History: Airbus A350 XWB
Preview of version: 6
Role | Wide-body jet airliner | ||
First flight : | 14 June 2013 | ||
Status : | flight-testing, early production | ||
Launch customer : | Qatar Airways | ||
Produced : | 2012 - present | ||
Number built : | 5 (September 2014) | ||
Unit cost : | A350-800: US$260.9 million A350-900: US$295.2M A350-1000: US$340.7M | ||
List of Airbus A350 by registration number |
The Airbus A350 XWB is a new family of long-range, twin-engine, wide-body jet airliners under development by Airbus. This is the first aircraft from the European manufacturer that will feature fuselage and wing structures made primarily from carbon-fiber reinforced polymer. According to initial specs released by Airbus it will be able to carry 250 to 350 passengers in a typical three-class seating layout.
While it was originally presented as a successor of the A330 and the A340 now its clear that the Airbus A330 will not be discontinued and will have a NEO variant. The Airbus A350 XWB will compete with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and the Boeing 777 family.
Proposed initially in 2004 with new aerodynamics, new engines and a fuselage that was based on the A330 the plane was redesigned and renamed A350 XWB due to the rejection of the initial proposal by most of the airlines that discussed it with Airbus. The company argues that the Airbus A350 will be more fuel-efficient and will have operating costs up to 8% lower then its main competitor the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. This is possible due to the A350's larger capacity.
The launch customer for the A350 is Doha based Qatar Airways, which has 80 aircraft of all three variants on order. The development of the aircraft costs Airbus around €12 billion (US$15 billion or £10 billion). The Airbus A350 XWB is scheduled to enter airline service in late 2014 with Qatar Airways.
Table of contents
Development
Initial design
Immediately after the Boeing 787 Dreamliner was announced, Airbus rejected the claim that this new airplane by its rival would be a serious threat to the A330 and concluded that no response is needed. However airlines started pushing Airbus to come up with a response to the 787. Reluctantly Airbus proposed the A330-200Lite, a simple derivative of the A330. This new variant would feature improved aerodynamics and better engines. Due to be announced at the 2004 Farnborough Airshow the A330-200Lite project was cancelled.
Later that year on the 16th of September 2004 then-Airbus president and CEO Noël Forgeard revealed that a new project is being considered without revealing anything specific. Airbus committed €4 billion to a new airliner design which was similar to the A330 but with a new wing, engines and horizontal stabilizer alongside new composite materiales and production methods applied to the fuselage. On 10 December 2004 the boards of EADS and BAE Systems then the shareholders of Airbus, gave Airbus the "authorisation to offer (ATO)" and formally named it the A350.
On 13 June 2005, Qatar Airways announced at the Paris Air Show that it placed an order for 60 A350s. In September 2006 the airline signed a memorandum of understanding with General Electric to launch the GEnx-1A-72 for the aircraft. Another Middle East carrier Emirates was also analyzing the airliner but they decided that this initial version doesn't suit their needs and did not order it. However in 2007 they placed an order for the A350 XWB in 2007. In 2014 due to fleet requirements review they cancelled this order.
On 6 October 2005 Airbus announced the full industrial launch of the programme with an estimated development cost of around €3.5 billion. The A350 was planned to be a 250 to 300 seat twin-engine wide-body aircraft derived from the Airbus A330. Two version were planned: the A350-800 with a range of 8800 nmi (16300 km) and a capacity of 253 seats and the A350-900 with a range of 7500 nmi (13900 km) and a passenger capacity of 300. These would directly compete with the 787-9 and the 777-200ER.
Airbus's largest customers almost immediately criticized the project. On 28 March 2006 in the presence of hundreds of top arline executives ILFC's president Steven F. Udvar-Hazy called the A350 "a Band-aid reaction to the 787" and GECAS president Henry Hubschman shared his opinion. A new clean-sheet design was requested by Udvar-Hazy in order to avoid losing market to Boeing. Airbus then-CEO Gustav Humbert hinted that there is no quick fix: "Our strategy isn't driven by the needs of the next one or two campaigns, but rather by a long-term view of the market and our ability to deliver on our promises."
Redesign and launch
Design
Technology
Operational Service
Competitors
Deliveries
Accidents
Specifications
Further reading
Similiar aircraft
Airbus A330
Airbus A340
Boeing 787 Dreamliner
Boeing 777
Aviation pages
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