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Airbus CEO: Despite engine delays, Airbus is on track to meet delivery targets

Guillaume Faury, Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury, said that on Tuesday the situation with completed airframes awaiting delayed engine deliveries had improved. However the European planemaker still needs more engines to meet its delivery target. Faury stated in July that the number of gliders, as they are called by the industry, had risen from 60 to a total of 60. He also said that Pratt & Whitney was now responsible for the delays on top of the earlier problems with CFM.

Faury, a reporter at the Global Aerospace Summit of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, said: "We are still in the same position." It has improved slightly, but we still have a lot to ask of the engine manufacturers between now and, say, the end November.

Faury said that the engines are the most difficult part of the supply chain for the aerospace industry, while reaffirming a target by the company to increase jet deliveries to 820 by 7% in 2025.

Faury remains confident, however, that engine manufacturers will be able support Airbus in its planned ramp-up for aircraft deliveries. RTX, which is the parent company of Pratt & Whitney declined to comment.

He said, "We can see that they have a good handle on these issues and that they're mostly behind them."

"But until we have the engines we still know that there will be uncertainty."

The industry is grappling with U.S. Tariffs on plane parts imported from other countries, a softening of U.S. inbound travel, a shortage of air traffic control, and the second bankruptcy of budget airline Spirit Airlines.

Faury said that the largest planemaker in the world is also watching the market, particularly China. Airbus is working towards the opening of a new assembly line there by the end of 2025. Faury is pleased to see that demand for long-distance flight tickets has recovered in a market which is growing rapidly. Bryan Bedford, the Federal Aviation Administration administrator, told the audience earlier in the day that overhauling the U.S. Air Traffic Control System would not be an "easy undertaking" after Congress approved a $12.5 billion initial budget to revamp the United States' aged air traffic system. Air traffic control problems at the FAA have been brewing for years, but recent high-profile incidents, close calls and a January crash between a U.S. Army chopper and an American Airlines regional jet, which killed 67, have raised public concern.

Bedford stated that "this is something that could take many years to complete".

(source: Reuters)