A Boeing 737 Max takes part in flying display at the 52nd Paris Air Show

Boeing revised up its rolling 20-year industry forecast for passenger and freight planes by 4 percent on Tuesday, though signs at the world’s biggest air show suggest a cooling of demand at the moment after years of red-hot growth.
The US planemaker continued to rack up orders at the Paris Airshow for a new version of its best-selling 737 aircraft, which was launched amid a flurry of deals.
Leasing firm Aviation Capital Group (ACG), for example, said on Tuesday it had placed an order for 20 of the new 737 MAX 10 jets, worth a total of $2.5 billion at list prices.
“It is getting a big endorsement from airlines and that is leading to more lessors endorsing it too,” Ihssane Mounir, Boeing vice president of sales and marketing, told reporters.
But analysts expect demand at the June 19-25 event to fall short of recent years and some aviation companies themselves have cut back staff and hospitality at the show.
Over the longer-term, though, Boeing sees an industry in rude health, forecasting 41,030 industry deliveries over the next two decades, up from 39,620 in a similar projection a year ago and topping $6 trillion in value.
That includes a 5 percent increase in the 20-year forecast for deliveries of single-aisle aircraft like the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 families, respectively the cash cows of the world’s two largest aircraft manufacturers.
Boeing now expects 29,530 deliveries in the medium-haul single-aisle category, which is popular with low-cost airlines.
Planemakers also see growing opportunities in aviation services. Boeing forecast that market could be worth $8.5 trillion over 20 years, growing at an average 4 percent a year.
Air travel has been on a sharp uptrend, led by emerging economies as China looks set to replace North America as the world’s biggest transport market in coming years.
But China’s growth is now slowing even though it remains above 6 percent a year. Boeing trimmed its 20-year forecast for average global traffic growth to 4.7 percent from 4.8 percent.
Airbus took a similar step in its own 20-year forecast released earlier this month, while increasing the projection for total deliveries by 6 percent, compared with last year’s edition, to 34,899 aircraft.
Boeing’s overall tally is a bigger number partly because it counts aircraft with 90 seats or more, whereas Airbus starts at 100 seats.
Need for new blood
The worldwide commercial aviation industry will need an extra 255,000 pilots by 2027 to sustain its rapid growth and it is not moving fast enough to fill the positions, according to a 10-year forecast published by training company CAE Inc.
More than half of the required pilots have not yet begun training, the report added.
“Rapid fleet expansion and high pilot retirement rates create a further need to develop 180,000 first officers into new airline captains, more than in any previous decade,” said the report by CAE, which trains pilots for airlines around the world.
“The shortage of pilots is a problem today. There is demand today, so people need to start building a strategy with us or other professional academies to be able to build that pipeline,” Nick Leontidis, CAE’s group president for civil aviation training solutions told journalists at the Paris Airshow on Tuesday.
Rival L3 also operates pilot training academies.
To meet demand, Leontidis said CAE would seek to grow its own training academy business, rather than make acquisitions.
Pilot unions in the US have said low wages and limited benefits for entry-level positions are deterring a new generation of potential aviators from pursuing the career. In the US, training requirements also are a hurdle for many would-be pilots.

Source: Arab News