Mid-Year Aerospace and Air Transport report

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Mid-Year Aerospace and Air Transport

REPORT

July 2020

PUBLICATIONS

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ILLUSTRATION: GRZEGORZ RZEKOS

Farnborough International Airshow 2018 merged with a computer highlight the challenges facing show organizers during the Covid-19 pandemic while heralding the creativity that went into this year’s FIA Connect event, conducted entirely online.

Aero industry assembles online

Pandemic

by Charles Alcock

Sustainability

This week should have seen more than 80,000 aviation industry professionals assemble for the Farnborough International Airshow, but instead they found themselves reflecting on where the Covid-19 pandemic, which triggered its cancellation, has left the aerospace business. The online FIA Connect event provided that opportunity, and on the foreheads of about 150 panelists in more than 70 webinars it was easy to visualize the burning questions on their minds: how bad will this crisis be, when will it start getting better, what will the dreaded “new normal” look like, and what steps do my colleagues and I need to take to get there? The consensus was refreshingly candid, built on an expectation that the industry needs to dig in for a recovery more challenging than other crises in living memory, including the first Gulf War, 9/11, the financial crisis of 2008, and the SARS epidemic. Panelists used the term “perfect storm” more than once to describe the grim confluence of steep economic downturn, public health emergency, government travel

restrictions, and widespread fear of travel and human interaction itself. Perhaps the clearest assessment came from the Roland Berger consultancy, which this week issued a report envisioning no prospect of airline capacity returning to 2019

levels until 2024. The company believes that the civil aerospace sector has just about gotten through the crisis-management phase, characterized by painful cost-cutting and job losses. continues on page 26

Tempest a game-changer by David Donald Speakers at a series of FIA Connect webinars this week have underlined the revolutionary way in which the Tempest program partners have undertaken development of a future combat air system (FCAS), as well as its significant effects on the national skills base, economy, defense industrial capabilities, and the ability of air forces to maintain an operational advantage. The program is adopting new processes and new ways of approaching challenges

to not only make the Tempest FCAS a “system-of-systems,” capable of defeating the threat and successfully achieving desired effects in future operations, but one achieved with maximum development and manufacturing efficiency to reduce costs and development times to around half of what can be achieved traditionally. “We need a game-changer, we need new approaches,” said Dave Holmes, continues on page 26

Airlines dealing with Covid cuts › page 6 SAF and hydrogen may power the future › page 8

Manufacturing Smart factories forging a digital path› page 18

Mobility EmbraerX flies eVTOL simulator › page 20

Diversity Panel aims to welcome women › page 28

Emissions Net-zero seeks carbon cuts by 2050 › page 46


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Mid-Year Aerospace and Air Transport report by Aviation International News - Issuu