Aviation Week/BofA Survey Shows Great Interest In Potential Embraer Narrowbody
Most airlines have spent the 2020s navigating day-to-day operational challenges. Ramping capacity back up to meet a surge in demand after the COVID-19 pandemic proved to be difficult and frustrating. Those headwinds were compounded by commercial aviation’s supply chain and production crisis alongside durability and quality issues with engines that have grounded a substantial number of airplanes.
Most airlines have spent the 2020s navigating day-to-day operational challenges. Ramping capacity back up to meet a surge in demand after the COVID-19 pandemic proved to be difficult and frustrating. Those headwinds were compounded by commercial aviation’s supply chain and production crisis alongside durability and quality issues with engines that have grounded a substantial number of airplanes.
But more than two decades after Boeing launched development of its last clean sheet aircraft, a new survey of airlines, lessors, manufacturers, component suppliers and MRO providers reveals a high degree of interest in a next-generation narrowbody that Embraer has been studying for some time. The global survey, conducted by Aviation Week Network in partnership with analysts at Bank of America, reveals that a large share of operators are eager for both next-generation passenger jets and more competition in the commercial aircraft market. They’re also willing to consider unusual designs. Airlines accounted for 45% of the 492 survey respondents.
“The survey respondents are supportive of Embraer doing this by themselves even more solo than with Boeing,” BofA Global Research Aerospace & Defense Analyst Ron Epstein says. “There is real appetite for a third legitimate manufacturer.”
Having dominated the commercial aircraft market as a duopoly since 1987, Airbus and Boeing face little competitive pressure to develop cutting-edge successors to the A320neo and 737 MAX families. Both companies say they do not anticipate a new narrowbody entering service before the mid-2030s, and recent comments indicate that their timing continues to slide to the right.
Airbus Group CEO Guillaume Faury wants to see production stability at high rates and better margins in Airbus’ own commercial aircraft business and for its suppliers for several years before a launch decision. And Boeing’s new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, says that while his company will eventually build a new commercial aircraft, the timing is not right to start now. Boeing has only just begun the long process of rebuilding from its self-inflicted production and quality crisis. Technology evolution timelines have put the two incumbent players in similar terrain. Both also have substantial backlogs which would be threatened by an earlier launch of a successor product.
Industry veterans say the go-slow approach by Airbus and Boeing, which runs counter to the pressing need for airlines to reduce their emissions, may have opened the door a crack for a third player to disrupt the duopoly.
“The path forward for a killer product isn't mysterious. It's a better A321XLR with a better wing, better engine power and newer features,” says AeroDynamic Advisory Managing Director Richard Aboulafia. “The A321 is still based on an almost 40-year-old platform."
“Airlines want something that is like an A320neo in terms of range and size,” Epstein says. “It does not have to be radically new. They don’t have to reinvent the wheel.”
Boeing’s previous CEO, Dave Calhoun, predicted that disruptor would be Comac, which has now introduced its C919 into the Chinese domestic market. But the C919 is based on present-day technology, and skeptics note that Comac faces the hurdles of achieving certification by international airworthiness authorities and setting up a far-flung maintenance network if it truly wants to be a global competitor.
Embraer has previously looked at upsizing into the narrowbody market but concluded that taking on the duopoly would be too risky. After a scuttled merger with Boeing, the Brazilian airframer is looking at the idea again as it considers future investments. Embraer has quietly continued studies around various aircraft concepts and had signaled that a decision on its next development could be announced in 2025. But CEO Francisco Gomes Neto appeared to pull back on that at the end of 2024, signaling that a launch decision might not come until after 2030.
“They are not ready,” Aboulafia says. “This has to be some grand alliance of suppliers, financiers and even countries. It could be that Gomes Neto's job is to come up with an idea and attract investors and partners. If they show up, then Embraer builds it.”
Yet customers appear to be eager to order sooner rather than later. An overwhelming 85% of airline respondents and 78% of total respondents agreed or strongly agreed that a new aircraft for entry into service between 2029 and 2032 equipped with the latest generation of current technology engines such as an evolution of the Pratt & Whitney geared turbofan, the CFM International LEAP or Rolls-Royce’s UltraFan project would be “compelling to purchase.”
A commanding 71% of both airlines and all respondents agreed or strongly agreed that, if Boeing, Airbus and Embraer all launched a new aircraft for entry into service at roughly the same time, they would still go for the Embraer offering if they were convinced of its merits, with only 5% of airlines disagreeing. More generally, 81% of the airline respondents said they would be “very supportive” of a third commercial aircraft manufacturer.
According to industry sources, a group of large airlines has hinted to Embraer that they would place large orders for a new aircraft should it be launched.
“Given where Boeing is now and where travel markets are going, it does seem to be now or never for Embraer,” Epstein says. “The sentiment could change in five years.” He believes there is a “50/50 chance” that Embraer will launch a larger commercial aircraft in the coming years. Epstein believes that entry into service could be, as airline preferences in the survey show, in the early 2030s. On the other hand, Embraer has shown to be cautious throughout its history and could opt for a less risky path, which could be a new executive jet.
In commercial aviation, there are also the unconventional disruptors. Backed by a $235 million U.S. Air Force development contract, California startup JetZero is working on a blended wing body aircraft that could be used as both a military tanker and a civil airliner. The company is hoping the aircraft, powered by conventional engines, could enter service in the middle of the next decade.
The survey shows a clear preference for a more economical, longer-range next-generation aircraft that can replace the 737-8 and the A320neo. The two aircraft have been the baseline versions of Boeing’s and Airbus’ narrowbody families, yet the larger A321neo has become by far the best-selling type in recent years and Boeing has seen some better sales success for the 737-10, even though the type still lacks certification.