Falling plane values, e-commerce rise fuels boom in
converting passenger planes to freighters
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[December 14, 2020] By
Jamie Freed, Ari Rabinovitch and Allison Lampert
SYDNEY/JERUSALEM/MONTREAL (Reuters) - From
Air Canada to China's CDB Aviation, airlines and leasing firms are
rushing to permanently convert older passenger jets into freighters,
betting on a boom in e-commerce as the value of used planes tumbles amid
the pandemic.
That has created a huge opportunity for passenger-to-freighter (P2F)
conversion companies, including Singapore Technologies (ST) Engineering
Ltd, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and U.S.-based Aeronautical
Engineers Inc.
Aviation analytics firm Cirium expects the number of P2F conversions
globally will rise by 36% to 90 planes in 2021, and to 109 planes in
2022.
"We estimate that most slots are sold for 2021 and at least 40% for
2022," Cirium Head of Market Analysis Chris Seymour said. "There is an
increase in newer-generation programs, notably the 737-800 and A321 as
well as the A330, although older types like the 767 continue to see
strong demand, driven in the past few years by Amazon building their own
fleet."
The market value of 15-year-old planes has fallen by 20% to 47% since
the start of the year depending on the model, according to advisory firm
Ishka, which makes freighter conversions more attractive.
Air Canada is looking to convert several of its Boeing Co 767s, Russia's
S7 Group is acquiring its first 737-800 converted freighters from lessor
GECAS, and lessor CDB Aviation has ordered two Airbus SE A330
conversions from ST Engineering's EFW joint venture with Airbus.
The P2F conversions are a step beyond the cheaper temporary conversions
many airlines have implemented during the pandemic, which remove
passenger seats to carry more cargo.
Permanent conversions are a financial bet that air freight demand, which
was weak before COVID-19, will remain strong for years to come as
shoppers turn to e-commerce. The airline industry estimates it will take
until 2024 for passenger traffic to recover to 2019 levels.
Freight markets are notoriously volatile, however, and have been beset
by extended downturns; shortage can quickly turn into overcapacity,
analysts warn.
Normally about half of the world's cargo is carried in the bellies of
passenger planes, but the hit to demand has left the world more reliant
on dedicated freighters.
"2020 has seen record high freighter aircraft utilisation, and our view
is that the pandemic has accelerated the long-term structural shift
towards increased e-commerce demand," said CDB Aviation chief executive
Patrick Hannigan.
Boeing said cargo yields had risen by 40% through September because of
the pandemic-related passenger disruptions, and it forecasts more than
60% of freighter deliveries over the next 20 years will be conversions
rather than new widebody freighters like the 777. Narrowbody freighters
are almost all conversions.
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Labourers work inside and around a passenger plane as they convert
it into a cargo plane at Israel Aerospace Industries site in Ben
Gurion International Airport, Lod, Israel December 10, 2020.
REUTERS/ Ronen Zvulun
The conversion boom is also helping aviation maintenance, repair and
overhaul groups offset some of the lost business from the decline in
passenger flights.
Such conversions generally cost millions of dollars on top of the cost
of the aircraft and take three to four months, said ST Engineering
Aerospace president Jeffrey Lam said.
His company is ramping up capacity, with plans to convert at least 18
A321 planes next year, rising to around 25-30 annually in the future, up
from single digits this year.
"We are all booked out for 2021 for aircraft conversions," Lam said.
"The first slots are well into 2022."
ST Engineering also may add converted freighters to its leasing
business, which has focused on passenger planes, he said.
IAI can convert 18 or more 767s a year and produces most of those used
by Amazon.com Inc.
"We are investing a lot of effort to meet the market demand," said Yosef
Melamed, general manager of IAI's aviation group, which is also working
on the first-ever P2F conversion of the larger 777-300ER as part of a
15-plane contract with GECAS.
"What happened with the coronavirus outbreak, commercial flights were
significantly reduced ... international flights dropped to nearly zero,"
he said. "So the only solution for transporting cargo, and with the
trend that people are staying at home ordering online, is cargo planes."
U.S.-based Aeronautical Engineers is also seeing a dramatic increase in
demand for conversions, said Robert Convey, its senior vice president
for sales and marketing, citing a 30-40% fall in the value of planes.
"We're seeing younger and younger aircraft being converted due to the
large number of passenger aircraft that have been grounded and are not
likely to return to service in the near future," he said.
Grant Stevens, vice president of corporate services at Canada's KF
Aerospace, said increased demand for P2F conversions, which grew from
about 10% of its business before the pandemic to about half today, has
helped offset a decline in requests for aircraft maintenance.
"We have been able to employ most of our staff by doing conversions," he
said.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed, Ari Rabinovitch and Allison Lampert. Editing
by Gerry Doyle)
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