Flight International 09Mar2020

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18 | Flight International | 3-9 March 2020 flightglobal.com

ANALYSIS ROB MORRIS LONDON

A changing environment in retirement


Max grounding altered market in 2019 as airlines maintained capacity; narrowbody will exert similar influence this year


I


n the past decade 6,208 com-
mercial jet aircraft were perma-
nently retired from service and
either parted out or scrapped –
82% more than the 3,418 retired
in the previous 10-year period
between 2000 and 2009.
Perhaps this is not surprising,
as deliveries in the period 1980-
1989 were almost 40% higher
than in 1970-1979.
With finite economic lives,
retirement volumes should be di-
rectly proportionate to historical
delivery volumes. Yet we saw
80% more retirements on deliv-
eries that were only 40% higher.
The conclusion is that over the
past 10 years, average economic
life must have declined. Data
backs this up: the average age of
retirements in 2008 at 31.6 years
fell throughout the decade just
passed to 23.8 years in 2019.
The average age at economic
retirement – the retirement age
adjusted for the last in-service
date before the aircraft was
placed into storage before final
part-out – was 22.3 years.
In addition, the number of air-
craft retiring before their 15th an-
niversary has largely ticked up,
with some 400 sub 15-year-old
aircraft parted out in the past 10
years, including 55 in 2019.
The pattern in annual retire-
ments through the decade has in-
itially been of annual increases
reaching a peak at almost 800
aircraft in 2013, before a mix of
annual declines or increases,
with an overall downward trend.
From the 632 retirements in
2017, we saw 498 in 2018.

MITIGATING FACTORS
With traffic demand strong and
OEMs struggling to establish in-
creased production rates, it is
logical that annual retirements
declined in 2018.
In 2019, we were expecting
much of the same. And then of
course in March last year the Boe-
ing 737 Max was grounded and
deliveries temporarily ceased.

Through the early months of
the grounding, global traffic
growth slowed somewhat but
still remained in the 4-5% range,
as airlines sought to maintain ca-
pacity growth by retaining older
aircraft in service or wet-leasing
extra capacity. However, more re-
cently, demand has slowed to-
wards the 3-4% range while ca-
pacity growth has fallen to 2-3%,
as airlines have seen weakening
demand fundamentals and recog-
nised the logic in allowing capac-
ity growth to slow, even in the
absence of Max deliveries.
In light of this, it seems credible
that in 2019 we could have ex-
pected to see retirements tick up
again as they did in 2017. At pre-
sent, the figure for last year stands
at 546 retirements, although this
is  likely to rise slightly as more
data becomes available, probably
settling somewhere in the
600-650 region.
However, what actually was
retired in 2019? At the summary
level, there were 87 regional jets,
321 single-aisles and 138 twin-
aisles withdrawn from use.
Single-aisle retirements were
dominated by the Boeing MD-80/
MD-90, where American Airlines
removed the former from its fleet
completely and Delta Air Lines
made strides towards doing the

same for both types. However, it
is also notable that more than 120
Airbus A320-family aircraft were
retired; the relatively short period
between the average and effective
age of retirement indicates that
these aircraft moved rapidly to
part-out to feed continued de-
mand for spares.

COMPELLING ECONOMICS
Of course, 44 of these were the
less popular A318/A319 variants,
but we still saw 63 A320s and 14
A321s parted out last year.
Even more remarkable is that
there were 55 737NGs parted out,
including 18 737-800s. Given the
Max situation, it is surprising to
see even this level of 737-800 re-
tirement in 2019.
But bear in mind that all these
aircraft are pre-2001 vintage ex-
amples, which command lower
lease rates – around $165,000 per
month – compared with a part-
out value of $16.9 million.
For now, given the continued
absence of the Max in the market,
we are seeing still further
strengthening of 737-800 lease
rates, with pricing for A320ceos
similarly strong.
With this in mind, should we
expect fewer part-outs of 737NG-
and A320-family aircraft in 2020?
That really depends on when in

2020 the Max returns to service
and new aircraft deliveries resume.
However, the respective family
survivor curves at the end of 2019
indicate that if we were in a “nor-
mal” scenario today, we might
expect to see some 162 A320ceo-
and 90 737NG- family aircraft
retired in 2020.
The reality, though, is that the
volume of retirements this year
will be inextricably linked to the
Max return to service. Once that
is achieved, Boeing will immedi-
ately move to deliver as many of
the 400-plus Max jets already
built but not yet delivered as rap-
idly as airlines can accommodate
them. And following the tempo-
rary production pause, deliveries
from the line will also restart. As-
cend currently estimates 280-
Max deliveries in 2020.
Once the new normal is estab-
lished, we expect the single-aisle
market to begin to move to a sur-
plus (if demand remains weak, as
IATA predicts in 2020) and the
2,450 A320ceo/737NG aircraft
that are older than 15 years but
still in passenger airline service
today become exposed to earlier
retirement as airlines winnow
out less efficient models. ■
Rob Morris is head of
consultancy at Ascend
by Cirium

Reduced economic lifespan for commercial aircraft is driving scrappage rate as jets come out of service

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