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Flubs And Forecasts

2024/12/20
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Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast

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Garrett Reim
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Graham Warwick
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Guy Norris
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Jens Flottau
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Lee Ann Shay
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Michael Bruno
参与讨论第二次特朗普政府对防务行业和全球联盟的影响。
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Molly McMillin
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Robert Wall
Topics
Michael Bruno: 我认为2024年商业航空业将出现诸多纠纷,但这些纠纷最终得到比预期更快、更意外的解决,波音收购Spirit Aerosystems就是一个例子。 我原以为纠纷会更激烈,持续时间更长,但结果却出乎意料。 Jens Flottau: 我认为航空公司利润率仍然很低,供应链问题将持续存在,这与我之前的预测基本一致,但供应链问题比我预期的更严重,例如GTF发动机和A350飞机的交付问题。 我预测2025年航空业将持续面临供应链挑战、利润率低、延误和成本问题,大型飞机项目进展缓慢。 Garrett Reim: 我认为马斯克和贝索斯的竞争仍在继续,但贝索斯落后了,这与我的预测部分相符。 我预测2025年将是高级空中交通(AAM)行业面临现实考验的一年,人工智能将在航空工程中得到更广泛的应用,尤其是在提高效率方面。 Guy Norris: 我之前的预测关于劳斯莱斯新型发动机的合作关系出现得过早,但发动机行业的变化趋势仍然存在,例如Boom的Symphony Engine Consortium。 我预测2025年超音速和高超音速推进技术领域将会有很多活动,例如Boom的超音速飞机和Hermes的高超音速技术,以及其他一些高超音速推进技术的发展。 Robert Wall: 史蒂夫关于下一代空中优势(NGAD)项目的预测部分正确,因为该项目没有在2024年决定,但也部分错误,因为该项目确实成为了一年中的主要话题。 我预测下一代空中优势(NGAD)项目和未来空中作战系统(FAXX)项目不会合并。 Lee Ann Shay: 我认为飞机维护市场将进一步整合,大型企业将变得更大,我的预测基本准确。 我预测2025年飞机发动机维护将成为焦点,这将导致发动机模块更换、PMA 使用和新型维修材料的需求增加,人工智能和数字化也将继续在飞机维护领域得到应用,特别是考虑到CFM 56和Pratt & Whitney geared turbofan的问题。 Graham Warwick: 我认为高级空中交通(AAM)行业的发展不如预期,一些公司将面临资金问题,一些公司未能按时完成认证,例如Lilium和Universal Hydrogen。 我预测2025年美国不会有高级空中交通(AAM)公司获得认证,人工智能将在座舱中得到应用,氢动力飞机的认证进展缓慢,但一些公司资金充足,有机会在2025年取得进展。 Molly McMillin: 我认为疫情期间进入公务航空业的新进入者大部分会继续留在该行业,供应链挑战将持续存在。 我预测2025年公务航空业的订单将保持强劲,一些新的飞机型号将获得认证,行业领导者将努力与新的政府领导人沟通,以确保有利的政策环境,例如争取100%的加速折旧。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The podcast opens by revisiting predictions made by Aviation Week editors for 2024, focusing on commercial aerospace, airlines, and the impact of supply chain issues. Editors assess their predictions' accuracy, awarding themselves grades ranging from C to C+.
  • Editors' self-assessments of their 2024 predictions ranged from C to C+.
  • Supply chain disruptions significantly impacted airlines.
  • Airline profit margins remained low, similar to 2016-2017 levels.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Welcome to the year-end edition of Aviation Week's Check 6 podcast. I'm Joanne Somo, Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief of Aviation Week and Space Technology Magazine. And today we continue our annual tradition of asking our editors to pull out their crystal balls and predict what's ahead in the coming year. But there's an added twist this year. Guy Ferneyho, our podcast editor, went back and found what they predicted for 2024.

We'll remind each of the editors what they said and how they did, and then ask them to pitch forward into their predictions for 2025. We've got eight editors with us today, so let's get started. Business Editor Michael Bruno, you had said, my prediction is 2024 is going to be the year of airing grievances in commercial aerospace.

I wouldn't say it's going to derail the supply chain, but it's going to sound like the family is having some disputes. How'd you do, Michael? I'd give myself a C or a C plus because there absolutely were disputes. There were plenty of disputes.

little jabs at each other, whether it was people picking on Honeywell International or continuing to call out precision cast parts, forgings, castings, things like that along the lines. But what I didn't see coming was Boeing buying Spirit Aerosystems, which I thought was going to be the biggest dispute. And if anything had the chance to derail what industry was working on, that was going to be it. But

Looks like they're going to work it out internally because they're all going to be one big happy family again. So a bit of a C for myself there in the sense that I thought the disputes would be louder, but it kind of got resolved a little quicker and in a stranger way than I expected. Jens Foto, on to commercial aviation. I think you actually give grades with numbers, not letters, but...

When you gave your prediction last year, you chose to talk about airlines. And you said, after the global financial crisis, airlines entered unprecedented profitability. Then they entered a period of unprecedented losses during COVID. And now they're kind of where they were. So nothing's changed over the long, long period. And I guess that's not very good news. You didn't say anything about Boeing, Airbus or supply chain.

Yeah, so I guess I'm kind of with Michael C, C plus. In principle, I still think that is accurate. If you look at the profit margins, the profits, the overall profits, it's kind of where they were in the, you know, 2016, 2017 timeframe. Not great.

If you look at other industries for the airline industry, okay. What I didn't see coming is how much worse the supply chain got and how much

That affected airlines. If you, I mean, just look at the GTF engines, 700 aircraft on the ground right now. The A350 is looking like it's going to have its worst ever year for deliveries, you know, not counting year one, obviously, where production is always very low. So that one is, yeah, I was clearly off. And I guess I'm in good company with that. But yes, C, C+.

And going forward to 2025, what are some of your key predictions for next year, Jens? Nothing will change. So it's still going to be a struggle on the supply chain side. Profit margins will be very small. Delays will continue. Costs will continue to have this cost debate on the airport side, on the ATC side. There will be a huge capacity shortage that Alans will struggle to deal with. ACMI operators will have another good year.

So it's more of the same. And unfortunately, probably also no news or no big news on future aircraft programs, which the industry really would need to, among others, reach its sustainability targets. I get the feeling that everyone's delaying decisions, moving things further to the right on the engine side, on the OEM side. So in that sense, 2025 might be a lost year.

Moving on to space and editor Garrett Ream. Garrett, last year you said, my prediction for 2024 is that the Elon Musk-Jeff Bezos rivalry will heat up. They say they want to launch New Glenn in August, a heavy launch rival to SpaceX Starship.

Also, Kuiper is the Amazon broadband communications constellation that's getting going and could be a serious rival to Starlink. And yet it really seemed that SpaceX pulled away even further this year, didn't it? Yeah, they did. Although I gave myself an A for effort. The Bezos rivalry with Musk seems to be still going, but Bezos has definitely fallen behind Amazon and

Blue Origin, you know, space industry is perpetually delayed and it should be more predictable that they weren't going to launch on time. But they do have some some deadlines with the FCC to get some Kuiper satellites launched. So there's some pressure growing on Bezos to to catch up.

Yeah, sort of half true. The rivalry still goes strong. It's got a new fold now with how deeply embedded Musk is within the Trump administration. And yeah, we'll see what happens going forward. So pitch us forward, Garrett. What are some of your key predictions for 2025? Yeah, I mean, looking at advanced air mobility, it seems like 2025 is going to be the year of truth or the year of...

you know, reality hitting, uh, there's, uh, Joby and Archer trying to get FAA certification. Uh, you know, what real progress they make towards that will, will maybe get a little bit, uh, exposed this year. And then, you know, how will the markets react? These are both publicly traded companies and I think you need more funding to keep going and testing and all, and so on and so forth. Um,

And then I think you'll see just a ton more announcements around AI and greater use of software in trying to improve engineering processes within various companies. And there's a growing realization that a lot of time is wasted, not on engineering, but on, you know, the paperwork and the tedious stuff that's not actually product creation.

Okay, thank you. Moving on to Propulsion and Guy Norris. Guy, for the better part of the last year, you reminded me that you went last last year. So we're going to bring you in earlier this time. You had said, I think in 2024, one of the things that might emerge is a new partnership on a new family of Rolls-Royce Ultra fans.

to take on the might of CFM with the Rise program, possibly involving non-traditional players. The old world of propulsion that we've seen for the last 70 years is under some sort of change.

Right. Yes. Thanks, Joe. And I first of all, can I just say I didn't realize you're going to hold us to these predictions and publicly embarrass us by making us see how badly we did. But anyway, that's that's the way we go. So, yes, I think I might have jumped the gun in that case quite significantly. I was really but, you know, I'm still I still think underneath it all.

something's moving in that direction. And I did say that things as we know it are changing in the engine business. And that does...

That did sort of start to happen with, you know, the development of the Symphony Engine Consortium for Boom, for example. So there are a couple of things that I got right, but basically I'm not very good at forecasting. So, and that just proved it. But I'm hoping that one day there will be the emergence of something like a new consortium to challenge the rise. I mean, why not?

Okay. And so pitch us ahead. Try again, guy. What do you think some highlights will be for 2025? The weird thing is that in the old days, well, in the old days, the past sort of 20 years at least, one of the areas that there really has not been much in the way of is in faster than sound travel, you know, supersonics, hypersonics, sound.

And now it's perhaps a safer area to forecast than the subsonic market, certainly in terms of new developments. And that's where I think we're going to see a lot of activity in 2025. I mentioned Boom briefly there. They, of course, will be hoping to go very soon in the early new year to Mark 1 plus and they're testing the XB1, which should sort of at least help their, you know, their

fundraising side as they continue to do the development of the bigger, the airline, the overture. And then looking at other areas, of course, out in the desert up at Edwards Air Force Base, we'll have Hermes with the Quarter Horse and

you know, paving the way for their stepwise program to develop hypersonic technology. And we're going to see a lot of areas of high-speed research continuing to bear fruit and things like rotating detonation. These are all air-breathing concepts. So I think, you know, we're going to see Venus Aerospace, for example, continue to do

pretty impressive things with their concept. So, yeah, I think high-speed propulsion will be another area to watch. So that's my safe prediction for 25 for you. Okay, Guy, we'll definitely come back next year, see how you did.

Moving on to defense. Unfortunately, Steve Trimble, our defense editor, could not be here, but his boss, Robert Wall, who just joined Aviation Week this year, rejoined, is standing in for Steve. So Robert, Steve's prediction was

The biggest program that's going to get decided will be the U.S. Air Force's next generation air dominance. I'm not going to pick a winner. We know so little about this program that any prediction is a wild guess. So how'd Steve do?

Yeah, well, since it's review time, it's actually really good to reflect on these things. So how did Steve do? Well, he did arguably very well and arguably very poorly because, of course, NGAD was not decided.

So in that respect, he did really well. He couldn't pick a winner and neither could the Air Force. So I don't want to give him a full failing grade. I think, you know, he pointed to the big story of the year for sure. I mean, the NGAD drama has been playing out

Now, really, for the last six months, we had all this tension and excitement building around the downslope, which then didn't happen and didn't happen. And then the Air Force said it was having second thoughts about the program. You know, now they've basically said we're going to punt it to the next administration. So I do think, Steve.

clearly identified what was the big theme in the defense industrial landscape here. Just got a bit wrong. Not as wrong as Guy did with his prediction, but a bit wrong. So how about Robert Wall's prediction for 2025? What are your predictions? Well, I could have set the bar really low and say Endural and General Atomics will fly their CCAs for the end of the Air Force program. But I admit that is a bit lame. So

I very, you know, with the Reagan forum here, though, just a few days ago, there was the suggestion made that maybe NGAD and FAXX should merge. And I guess one prediction I'll make is that ain't going to happen. I'm not sure if one or both of the programs will survive, but I don't think anyone has appetite for another merge program a la F-35. So so I'll leave those two with you and let Steve mock me at the end of next year.

Thank you, Robert. Leanne Shea, moving on to MRO. You had predicted a year ago, quote, the aircraft maintenance market is still really fragmented. I think it's ripe for further investment and further consolidation. The big are going to get bigger.

So I would give myself like an A minus because there was consolidation and Lufthansa Technique said that I had predicted they would announce a new European facility. They didn't do that until December 9th. So I would have gotten downgraded if they wouldn't have like eat that announcement out at the end of the year. So I kind of got saved by there. Otherwise I'd be like in the B category, but I think I did pretty well. Still, you know, the market still is tight, you know, and so going forward, you know,

I think 2025 is going to be the year of the engine. Everything's going to be focused about the engine. You know, Safran is expecting CFM 56 shop visits to peak in 2025, like 2,300 engine inductions. That's a lot of engines right there. But then you take the CFM leap and in between just overhauls and shop visits, you've got another like 2,000 inductions.

Now, on top of that, you still have the Pratt & Whitney geared turbofan performance issues, groundings of about like 350 aircraft at any one time. And then you add on to the aircraft OEM still struggling with the delivery targets. So you've got older engines, you know, continuing to power those mature aircraft.

So some of those are going to have to be going in for another shop and another overhaul, things that would have never been predicted several years ago. So this is all leading to greater engine module swaps, PMA usage, and new serviceable material. Those things have been happening the last few years, but I think next year that's going to be even higher.

And I agree with Garrett. He mentioned artificial intelligence. We've seen a lot of applications coming out for being introduced for the aftermarket in this year. And that's just going to keep continuing and as well as digitalization. I think MROs who have not been working on digitalization efforts are probably going to slip by a little bit in 2025. Thanks, Leanne.

Moving on to Graham Warwick. Graham, if anyone at Aviation Week knows everything about everything, it's you. Last year, you chose to talk about AAM, Advanced Air Mobility, and you said, quote, My prediction for 2024 is that it is not going to go the way people want it to. There will be folks that don't stay on their certification tracks and don't meet their deadlines.

There are probably some folks in advanced air mobility that will have some serious funding issues during 2024. I think you did pretty well there. Is there a letter higher than A? Because I think I got it. Mind you, that was an easy target to aim for, right? So I have to, you know, everybody else was going for much harder targets than I was going for. So, yeah, so that's what happened.

Everybody moved their certification targets back. We had one failure, which is not eVTOL, but was in the hydrogen propulsion. Universal Hydrogen closed its doors. Lilium went into insolvency and is now operating in self-administration while it tries to find either a buyer or some funding from somewhere.

So vertical aerospace in the UK kind of pulled itself out of immediate problems, but it's still a long way from having the money it needs to get to a certified airplane. And there's some issues around Volocopter, who was one of the early leaders in this industry, and they are still trying to close a financing deal that will keep them afloat.

Meanwhile, Gareth mentioned them, Joby and Archer are the market leaders by and large, and they have had great success in continuing to bring in money. I mean, Joby brought in $500 million just from Toyota, its major external shareholder, and Archer just brought in another $400 million plus by creating a defense division, basically, that will take its EV toll technology and apply it to cars.

So the military market with the ever-present Angeril as its partner. So no significant progress through the year, some failures, some standouts. So you can ask me what's going to come next. Indeed.

So I'm going to go further than Garrett said. Other than we don't know what's going to happen with Volocopter. If Volocopter gets money and stays afloat, they may certify in Europe in 2025. So I'll give that caveat. In the US, nobody's going to certify in 2025. They will miss their deadlines.

They might make it in 2026, which means they might launch service in 2026 if they certify early enough in the year. But I don't think they'll launch service in 2026. I think it's 2027 before we see service in the US. And that's kind of the timescale this thing should have been right from the beginning. The original timescales these companies put out were unattainable.

And what they've done is they've started fast and then they've slowed down to exactly the same pace as the rest of the aerospace industry.

And that's what certification does to you. So a lot of people have mentioned AI. We are on track to get the first in-cockpit applications of AI certified in 2025. And that's for situational awareness, basically, pilot assistance, situational awareness. So that's going to be a big step when we get those first ones certified. But again, it might not happen. But I kind of think that it will at some point during 2025.

I don't think we're going to see much progress on the hydrogen side because we're in that doing the hard work of certification. We don't expect any progress, any certification progress until 2026. But the players that are still in the running are reasonably well-funded and have a chance of getting through this year ahead of us. And I think Leanne mentioned, again, going back to AI, Leanne's mentioned how much it's turning up in MRO markets

We are beginning to see some fairly significant announcements around the use of AI in the design space, from the conceptual through the early stages of design and beginning to push all the way through

into the latter stages, the optimization of the manufacturing and all that sort of thing. So I think that's only going to pick up pace. And it's been very hard to write about AI up until now because we haven't had concrete applications other than the big data processing type of thing that folks do to really look at aerospace and say, how does AI actually apply to aerospace? We are beginning to see some concrete applications.

Now, we're not certifying any of those applications yet because we have not yet got to grips with certifying machine learning and all of the unpredictability that can be built into that somewhat not transparent process of how it comes up with its answer. But we're going to see folks get to grips with that through 2025.

You know, is my result stark, as I said last year? No, it's not as stark, but we're not going to have that. We are not going to have the progress that people even today think we're going to have. It's going to continue to be a push to get things through.

Thank you, Graham. And here to take us to the finish line today is Molly McMillan, who's here to talk about business aviation. And Molly, you had a year ago said something to watch in 2024 will be weather orders weaken. Will those who entered the industry during the COVID pandemic remain in it for the long term? And prediction number two, supply chain challenges will continue. That was the understatement of the year, wasn't it?

It was. I guess I was kind of easy on myself because those were pretty easy to predict, probably. Did new entrants stay in business aviation? The answer seems to be yes, for the most part. All the OEMs, you know, said that during COVID, the number of people that got into business aviation for the first time was like at record levels. Yeah.

As an example, Embraer said up to 40% of all their new buyers were new owners of business aircraft. And that's compared to normally it's 9% to 12%. Of that, only 8% got rid of their airplanes since then. And of those, the majority were buying a different aircraft. So I would guess resoundingly, except for some

you know, here and there, the answer is yes. The charter market, some people have left the charter market but moved on to fractional or ownership and some have gone back to the airlines. But I think everyone is still seeing, you know, all boats were lifted during COVID. So as far as orders, they seem like they have increased

gotten to more sustained level, although OEMs are still saying that their demand is continuing. So I expect that to continue in 2025. The Citation Ascend, the Beechcraft Denali, and the Global 8000, I predict they are supposed to be certified in 2025, and I think they will

One thing to watch is there are new leaders in government, both in the U.S. and in Europe. And along with that, a new administration, a new commission, and business aviation leaders are planning and in the midst of going to educate those new leaders on business aviation to make sure that the policies are favorable for that industry. Some things that I think will happen, you

possible, the return of 100% bonus depreciation, which had run out. That always gives a boost to sales. Maybe a reevaluation of targeted IRS audits on business aviation owners. It'll depend on tariffs. If the tariffs take place, that might mitigate

The business aviation may affect the engines, which a lot of them come from Canada. So that kind of remains to be seen. And of course, the easy prediction, labor and supply challenges to continue into 2025. And on that note, we have a wrap for this podcast and for our Check 6 podcast of 2024. Thanks to all of you for providing and sharing your insights.

Thanks to our listeners for listening to us all year. We really enjoy doing Check 6, and sometimes it's quite a bit of fun. A special thanks to our podcast editor in London, Guy Ferneyhoe, whose idea was to dredge up last year's predictions and put all of you on the carpet. If you're mad about it, please see Guy.

And finally, if you're listening to us in Apple Podcasts and want to support this podcast, please leave us a star rating or write a review. Better yet, share this episode with a friend or a colleague. We'll see you again in January. Have a safe and happy holiday season.

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