First international airshow since the pandemic is a complete success
From 14th-18th November, 120,000 visitors graced the halls next to Al Mak-toum International Airport in South Dubai. It was the first international industry meet-up since the Corona pandemic rocked the aviation world. “It was the best Dubai Airshow I’ve experienced so far,” summarizes Michael Schreyögg, Chief Program Officer of MTU Aero Engines. “As the first of its kind in years, it was extremely busy and it was the right decision for MTU to be there.”
One of the show highlights was the public debut of the Boeing 777X, powered by GE9X engines for which MTU has developed and manufactured the turbine centre frame. The 777-9 variant that took to the skies during the aerial displays can carry 426 passengers for 13,500 kilometers. And each GE9X engine can produce up to 134,000 pounds of thrust.
The Dubai Airshow saw 408 orders for Airbus, of which 269 were firm orders and 139 commitments. In many cases, the engine type was not announced, though MTU should indirectly benefit from the two A400M orders from the Indonesian Ministry of Defence as well as the 35 A220 orders from Air Lease Corporation and Ibom Air. The largest Airbus order was a 255 aircraft order from the Indigo Partners. The aircraft are to be split among the group’s subsidiary airlines: Wizz Air (75 A321neo plus 27 A321XLR), Frontier (91 A321neo), Volaris (39 A321neo) and Jet Smart (21 A321neo plus two A321XLR). Boeing did not fare quite as well, announcing an overall total of 97 orders, 72 of which for the 737 Max and 20 were for freighter conversions. For its part, Embraer announced a three E175 aircraft order from Nigerian Overland airways.