The world's biggest jets are headed for the boneyard

The mighty Airbus A380 and Boeing 747 helped shrink the world, but now the airlines which flew them are shrinking to survive.

By David Fickling, August 26 2020
The world's biggest jets are headed for the boneyard

The queens of the skies have fallen on hard times. As Covid-19 has frozen the international travel on which they once thrived, double-decker, four-engine planes like the Airbus A380 and Boeing 747 are more likely to be found in storage than soaring through the skies.

Carriers such as Pan Am used the 747 to turn aviation into a global industry in the 1970s, and over the past decade Emirates used the A380 to repeat the trick for the global south – but those times have passed.

Since mid-March, most have barely flown except on short hops to maintain pilots’ certifications and valedictory voyages to gather dust in desert boneyards.

All of BA's Boeing 747s are headed for the hangar, never to return to the skies.
All of BA's Boeing 747s are headed for the hangar, never to return to the skies.

Many of those furloughs look like becoming permanent. British Airways, which until now retained the world's largest fleet of 747-400s, has grounded all 31 of them for good. Qantas has  bid farewell to its last 747 and has already suspended its stable of A380s.

Read more: Final call – Qantas farewells the iconic Boeing 747 jumbo jet

Among the 15 operators of the A380, which entered service less than 13 years ago, only Emirates has been operating flights in anything close to a normal fashion, according to data from aircraft-tracking site Flightradar24.

The bulk of Emirates' A380 superjumbos remain grounded.
The bulk of Emirates' A380 superjumbos remain grounded.

Out of its 115 such planes – about half the global fleet – just a dozen have been flying to and from Europe over the past month or so, as limited traffic has trickled back. China Southern Airlines has also been running a limited service with its five A380s.

However, the vast majority of the planes – worth some $50 billion, if valued at about half of their list prices – have been stuck on the tarmac, possibly permanently. Qatar Airways has speculated that its A380s may never return, while Lufthansa  has made similar noises.

Read more: Qatar CEO says A380s "will not return for at least a year, maybe never"

Time is running out for the A380

By the time the long-haul routes for which the A380 was designed return to normal in 2024 or so, about half the fleet will be at least a decade old and well on the way toward retirement.

Singapore Airlines, the biggest A380 operator after Emirates, said in first-quarter results that it may write down “older generation aircraft” such as its A380s by around US$1 billion.

Read more: Future of Singapore Airlines' A380 in limbo as network, fleet reviewed

It’s a similar picture with the 747. Of the 29 planes operated by Lufthansa – the largest passenger fleet, once British Airways’ jets have retired – just four have remained in regular operation since March, with a further four gradually returning to service over the past two months.

The pandemic saw Qantas retire its Boeing 747s ahead of time.
The pandemic saw Qantas retire its Boeing 747s ahead of time.

Probably the most active operator of passenger 747s at this point is Aeroflot, plus a handful of charter operators that run seasonal flights to holiday destinations and pilgrimage services to Saudi Arabia. Even there, though, foreign pilgrims at this year’s hajj will be confined to 10,000 people already in the country.

The reasons for the decline of these jets aren’t hard to discern.

Even at the best of times, it can be challenging to fill more than 400 seats at a time, and a plane with more than 20% of seats empty will typically lose money – and that’s before you start thinking about the costs of providing crew and destination accommodation for such vast aircraft.

With the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 able to achieve similar ranges using just two engines and smaller cabins, the economics of double-decker planes no longer make a lot of sense.

U.S. airlines in particular have long since given up on the jumbo. They never bought a single A380, and last took delivery of a 747 a few months after the September 11, 2001, attacks, when Northwest Airlines bought two before later going bankrupt and being taken over by Delta Air Lines.

Could cargo keep the Boeing 747s flying?

There’s one area that’s been booming, however: freight.

Air cargo typically takes up a substantial share of the belly space on passenger flights, but with borders closed to tourism, the semiconductors, high-value materials and consumer goods that typically travel beneath your feet have had to find a new route to market.

Cargo traffic this year will be down just 17% from a year earlier, compared to 55% for passenger flights, according to the International Air Transport Association.

That could provide a final chapter for the 747 – although not for the A380, which isn’t easily converted to cargo usage.

Cathay Pacific still flies the Boeing 747, but as a cargo carrier rather than a people-mover.
Cathay Pacific still flies the Boeing 747, but as a cargo carrier rather than a people-mover.

Boeing’s jumbo is already a freight aircraft in all but name, with about two-thirds of the latest 747-800 variant being sold to freight carriers such as UPS and Cathay Pacific's logistics arm.

Even non-cargo aircraft can get in on the act: KLM has been carrying face masks and protective gowns on the seats of ordinary passenger aircraft pressed into pandemic freight service.

That would be an appropriate end for grand planes often likened to ocean liners.

Some of the most celebrated ships of the great age of sea transport ended their lives as coal hulks, quarantine centers and floating museums after aircraft rendered them obsolete.

The ultimate fate of jumbo jets may be similarly prosaic: As workaday aircraft, shipping goods to a more home-bound global population.

Also read: The Qantas Boeing 747 – looking back on a half-century of flying

This article is published under license from Bloomberg Media: the original article can be viewed here

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Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

14 Sep 2012

Total posts 381

Question for those in the know around cargo/freight. I understand the 747 has always been a favourite for cargo due to its size and the nose section being able to open/close. Would QF have considered converting some of its 747s into freighters rather than sending them to Mojave? 

22 Apr 2020

Total posts 8

Id imagine it's hard to compete with the economics of 777 conversions.

31 Mar 2014

Total posts 379

Pretty sure the opening/closing nose is only for factory 747 freights. It isn't available on passenger converted freighters

Emirates Airlines - Skywards

19 Jan 2018

Total posts 23

I've said it before and I'll say it again.... I for one will be very sad to see the demise of the A380 should that happen. It is by far the best aircraft I've ever flown on. The upstairs J class cabin is so much quieter when compared to other single level aircraft. And as a frequent long haul passenger on the Emirates A380 (pre-covid of course) who could not love that bar at the back?! It will be a very sad day if the biggest of all the birds disappears!

United Airlines - Mileage Plus

12 Sep 2011

Total posts 329

Sad to say A380 is laready gone LH QR EY etc etc et al 

16 Mar 2014

Total posts 20

I heard that some pilots refer to the A380 as the Hyundai of the skies!

26 Aug 2020

Total posts 1

Not Aeroflot, but its subsidiary Rossiya Airlines operates ex-Transaero 747-400s on trunk domestic routes (like from Moscow to Sochi and Simferopol) and long houl domestic flights (like from Moscow to Russian Far East)

Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

10 Jan 2017

Total posts 40

Thanks for everything China 


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