The world's biggest passenger planes keep breaking down
Two decades after its maiden flight, regulatory bulletins ordering repairs, inspections or replacement parts for the massive four-engined plane are piling up. While some are procedural, such as a demand for timely equipment checks, others are more serious.
Leaking escape slides, cracked seals and a ruptured landing-gear axle feature among 95 airworthiness directives for the A380 listed by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency since January 2020.
That's about double the number of directives for large Boeing aircraft in the same period.
With newer, more fuel-efficient jets in short supply, airlines committed to the twin-deck A380 have little choice but to keep flying it. In its youth, the A380 was a triumph of international collaboration, with four million parts made by 1,500 companies worldwide. Now, in old age, the aircraft's complexity is testing aviation's fractured supply chains in the post-Covid-19 era.
'The A380 is a complex aeroplane whose scale does make it more demanding to maintain compared to other aircraft,' the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (Easa) said. 'It is very important for safety that there is no stigma attached to publishing an airworthiness directive, safety must come first.'
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The agency said such directives, which mandate actions to make an aircraft safe, 'can vary hugely in scope and urgency'.
The volume of airworthiness directives for different planes 'is not a good basis for comparison', Easa said.
Stranded passengers
However, with the capacity to carry 485 passengers or more, delays caused by mechanical failures can be costly and create a cascade of scheduling headaches. A Qantas Airways A380 on the flagship Sydney-London route broke down in Singapore on May 7 with fuel-pump problems. The onward flight to London was pushed back more than 24 hours and passengers accommodated in hotels.
That was at least the second fuel-pump issue to delay QF1 in Singapore since Qantas reactivated its A380s. More recently, Qantas passengers who were due to depart Singapore on Jul 14 for Sydney on an A380 were delayed for days because of technical difficulties. Plans to retrieve them sooner were complicated by damage to another A380 at Sydney airport, when an aerobridge slammed into one of the engines.
A British Airways A380, G-XLEB, recently spent more than 100 days in Manila. After returning to London Heathrow in mid-June, it flew just seven days of the next 30, according to Flightradar24. Still, IAG-owned British Airways from next year will embark on an interior upgrade programme, including overhauling A380 cabins, suggesting the airline will keep flying the plane for years.
For airlines using the A380, large-capacity alternatives are scarce. Boeing's new 777X is years behind schedule and Airbus cannot make long-haul A350s fast enough. Meanwhile, A380 operators are left with an out-of-production superjumbo that will only become more needy and more expensive to run. In online aviation forums, some services are gaining a name for breakdowns, cancellations or overnight delays.
In a statement, Airbus said that the A380 'continues to operate scheduled services with a high level of operational reliability, standing at 99 per cent for the global fleet over the past 12 months. Airbus is committed to providing full technical support to customers to ensure that they can optimise operations with their A380 fleets, and this will continue as long as the aircraft remains in service'.
60,000 hours
Meanwhile, A380s are taking up space and manpower in workshops around the world, exacerbating a shortage of repair facilities for the wider commercial fleet. A comprehensive check of the massive plane can consume 60,000 hours of labour, according to aircraft repairer Lufthansa Technik.
Qantas is sending some double-deckers to Dresden in Germany to be overhauled; British Airways flies its to Manila for repairs; and Emirates, the world's biggest operator of A380s, maintains some in China.
Some of the aircraft's recent faults stem from prolonged periods on the ground during the pandemic, when airlines parked their A380s in the Californian desert, central Spain or the Australian outback.
An airworthiness directive from the European Union Aviation Safety Agency on May 16 ordered emergency inflatable escape slides to be replaced. Glued seams had split, probably due to exposure to moisture and heat during storage. The fault could have fatal consequences, Easa said.
On Apr 7, Easa ordered inspections on A380s after cracked sealant was found on fittings attaching the landing gear to the wings. A directive in April last year required some landing gear axles to be replaced after a rupture on a plane that had been in storage since 2020.
The future of the A380 was already in doubt when Covid-19 halted global travel in early 2020. The year before, Airbus had killed off production after underwhelming sales.
When Covid-19 receded and borders reopened, the A380 suddenly found new purpose. Travel boomed and carriers including Singapore Airlines, Deutsche Lufthansa AG and Qantas, once again embraced the plane's unrivalled carrying power.
In a statement, British Airways called the A380 'a vital part of our long-haul fleet. Through working closely with Airbus, we have seen consistent year-on-year improvements in its reliability'.
Qantas said the plane 'is a key part of our international network, and we will continue to fly them for years to come. All Qantas A380s have gone through a scheduled major maintenance overhaul in recent years, as well as significant upgrades to the cabin interiors'.
Other A380 operators were reluctant to provide specific details. Asiana Airlines said that 'issues related to aircraft operations and maintenance are difficult to disclose externally'. Korean Air Lines said that it 'maintains its A380 fleet to the highest safety standards, in strict accordance with all regulatory requirements and manufacturer guidelines'.
Singapore Airlines said that its 12 A380s are important to operations, but it was 'unable to comment on specifics'. The company said that it works closely with 'Airbus and our suppliers to ensure the ongoing reliability and serviceability of our A380 fleet'.
To be sure, the A380 still has fans. Emirates, which has cannibalised some A380s for spare parts, plans to keep flying the aircraft until the end of the next decade. The airline's president, Tim Clark, has likened the jet to a huge vacuum cleaner capable of gobbling up passengers such as no other plane.
Reliability issues are the latest twist for a superjumbo that has almost always been divisive. Passengers still love the A380's cavernous interiors and audacious scale. Airlines wrestle with its logistics needs – from longer runways to extra-large hangars, as well as the mechanical dramas.
Supply chain constraints have increased the price of parts, servicing and engine repairs on all major aircraft, said Eddy Pieniazek, Ishka's head of advisory.
'With the A380 being of its size and having four engines, this escalation in maintenance costs has become even more noticeable,' said Pieniazek. BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
16 hours ago
- Business Times
Carvana's 10,000% rally from low deals US$7 billion blow to shorts
[NEW YORK] Carvana's shares notched an all-time high this week, rising more than 10,000 per cent from a low in late 2022, and delivering a blow to investors betting against the online used-car dealer. The jump to record caps a roller-coaster ride for the stock that quickly became an investor darling after a public debut in 2017, but has also been plagued by criticisms ranging from claims that the company was overvalued and allegations of lax business practices. The latest gains came after the company's blockbuster second-quarter results on Wednesday (Jul 30) fuelled expectations that a turnaround is taking hold at the embattled company. As a result of the rally, short investors betting against Carvana have been dealt a US$7.42 billion blow in mark-to-market losses since the end of 2022, according to calculations from S3 Partners. About 10 per cent of the company's free float is currently held short, down from 55 per cent on Dec 27, 2022, when the stock had dropped to its lowest level. 'This rally from the lows has turned Carvana into one of the most spectacular recoveries in modern market history and a brutal reminder of how dangerous shorting stocks like this can be,' said Dave Mazza, CEO at Roundhill Financial. Carvana shares closed 5.7 per cent lower on Friday, retreating from Thursday's record but still ending the week more than 10 per cent higher. Carvana's online platform allows customers to buy a used car without getting up from their couch, a business model that attracted immense interest during the Covid-19 pandemic. The share price quickly skyrocketed, followed by a brutal 99 per cent wipeout during the wider tech sell-off that ensued. But now, as the appetite for riskier stocks and growth assets has come roaring back over the past month, Carvana is in the right spot to benefit. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'Before Gamestop, a move like this would have been impossible,' said Mark Hackett, chief strategist at Nationwide Funds Group, referring to the retail-trading-driven mania involving risky stocks that gripped the markets in 2021, and seems to be rearing its head again this year. 'But now it is common.' But it is not just the retail-trading fervour around growth stocks that's helping Carvana's shares, market watchers say. Carvana's online business model helps to differentiate it from other auto dealers, who largely operate brick-and-mortar stores, and that has given the relative upstart a higher valuation multiple. At the same time, the trade policy chaos unleashed by US President Donald Trump's tariff programme has been a boon to used-car sellers, who saw demand rise as consumers try to avoid the steep new levies. On Wednesday, Carvana reported second-quarter results that included record-setting revenue, propelling the stock to a breakout above 2021's prior record high. Nationwide's Hackett said that tariff-driven margin benefit was the main source of growth during the quarter. As Carvana soared from the 2022 low, its more traditional peers, such as CarMax, AutoNation and Lithia Motors, have seen no such surge. CarMax shares have fallen about 7 per cent over the same period as at Friday's close, while AutoNation climbed nearly 80 per cent and Lithia rose 44 per cent. After the latest results, some analysts see more strength ahead for Carvana. 'Investors haven't yet witnessed Carvana's true earnings power,' said Alexander Potter, analyst at Piper Sandler. BLOOMBERG

Straits Times
5 days ago
- Straits Times
World's biggest passenger planes keep breaking down
SYDNEY – The world's largest commercial passenger jet, the Airbus A380, enjoyed an unexpected resurgence hauling full loads of passengers when global travel rebounded after the Covid-19 pandemic. But keeping the ageing superjumbo safely airborne is becoming an increasingly expensive headache for airlines. Two decades after its maiden flight, regulatory bulletins ordering repairs, inspections or replacement parts for the massive four-engined plane are piling up. While some are procedural, such as a demand for timely equipment checks, others are more serious. Leaking escape slides, cracked seals and a ruptured landing-gear axle feature among 95 airworthiness directives for the A380 listed by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency since January 2020. That's about double the number of directives for large Boeing aircraft in the same period. With newer, more fuel-efficient jets in short supply, airlines committed to the twin-deck A380 have little choice but to keep flying it. In its youth, the A380 was a triumph of international collaboration, with four million parts made by 1,500 companies worldwide. Now, in old age, the aircraft's complexity is testing aviation's fractured supply chains in the post-Covid era. 'The A380 is a complex aeroplane whose scale does make it more demanding to maintain compared to other aircraft,' the European Union Aviation Safety Agency said in a statement. 'It is very important for safety that there is no stigma attached to publishing an airworthiness directive -– safety must come first.' The agency said such directives, which mandate actions to make an aircraft safe, 'can vary hugely in scope and urgency.' The volume of airworthiness directives for different planes 'is not a good basis for comparison,' EASA said. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World Trump says many are starving in Gaza, vows to set up food centres Asia Cambodia, Thailand agree to 'immediate and unconditional ceasefire' to de-escalate border row World US, China hold new talks on tariff truce, easing path for Trump-Xi meeting Asia Giant algal bloom off South Australia devastates marine life, threatens seafood exports Sport Dare to dream, urges Singapore's first International Swimming Hall of Famer Joseph Schooling Singapore 44 suspects under probe for involvement in SIM card fraud Singapore Tanjong Katong sinkhole: Road recovery works progressing steadily, tests under way Singapore ST Explains: What we know about the Tanjong Katong sinkhole so far Stranded passengers However, with the capacity to carry 485 passengers or more, delays caused by mechanical failures can be costly and create a cascade of scheduling headaches. A Qantas Airways A380 on the flagship Sydney-London route broke down in Singapore on May 7 with fuel-pump problems. The onward flight to London was pushed back more than 24 hours and passengers accommodated in hotels. That was at least the second fuel-pump issue to delay QF1 in Singapore since Qantas reactivated its A380s. More recently, Qantas passengers who were due to depart Singapore on July 14 for Sydney on an A380 were delayed for days because of technical difficulties. Plans to retrieve them sooner were complicated by damage to another A380 at Sydney airport, when an aerobridge slammed into one of the engines. A British Airways A380, G-XLEB, recently spent more than 100 days in Manila. After returning to London Heathrow in mid-June, it flew just seven days of the next 30, according to Flightradar24. Still, British Airways from 2026 will embark on an interior upgrade programme, including overhauling A380 cabins, suggesting the airline will keep flying the plane for years. For airlines using the A380, large-capacity alternatives are scarce. Boeing's new 777X is years behind schedule and Airbus can't make long-haul A350s fast enough. Meanwhile, A380 operators are left with an out-of-production superjumbo that will only become more needy and more expensive to run. In online aviation forums, some services are gaining a name for breakdowns, cancellations or overnight delays. In a statement, Airbus said the A380 'continues to operate scheduled services with a high level of operational reliability, standing at 99 per cent for the global fleet over the past 12 months. Airbus is committed to providing full technical support to customers to ensure that they can optimize operations with their A380 fleets, and this will continue as long as the aircraft remains in service.' 60,000 hours Meanwhile, A380s are taking up space and manpower in workshops around the world, exacerbating a shortage of repair facilities for the wider commercial fleet. A comprehensive check of the massive plane can consume 60,000 hours of labour, according to aircraft repairer Lufthansa Technik. Qantas is sending some double-deckers to Dresden in Germany to be overhauled; British Airways flies its to Manila for repairs; and Emirates, the world's biggest operator of A380s, maintains some in China. Supply chain constraints have increased the price of parts, servicing and engine repairs on all major aircraft, said Eddy Pieniazek, Ishka's head of advisory. 'With the A380 being of its size and having four engines, this escalation in maintenance costs has become even more noticeable,' said Mr Pieniazek. In a statement, British Airways called the A380 'a vital part of our long-haul fleet. Through working closely with Airbus, we've seen consistent year-on-year improvements in its reliability.' Qantas said the plane 'is a key part of our international network, and we'll continue to fly them for years to come. All Qantas A380s have gone through a scheduled major maintenance overhaul in recent years, as well as significant upgrades to the cabin interiors.' Asiana Airlines said 'issues related to aircraft operations and maintenance are difficult to disclose externally.' Korean Air Lines said it 'maintains its A380 fleet to the highest safety standards, in strict accordance with all regulatory requirements and manufacturer guidelines.' Singapore Airlines said its 12 A380s are important to operations but it was 'unable to comment on specifics.' The company said it works closely with 'Airbus and our suppliers to ensure the ongoing reliability and serviceability of our A380 fleet.' To be sure, the A380 still has fans. Emirates, which has cannibalized some A380s for spare parts, plans to keep flying the aircraft until the end of the next decade. The airline's president, Tim Clark, has likened the jet to a huge vacuum cleaner capable of gobbling up passengers like no other plane. BLOOMBERG
Business Times
5 days ago
- Business Times
The world's biggest passenger planes keep breaking down
[SYDNEY] The world's largest commercial passenger jet, the Airbus A380, enjoyed an unexpected resurgence hauling full loads of passengers when global travel rebounded after the pandemic. But keeping the ageing superjumbo safely airborne is becoming an increasingly expensive headache for airlines. Two decades after its maiden flight, regulatory bulletins ordering repairs, inspections or replacement parts for the massive four-engined plane are piling up. While some are procedural, such as a demand for timely equipment checks, others are more serious. Leaking escape slides, cracked seals and a ruptured landing-gear axle feature among 95 airworthiness directives for the A380 listed by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency since January 2020. That's about double the number of directives for large Boeing aircraft in the same period. With newer, more fuel-efficient jets in short supply, airlines committed to the twin-deck A380 have little choice but to keep flying it. In its youth, the A380 was a triumph of international collaboration, with four million parts made by 1,500 companies worldwide. Now, in old age, the aircraft's complexity is testing aviation's fractured supply chains in the post-Covid-19 era. 'The A380 is a complex aeroplane whose scale does make it more demanding to maintain compared to other aircraft,' the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (Easa) said. 'It is very important for safety that there is no stigma attached to publishing an airworthiness directive, safety must come first.' BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The agency said such directives, which mandate actions to make an aircraft safe, 'can vary hugely in scope and urgency'. The volume of airworthiness directives for different planes 'is not a good basis for comparison', Easa said. Stranded passengers However, with the capacity to carry 485 passengers or more, delays caused by mechanical failures can be costly and create a cascade of scheduling headaches. A Qantas Airways A380 on the flagship Sydney-London route broke down in Singapore on May 7 with fuel-pump problems. The onward flight to London was pushed back more than 24 hours and passengers accommodated in hotels. That was at least the second fuel-pump issue to delay QF1 in Singapore since Qantas reactivated its A380s. More recently, Qantas passengers who were due to depart Singapore on Jul 14 for Sydney on an A380 were delayed for days because of technical difficulties. Plans to retrieve them sooner were complicated by damage to another A380 at Sydney airport, when an aerobridge slammed into one of the engines. A British Airways A380, G-XLEB, recently spent more than 100 days in Manila. After returning to London Heathrow in mid-June, it flew just seven days of the next 30, according to Flightradar24. Still, IAG-owned British Airways from next year will embark on an interior upgrade programme, including overhauling A380 cabins, suggesting the airline will keep flying the plane for years. For airlines using the A380, large-capacity alternatives are scarce. Boeing's new 777X is years behind schedule and Airbus cannot make long-haul A350s fast enough. Meanwhile, A380 operators are left with an out-of-production superjumbo that will only become more needy and more expensive to run. In online aviation forums, some services are gaining a name for breakdowns, cancellations or overnight delays. In a statement, Airbus said that the A380 'continues to operate scheduled services with a high level of operational reliability, standing at 99 per cent for the global fleet over the past 12 months. Airbus is committed to providing full technical support to customers to ensure that they can optimise operations with their A380 fleets, and this will continue as long as the aircraft remains in service'. 60,000 hours Meanwhile, A380s are taking up space and manpower in workshops around the world, exacerbating a shortage of repair facilities for the wider commercial fleet. A comprehensive check of the massive plane can consume 60,000 hours of labour, according to aircraft repairer Lufthansa Technik. Qantas is sending some double-deckers to Dresden in Germany to be overhauled; British Airways flies its to Manila for repairs; and Emirates, the world's biggest operator of A380s, maintains some in China. Some of the aircraft's recent faults stem from prolonged periods on the ground during the pandemic, when airlines parked their A380s in the Californian desert, central Spain or the Australian outback. An airworthiness directive from the European Union Aviation Safety Agency on May 16 ordered emergency inflatable escape slides to be replaced. Glued seams had split, probably due to exposure to moisture and heat during storage. The fault could have fatal consequences, Easa said. On Apr 7, Easa ordered inspections on A380s after cracked sealant was found on fittings attaching the landing gear to the wings. A directive in April last year required some landing gear axles to be replaced after a rupture on a plane that had been in storage since 2020. The future of the A380 was already in doubt when Covid-19 halted global travel in early 2020. The year before, Airbus had killed off production after underwhelming sales. When Covid-19 receded and borders reopened, the A380 suddenly found new purpose. Travel boomed and carriers including Singapore Airlines, Deutsche Lufthansa AG and Qantas, once again embraced the plane's unrivalled carrying power. In a statement, British Airways called the A380 'a vital part of our long-haul fleet. Through working closely with Airbus, we have seen consistent year-on-year improvements in its reliability'. Qantas said the plane 'is a key part of our international network, and we will continue to fly them for years to come. All Qantas A380s have gone through a scheduled major maintenance overhaul in recent years, as well as significant upgrades to the cabin interiors'. Other A380 operators were reluctant to provide specific details. Asiana Airlines said that 'issues related to aircraft operations and maintenance are difficult to disclose externally'. Korean Air Lines said that it 'maintains its A380 fleet to the highest safety standards, in strict accordance with all regulatory requirements and manufacturer guidelines'. Singapore Airlines said that its 12 A380s are important to operations, but it was 'unable to comment on specifics'. The company said that it works closely with 'Airbus and our suppliers to ensure the ongoing reliability and serviceability of our A380 fleet'. To be sure, the A380 still has fans. Emirates, which has cannibalised some A380s for spare parts, plans to keep flying the aircraft until the end of the next decade. The airline's president, Tim Clark, has likened the jet to a huge vacuum cleaner capable of gobbling up passengers such as no other plane. Reliability issues are the latest twist for a superjumbo that has almost always been divisive. Passengers still love the A380's cavernous interiors and audacious scale. Airlines wrestle with its logistics needs – from longer runways to extra-large hangars, as well as the mechanical dramas. Supply chain constraints have increased the price of parts, servicing and engine repairs on all major aircraft, said Eddy Pieniazek, Ishka's head of advisory. 'With the A380 being of its size and having four engines, this escalation in maintenance costs has become even more noticeable,' said Pieniazek. BLOOMBERG