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Boeing orders rise to 4-year high on year-end surge, but Airbus still No 1 passenger aircraft maker in 2022

  • Boeing’s net order book in 2022 stood at 774, compared with 820 for Airbus
  • Toulouse-based Airbus continues to dominate the market for single-aisle aircraft, with the A320 family outselling the 737s

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Boeing delivered18 737 MAX aircraft to Southwest Airlines in December, the most it has supplied to a single airline customer in a month. Photo: Reuters
Boeing took more than 200 net orders for passenger aeroplanes in December to complete its best year since 2018, but it failed again to catch up with European manufacturer Airbus in orders and aircraft deliveries.
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Airbus reported on Tuesday that it took orders for 820 planes in all of 2022, after subtracting cancellations, and it delivered 661 to airlines and other customers. Those numbers topped Boeing’s 774 orders and 480 deliveries.

The battle for supremacy in aircraft manufacturing has been a one-sided affair in recent years, as Boeing was dragged down by two deadly crashes of its bestselling plane, the 737 MAX, and with production flaws that halted shipments of a larger plane, the 787. The latest numbers showed Boeing closing the gap, however.

Both companies are struggling with shortages of engines and other supply chain issues that limit how fast they can build and deliver planes. The outcome is frustrating to the manufacturers – deliveries were below Airbus expectations – and to airlines that are eager to expand their fleets as travel recovers from the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Boeing employees work on the 737 MAX on the final assembly line at Boeing’s Renton plant, on June 15, 2022, in Washington. Photo: TNS
Boeing employees work on the 737 MAX on the final assembly line at Boeing’s Renton plant, on June 15, 2022, in Washington. Photo: TNS

“The supply environment was constrained in 2022 and will remain constrained in 2023,” Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said on a call with reporters.

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Faury said that despite the supply issues, Airbus is committed to increase production rates.

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