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FlightGlobal

FlightGlobal

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Global aviation industry news, including military aviation.

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Reflections on 2025 Order and Delivery Figures
Video•Jan 26, 2026

Reflections on 2025 Order and Delivery Figures

Flight Global Focus opened its 2026 season by dissecting 2025 order and delivery data for the two industry giants, Airbus and Boeing. The podcast highlighted that Airbus out‑delivered Boeing—793 versus 600 aircraft—while Boeing captured a larger share of new orders, logging 1,175 against Airbus’s 1,000. The discussion unpacked several trends: the A321neo dominated half of Airbus’s order book, the A320 family finally overtook the 737 in cumulative deliveries, and Airbus’s A350 orders split evenly between the 900 and 1000 variants, signaling renewed interest in the larger model. Supply‑chain friction persisted for both firms; Airbus wrestled with fuselage‑panel thickness issues and engine delays, prompting a strategic acquisition of Spirit AeroSystems’ center‑fuselage work to unclog A350 production. Boeing, meanwhile, rebounded from a 2024 door‑plug incident, lifted its 737 production cap to 38 units per month and is seeking FAA clearance to reach 42‑52 units monthly, while also expanding 787 capacity. Notable anecdotes underscored the narrative: David Kaminsky noted the historic A320 milestone, John Headinger linked Boeing’s order surge to President Trump’s trade‑deal diplomacy, and both analysts cited Spirit’s troubled legacy as a common pain point now being addressed through ownership. Boeing’s confidence in a quality‑free 2025 and Airbus’s three‑year plan to raise A350 output to 12 per month by 2028 were presented as pivotal forward‑looking metrics. The implications are clear: Airbus must resolve lingering supply‑chain constraints to capitalize on A321neo demand and launch the A350 freighter, while Boeing’s ability to sustain higher 737 and 787 rates hinges on successful Spirit integration and regulatory approval. Investors and airlines will watch these production targets closely, as they dictate capacity, pricing power, and competitive positioning in a market still reshaped by pandemic recovery and geopolitical trade dynamics.

By FlightGlobal