Iran is set to purchase 114 Airbus jets for state-owned carrier Iran Air. The order is enabled by the lifting of the United States and European economic sanctions imposed on Iran on January 16. These sanctions had previously handcuffed Iran’s trade activity, including purchases of new aircraft, and were lifted after Iran followed through on its promise to dismantle sections of its nuclear program, wrote the Airways News.
The 114 aircraft include a mix of new and used Airbus A320 family aircraft as well as used Airbus A340 widebodies, with the first of these aircraft expected to be delivered as early as July.
Iran and Airbus have not yet explicitly held commercial talks (as those were banned under the sanctions), but the plans were confirmed by comments from Iranian ministers.
The Airbus order is the first leg of the upcoming Iranian aerospace windfall, while the initial Iranian aircraft orders were likely to include a heavy dose of used aircraft.
Iranian commercial fleets are vintage, and even a 15-20 year old A340 or A320 represents a substantial improvement in operating costs, dispatch reliability and safety.
With regard to the actual mix of orders, more details are likely to emerge this week, but looking at Iran Air’s current fleet, roughly 42% of its passenger fleet are composed of widebody aircraft with the balance narrowbodies (primarily Fokker F100s).
Some of this is driven by availability and range for older aircraft, so the breakdown is likely to fall closer to 80-20 narrowbody to widebody in this new order. This would correspond to +/-91 A320 family aircraft and +/-23 A340 aircraft.
The 23 A340s would allow one-to-one replacement of Iran Air’s A300s, A310s and Boeing 747s with three to four frames for growth.
According to FleetIntel, there are currently 78 A340s actively marketed for sale by airlines around the world. These break down as six A340-200s (all between 16 and 23 years old), 44 A340-400s (between seven and 22 years old), 16 A340-500s (between eight and 13 years old), and 14 A340-600s (once again between eight and 13 years old).
The A340-200s are too old to be economically feasible, so isolating to focus on the A340-300s, 500s, and 600s, the 14 A340-600s make a lot of sense.
The A340-600s can operate pretty much any route that Iran Air would want to, except for Tehran-Australia/New Zealand.
Los Angeles would be pushing it, but at 6,614 nautical miles, it is technically within the range of the A340-600, which has been used by South African Airways to operate Johannesburg-New York JFK nonstop in the past.
As an added bonus, four engines of the A340 offset any hot/high performance issues that Tehran might face. The A340-600s should be supplemented by 8-10 of the youngest A340-300s on the market, several of which are marketed by Airbus.
Using the same FleetIntel database, there are 48 A320 family aircraft available on the market (nine A319s, 30 A320s, and nine A321s), and presumably Iran Air would immediately buy 20 or so A320s and 5-10 A321s (some of the Russian ones on the market are very young).
Iran Air could also strike a deal with a lessor or another airline to buy out an existing fleet of A320s or A321s. This would leave 60-65 A320 family aircraft to order as new builds, and with the neo sold out for a while, this might be split as 40 neos and 20 current engine options. As far as the variants, something that might make sense is 20 new build A320 ceos, 25 A320neos and 15 A321 neos.
Is Boeing Next?
While Airbus has won the opening salvo in terms of Iranian orders, it is not out of the question that Boeing could win some orders as well in the near future.
Iran is reportedly considering the Boeing 737 and Boeing 777 (there are tons of these floating around on the used market), as well as smaller jets from Embraer and Bombardier.
The big payoff for Boeing could be on the 777, as an Iranian order for 20-30 new Boeing 777-300 ERs would do wonders toward bridging the production gap to the re-engined Boeing 777X. Even an order for used 777s would help boost the value on the secondary market, which recently tanked Boeing shares after comments by Delta CEO Richard Anderson.
Boeing has technically been cleared by the US government to negotiate with Iran but must proceed more cautiously than Airbus given its more uncertain political environment.
However, Iranian orders for Boeing planes are expected to be announced later this year. Still, 2016 has begun with a bang for Airbus, thanks to the folks in Tehran.