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Supply chain will plague airlines in 2025

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) expects severe supply chain issues to continue to undermine airline performance into 2025, raising costs and limiting growth.

IATA quantified the scale of the challenges facing airlines because of supply chain issues in its latest airline industry outlook:

“Supply chain issues are frustrating every airline with a triple whammy on revenues, costs, and environmental performance,” said Willie Walsh, IATA director general. “Load factors are at record highs and there is no doubt that, if we had more aircraft, they could be profitably deployed, so our revenues are being compromised. 

“Meanwhile, the aging fleet that airlines are using has higher maintenance costs, burns more fuel, and takes more capital to keep it flying. And, on top of this, leasing rates have risen more than interest rates as competition among airlines intensified the scramble to find every way possible to expand capacity. This is a time when airlines need to be fixing their battered post-pandemic balance sheets, but progress is effectively capped by supply chain issues that manufacturers need to resolve.”

IATA said that persistent supply chain issues were at least partially responsible for two negative developments:

“The entire aviation sector is united in its commitment to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050,” said Walsh. “But when it comes to the practicality of actually getting there, airlines are left bearing the biggest burden. 

“The supply chain issues are a case in point. Manufacturers are letting down their airline customers and that is having a direct impact of slowing down airlines’ efforts to limit their carbon emissions. If the aircraft and engine manufacturers could sort out their issues and keep their promises, we’d have a more fuel-efficient fleet in the air.”

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