Qatar Airways announced an order for two Boeing 747-8 freighters and four 777-300ERs, valued at $2.16 billion at list prices.
Qatar said the order was a sign of the airline’s continued expansion and contribution to the US economy.
The deal adds to the Doha-based carrier’s fleet of nearly 100 Boeing widebody aircraft and its more than 100 additional Boeing aircraft on order.
Qatar Airways Ltd. is considering whether to order more Boeing Co. 747 jumbo freighters as global air cargo rebounds and the Persian Gulf carrier responds to a blockade of its home country.
The jets, featuring a hinged nose that flips open to load oversize equipment, would help the Doha-based carrier make good on its ambition to become the largest international cargo operator in the world, Chief Executive Officer Akbar Al Baker said Monday during a visit to Seattle to take delivery of the first of Qatar Air’s two 747-8 freighters.
Boeing has been scrambling to land additional orders needed to extend the commercial life of its iconic hump-backed jet into the next decade.
The Chicago-based planemaker had 20 unfilled orders for its 747 as of the end of August, including the two jets currently bound for Qatar Air.
That is the equivalent of about three years of production at its current six-jets-a-year pace.
Qatar Air’s cargo division is flourishing as air freight emerges from a lengthy slump. Worldwide loads are up 11 percent this year through July, according to the International Air Transport Association, a trade group.
The flight embargo imposed in June by neighboring nations to penalize Qatar actually has provided a benefit, Al Baker said. Air-freight deliveries have climbed 160 percent from a year ago as Qatar Air has airlifted in fresh food, medical equipment and other supplies.
Four Arab nations severed diplomatic and transport links with Qatar as punishment for allegedly backing Islamic militants, a charge the Gulf nation denies.
I’m pleased to tell you today that in fact the blockade has quite the opposite impact on our business to the one intended, Al Baker said.
Our adversaries thought they would bring us to our knees and we would capitulate, but this didn’t happen.
He dismissed any suggestion that Qatar Air might delay aircraft orders because of the blockade or slowing travel growth in the Middle East.
We are not studying any deferrals because Qatar Airways’ aircraft orders are not all growth airplanes,Al Baker said.
They are also fleet replacement.
The carrier plans to take all 110 of the Boeing 777X planes that it has committed to buy from Boeing through orders or options.
And it expanded a previous order for 44 of Boeing’s 777-300ER by four aircraft, a deal previously recorded on Boeing’s backlog without disclosing the buyer.
Combined with the two jumbos, the aircraft are worth $2.16 billion at list prices before the customary discounts.
Qatar Air has decided to take all of the Airbus SE A350 aircraft it has on order, reversing an earlier plan to cancel four deliveries, Al Baker said.
As to Qatar Air’s ongoing war of words with U.S. carriers over access to the U.S. market, Al Baker advised its rivals to shut up and mind their own business.
Tourism Observer
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