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The order, for narrow-bodied planes such as A320neo, A321neo, and A321XLR, will cement its growth plans in the next decade with deliveries taking place from 2030 to 2035.
The airline did not place any order for wide-bodied aircraft. “The engine selection for this order will be done in due course and so will be the exact mix of A320 and A321 aircraft,” IndiGo stated. While IndiGo had selected Pratt & Whitney for the first batch of A320Neo aircraft, it chose CFM engines in 2019 and 2021. The CFM agreement covers 580 planes that IndiGo ordered in two tranches.
The purchase agreement was signed by Rahul Bhatia, promoter and managing director of IndiGo; Venkataramani Sumantran, chairman; and Pieter Elbers, chief executive officer (CEO), on one side, and Guillaume Faury, CEO of Airbus, and Christian Scherer, chief commercial officer, on the other, at the Paris Air Show 2023.
The order will be for both incremental growth and replacement and is seen as a way to secure a delivery pipeline as the Airbus order book is fast filling up.
With IndiGo’s announcement, Air India’s has been pushed to being the world’s second-largest, single-tranche order.
The total order enables IndiGo to fulfil its mission to continue to boost “economic growth, social cohesion and mobility” in India, he added. “This order strongly reaffirms IndiGo’s belief in the growth of India, in the A320 family and in our strategic partnership with Airbus,” Elbers said.
The airline operates 13,039 flights a week, which is about 13.3 per cent more than what it was a year ago, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.
“It is also a resounding endorsement of the A320 Family’s best-in-class operating economics that have been powering IndiGo’s growth for almost two decades. We cherish our long-standing relationship with IndiGo and are proud of our success together,” he added.
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