The Covid-19 pandemic has not tempered the growing appetite for air travel.

The number of aircraft in the world is expected to increase by 82% over the next 20 years, Boeing estimates on Sunday.

The world fleet, all manufacturers combined, should reach 47,080 aircraft in 2041, compared to 25,900 in 2019, details the group in an annual report released on the eve of the opening of the Farnborough Air Show (United Kingdom).

42,710 new aircraft

This is slightly less than the 49,405 planes in 2040 forecast last year, because Boeing has revised down its forecast for annual global economic growth (+2.6% instead of +2.7% on average) .

This should result in less strong growth in passenger traffic than expected (+3.8% instead of +4.0%).

On the other hand, it is a little more than the latest forecasts from Airbus, unveiled on Monday, which estimates that the world fleet will reach 46,930 aircraft in 2041 against 22,880 aircraft in service in 2020. Boeing is now counting on the delivery, all manufacturers combined, of 42,710 new planes in the next twenty years (41,170 without counting the Russian market, very uncertain), or 900 less than in its forecasts last year.

A problem of supply more than demand

"In 2022, demand is no longer the main obstacle [to the growth of the aviation market] since people can travel again," Darren Hulst, head of commercial marketing at Boeing, pointed out during a briefing with officials. journalists.

"It's supply," with all the supply chain issues and staffing shortages.

Already the global single-aisle fleet, used more for domestic traffic, has returned to 98% of what it was before the pandemic.

Those of wide-body aircraft, intended for international travel, are at 78%.

But the dynamics are changing rapidly.

The resumption of domestic air traffic is, for example, currently hampered in China by health restrictions and in Europe by capacity problems.

The shadow of sustainable development

The rebound in international flights, on the other hand, is faster than initially expected.

With the explosion of online commerce, the trend is accelerating even more for aircraft transporting goods: Boeing predicts that the fleet of cargo planes will grow by 80% by 2041.

The manufacturer takes into account each year a little more new constraints in terms of sustainable development such as the price of sustainable aviation fuel or possible new carbon taxes, also underlined Darren Hulst.

How much will these measures really affect the market?

“It still remains largely unknown,” he said.

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