Emirates will receive the last Airbus A380 ever in November. Here's how the world's largest passenger plane went from revolutionary to reject in just a decade.

Emirates Airbus A380
Emirates Airbus A380
  • The Airbus A380, which made its first test flight on April 27, 2005, is the largest passenger airliner in the world.
  • However, Airbus announced production of the jumbojet would end at the end of 2021 due to low demand from carriers.
  • In November, Emirates will receive the last three A380s produced, marking the end of an era for the double-decker jet.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The end is near for the Airbus A380 production. Emirates announced Wednesday that Airbus will deliver the final double-decker aircraft to the carrier in November, officially ending the program.

Emirates is the biggest buyer of the A380 making up nearly half of the 251 orders. Currently, the airline has 115 A380 aircraft in its fleet but will grow that to 118 after the final delivery. Initially, the carrier was supposed to receive its last A380 in June 2022.

The airline plans to keep the A380 in its fleet for at least another 20 years, offering comfortable long-haul travel on the modern, spacious jet.

The A380 took its maiden flight in 2005, and was an impressive feat of engineering at the time, but has since become one of Airbus' biggest failures due to its high operating costs and inefficiency in the modern era.

However, the jet wasn't the game-changer Airbus envisioned, especially on the financial front. For much of the plane's life, Airbus has struggled to find airlines willing to put the A380 into service. With a price tag of $445.6 million, the A380 is one of the most expensive and lavish airplanes ever built, with room for as many as 800 passengers.

Thus, the program ends with just 251 planes. The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the plane's death knell, with airlines around the world grounding their fleets and some outright retiring the jet.

Here's a look at the topsy-turvy history of the Airbus A380 superjumbo.

This story was originally published by Benjamin Zhang in November 2017 and updated by David Slotnick in 2020. It was updated in September 2021 by Taylor Rains.

During the 1970s, Airbus' A300B was the new kid in the world of commercial airliners.
Airbus A300
By the early 1990s, Airbus was in a much different position. Its narrow-body A320 family, which helped pioneer civilian fly-by-wire technology, was well on its way to becoming the second-best-selling jetliner in history.
Airbus A320 family
At the same time, the company unveiled its new A330 ...
Airbus A330
... and A340 family wide-body jets. The two jets offered viable alternatives to Boeing's 767 and 777 wide-bodies. But Airbus has set its sights on a bigger target ...
Airbus a340
... the Boeing 747-400. Airbus wanted to produce an aircraft even bigger than Boeing's latest jumbo jet - with lower operating costs.
Boeing 747 factory
The result was a double-decker concept called the A3XX.
Airbus A3xx
The A3XX would eventually morph into the A380 superjumbo.
Airbus A380 First flight
The A380 is built in a 1.6-million-square-foot assembly plant at Airbus headquarters in Toulouse.
Airbus A380
At 239 feet long, 79 feet tall, and 262 feet from wingtip to wingtip, it's a big plane.
Airbus A380 Kieran Doherty
Only the Boeing 747-8 is longer, at 250 feet and two inches (although the A380 can carry many more passengers).
Boeing 747 8
According to Airbus, in a typical four-class seating arrangement, the superjumbo can carry as many as 544 passengers, with a range of more than 9,400 miles. In a high-density configuration, the A380 is certified to carry as many as 868 passengers - 538 on the main deck, 330 on the upper floor.
Emirates Airline's Airbus A380 stewardess
Power for the A380 comes from a quartet of engines from suppliers Rolls-Royce and Engine Alliance.
Etihad Airbus A380 2
The A380's flight crew operates from a state-of-the-art glass cockpit. Like all modern Airbus jets, the aircraft is flown using a side stick, with a fly-by-wire control system.
Airbus A380 Cockpit
After its maiden flight, the A380 completed a flight-test program before entering commercial service in 2007.
Airbus A380
As an airliner, the A380 promised luxury and comfort on an unprecedented scale.
Etihad Airbus A380 16
The Airbus jumbo delivered, at least to airlines that wanted to take advantage of luxurious options. Premium features, such as walk-up bars ...
Airbus A380 Emirates 100th plane
... private lounges ...
Etihad Airbus A380 22
... and bathrooms with showers set the superjumbo apart from its rivals.
Emirates Airbus A380 First Class Shower Spa
And then there are the first-class suites that Emirates offers ...
Emirates Airbus A380 First class
... the even larger first-class suites that Singapore unveiled ...
Singapore Airlines Airbus A380 Suites_03

Read about Singapore Airlines' new A380 suites »

... and Etihad's The Residence.
Etihad First Class Residence
It's a 125-square-foot flying home.
Etihad Airbus A380 41
On October 15, 2007, Singapore Airlines took delivery of the first production A380.
Airbus A380 Singapore Airlines
Soon, other global airlines, such as Korean Air ...
Korean Air Airbus A380
... Lufthansa ...
Lufthansa Airbus A380
... Qantas ...
Qantas Airbus A380
... British Airways ...
British Airways Airbus A380
... Malaysia Airlines ...
Malaysia Airlines A380
... Thai Airways ...
Thai Airways Airbus A380 800_002_size_l
... Air France ...
Air France Airbus A380
... Qatar Airways ...
Qatar Airways Airbus A380
... Asiana Airlines ...
Asiana Airbus A380
... China Southern ...
Airbus A380 China Southern
... and Etihad took delivery of the plane.
Etihad Airbus A380
Portugal's HiFly became the first airline to operate a second-hand A380 when it took delivery of an ex-Singapore Airlines jet in the summer of 2018.
A380 Hi Fly
Japan's All Nippon Airways became the latest airline to introduce the A380 in 2018, which it flies between Tokyo and Honolulu, Hawaii. It's painted to look like a sea turtle.
ANA A380
But no customer is more important than Emirates and its CEO, Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, seen here with former Airbus CEO Tom Enders.
Emirates CEO Airbus
Emirates accounts for 123 of the 274 of the A380s ever ordered.
Airbus A380
Emirates is a predominantly long-haul international airline whose business is built around funneling millions of passengers through its palatial central hub in Dubai and then on to destinations around the world.
Dubai Airport
As a result, Emirates needs an aircraft that can carry a lot of passengers for very long distances - a perfect job for the A380.
Emirates Airline's Airbus A380
But few airlines use Emirates' strategy. These days, the trend in the industry is to offer direct flights using smaller long-range aircraft.
Airbus A380
Instead of Emirates' dedicated hub-and-spoke route model, most airlines have moved towards more point-to-point flying. This has allowed smaller, more efficient twinjets like the Boeing 777 ...
Boeing 777 200LR
... and the Airbus A330 to become the dominant forces in long-haul flying.
Hawaiian Airlines Airbus A330
Smaller next-generation composite wide-bodies like the Boeing 787 Dreamliner offer airlines more flexibility and less risk. According to the CEO of Qantas, Alan Joyce, it costs less to operate two Dreamliners than it does to fly a single A380.
Qantas Boeing 787 Dreamliner
As a result, the A380 never developed into a true workhorse like the 747. Instead, it has been relegated to a niche aircraft economically feasible only on routes with heavy airport congestion.
Qantas Airbus A380
Boeing has similarly all but given up on the 747-8 as a passenger jet, which will end production in 2022.
boeing 747

Source: BI

With early production A380s coming to the end of their 10-year leases, Airbus will likely have to contend with competition for its own used planes. However, early signs for the second-hand market aren't promising. German investment firm Dr. Peters Group has decided to sell its off-lease A380s for spare parts after it couldn't find any takers for the plane.
Airbus A380 first delivery
Emirates Airline president, Sir Tim Clark, has for years pushed Airbus to make a more cost-effective version of the plane with upgraded aerodynamics and a new fuel-efficient engine called the A380neo. That hasn't happened.
Emirates Airbus A380
Airbus has been reluctant to invest the kind of money needed to develop a new version of the A380. In 2017, Airbus offered its customers a moderately updated version of the plane, called the A380 Plus, with room for 80 more people and new winglets for better fuel economy. So far, there have been no takers.
Airbus A380 plus
Unlike with the Boeing 747, the A380 freighter never came to fruition, so Airbus won't be able to subsist on sales of a cargo variant while it waits for passenger-plane sales to rebound.
Airbus a380 Fedex freighter
In January 2018, Emirates ordered 20 additional A380s that would have kept the A380 production line moving for the next decade.
Emirates Airbus a380 order
However, that deal fell apart. In the end, even the A380's most loyal customer couldn't hold on any longer. Emirates cut 39 A380s from its original order of 162 planes and bought smaller twin-engine Airbus A330neos and A350s instead.
Emirates Airbus A380 100th plane
In 2017, Singapore Airlines became the first airline to retire an A380, the first of five to be taken out of service. One has been scrapped so far, while another has entered service with leasing company Hi-Fly.
Singapore Airlines Airbus A380
In November 2019, Air France became the second. The airline quietly took the plane out of service after a flight from Johannesburg to Paris. The airline previously announced it would retire its 10 A380s by 2022.
Air France Airbus A380
Through March and April 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic has led to sharply reduced travel demand all around the world, numerous airlines grounded their A380 fleets, including Korean Air, Lufthansa, and Qantas. Other airlines have grounded most of the planes, electing to keep just one or two in service.
Korean Air Airbus A380
Air France decided to speed up its retirement of the fleet due to the pandemic, pulling them from service in May 2020, two years earlier than it had planned. It was the first airline to retire the plane type due to the pandemic.
FILE PHOTO: An Air France Airbus A380 aircraft lands at Charles-de-Gaulle airport after its retirement flight, in Roissy, near Paris, June 26, 2020. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Air France Airbus A380 retirement flight near Paris
Since Air France's A380 retirement, Germany-based Lufthansa has put its superjumbos into long-term storage. The airline said the planes would remain grounded unless there is an unexpected surge in travel demand.
LAX Day Trip Alaska Airlines - Lufthansa A380
A Lufthansa Airbus A380.
Korean Air has also decided to retire the double-decker jet. CEO Walter Cho confirmed the fate of the A380 when he revealed the company would drop them within five years.
Korean Air A380 JFK

Source: FlightGlobal

Like Lufthansa, Abu Dhabi-based Etihad has put its A380s into storage, and, according to CEO Tony Douglas, does not expect them to fly again. With the loss of the jet, customers will no longer have access to the A380 exclusive cabin known as the "The Residence," which were flying apartments with three rooms, a butler, caviar, chauffeur service, and champagne.
Etihad Airbus A380
While the pandemic has sped up the retirement of many airlines' A380s, some carriers have faith in the jet and do not plan on ditching it quite yet. In early 2021, Doha-based Qatar Airways said it was retiring half its superjumbo fleet, but has since backtracked on that decision.
Qatar Airways Airbus A380

Source: FlightPlan

Qatar CEO Akbar Al Baker said in an interview to FlightPlan in July that there was a small chance the company would bring back five of its A380s, even though he personally dislikes the jet. Al Baker said the A380 was Qatar's biggest mistake, and though there is a slight possibility the company will operate it again, it is not likely to survive long in the post-pandemic industry.
QATAR AIRWAYS A380-861 soon after take off from Hamad International Airport DOH.
Qatar Airways A380
In addition to Qatar, All Nippon Airways has maintained its A380s, with two flying to Hawaii and a third having been delivered to the airline on paper, but still remains in the care of Airbus.
ANA A380

Source: aeroTelegraph

British Airways has also committed to the A380, having extended the jet's maintenance contract with Lufthansa Technik for another five years. CEO Sean Doyle confirmed the double-decker would be back despite the pandemic.
British Airways Airbus A380

Source: Lufthansa Technik

China Southern has continued to operate the fleet during the pandemic, though the fate of the five-jet fleet is still uncertain. Guoxiang Wu, an executive at the airline, said the future of the A380 is under review even as it continues to fly.
China Southern Airlines A380 Beijing Daxing Airport

Source: CAPA Live: Asia Aviation: Inspiring clear action for aviation growth

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce has confirmed the superjumbo will not be leaving the fleet, saying the A380 is the "perfect vehicle" for high-demand cities like Heathrow and Los Angeles.
Qantas Airbus A380
A Qantas Airbus A380.

Source: CNN

Singapore Airlines is shuttling its A380s back to Singapore from the Australian desert and expects them to return to service when demand increases. The airline has even invested in a new cabin for the jets, retrofitting them with new first-class suites and updated economy class seats and inflight entertainment.
An Airbus A380-841 airplane of Singapore Airlines takes-off from Zurich airport, Switzerland, April 14, 2016. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
An Airbus A380-841 airplane of Singapore Airlines takes-off from Zurich airport

Source: SimpleFlying

In September 2021, Emirates announced it would be receiving the final A380 aircraft from Airbus in November, with three total being delivered, completing its 118-A380 fleet.
Emirates Airbus A380
An Emirates Airbus A380.
The final A380s will have a 4-cabin configuration with Emirates' sophisticated Premium Economy section, complete with wide, spacious seats, a leg rest, and greater recline.
Emirates A380 Premium Economy
Emirates A380 Premium Economy
Even though the A380 program ends in 2021, and the first few have already been retired, the planes are expected to fly on for years to come. So, if you're still hoping to fly on one, you have plenty of time left.
Airbus A380
Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/2MTmQKW

No comments

Powered by Blogger.