury also addressed an increase in costs, saying a recent spike in inflation was manageable if it lasted for two years, but that a longer period would cause deeper difficulties.

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The French former auto executive, who visited Washington last week with French President Emmanuel Macron, also called the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, which includes significant support for alternative fuels, a "real cause for concern".

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Production incentives for Sustainable Aviation Fuel and green hydrogen are "good news for aviation" but conditions requiring investments in the United States risk creating an uneven playing field, he said.