Singapore Airlines (SIA) has signed a provisional agreement to buy seven Airbus A350 freighters in a deal that would make it the first airline to operate the new model, it said on Wednesday (Dec 15).
The letter of intent for deliveries from the fourth quarter of 2025 includes a swap with 15 A320neos and two A350-900 passenger planes in its order book, the airline said in a statement.
Those planes had a list value of US$2.3 billion when Airbus last published prices in 2018, roughly the same price as seven A350-900 passenger planes at the time, making it unclear how much incremental revenue the planemaker will get from the deal.
The deal with one of Asia's major carriers is nonetheless a significant boost for Airbus' efforts to penetrate a cargo market long dominated by its American rival Boeing.
Reuters reported in November that Airbus hoped to land a freighter deal with SIA as Qatar Airways, embroiled in a row over surface damage to existing A350s, favoured a deal for Boeing 777X freighters.
SIA said that the A350 freighters, along with options for another five, will replace its fleet of seven ageing Boeing 747 freighters and help the airline to reduce carbon emissions.
The airline is the third customer for the A350F after deals clinched with lessor Air Lease Corporation and French cargo company CMA CGM.
"The selection of the A350F to replace the 747F is sensible as SIA already has the world's largest A350 passenger fleet, creating attractive synergies for its future cargo operation," said Brendan Sobie, an independent aviation analyst based in Singapore.
He said that the conversion of 15 A320neo orders made sense because the airline had too many narrow-body planes on order for the post-pandemic environment.
Cargo accounted for two-thirds of SIA's revenue in the six months to Sep 30. The airline, which lacks a domestic market, has been hit hard by pandemic-related border closures.
SIA on Wednesday said that it should reach 45 per cent of pre-pandemic passenger capacity in December, up from an earlier estimate of 43 per cent, as Singapore gradually opens its borders. In November, it filled about a third of its passenger seats.
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The letter of intent for deliveries from the fourth quarter of 2025 includes a swap with 15 A320neos and two A350-900 passenger planes in its order book, the airline said in a statement.
Those planes had a list value of US$2.3 billion when Airbus last published prices in 2018, roughly the same price as seven A350-900 passenger planes at the time, making it unclear how much incremental revenue the planemaker will get from the deal.
The deal with one of Asia's major carriers is nonetheless a significant boost for Airbus' efforts to penetrate a cargo market long dominated by its American rival Boeing.
Reuters reported in November that Airbus hoped to land a freighter deal with SIA as Qatar Airways, embroiled in a row over surface damage to existing A350s, favoured a deal for Boeing 777X freighters.
SIA said that the A350 freighters, along with options for another five, will replace its fleet of seven ageing Boeing 747 freighters and help the airline to reduce carbon emissions.
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The airline is the third customer for the A350F after deals clinched with lessor Air Lease Corporation and French cargo company CMA CGM.
"The selection of the A350F to replace the 747F is sensible as SIA already has the world's largest A350 passenger fleet, creating attractive synergies for its future cargo operation," said Brendan Sobie, an independent aviation analyst based in Singapore.
He said that the conversion of 15 A320neo orders made sense because the airline had too many narrow-body planes on order for the post-pandemic environment.
Cargo accounted for two-thirds of SIA's revenue in the six months to Sep 30. The airline, which lacks a domestic market, has been hit hard by pandemic-related border closures.
SIA on Wednesday said that it should reach 45 per cent of pre-pandemic passenger capacity in December, up from an earlier estimate of 43 per cent, as Singapore gradually opens its borders. In November, it filled about a third of its passenger seats.
Continue reading...