Airbus A320 flies past Boeing 737 as most-delivered jet in history
By Tim Hepher
PRAGUE (Reuters) - Europe's Airbus broke a major commercial barrier on Tuesday when its A320 family of planes overtook the Boeing 737 to become the most-delivered jetliner in history.
Boeing's decades-old record fell with the handover of an A320neo to Saudi carrier Flynas, bringing total deliveries to 12,260 since the A320 series entered service in 1988, according to benchmark data from UK-based aviation analytics firm Cirium.
Airbus and Boeing did not reply to requests for comment on the data, tracked by leading aircraft supply analyst Rob Morris.
Demand for the industry's workhorse A320 and 737 jets has surged in recent years, as economic growth led by Asia brought tens of millions of new middle-class travellers into the skies.
Together, Boeing and Airbus have delivered more than 25,000 of these jets, originally designed to serve major hubs but later widely adopted by low-cost carriers, which Airbus courted after Boeing cut output during a downturn in demand post-9/11.
Already the world's largest planemaker by annual deliveries, Airbus now claims the top spot for cumulative narrow-body deliveries, capping a 40-year transatlantic battle for market share after early disagreements over strategy and the share of jobs among partner nations, France, Germany, Spain and Britain.
"At the beginning, nobody thought it would work and now it's winning, at least on the bigger variants," said Adam Pilarski, former chief economist at Douglas Aircraft, which also competed with Boeing before being absorbed by its domestic rival in 1997.
DECADES OF TRANSATLANTIC RIVALRY
Launched in 1984, the A320 emerged at a time when Airbus's future was far from assured, following the rocky introduction of two wide-body jets. The aircraft first flew in 1987 and entered service the following year.
Engineers in Toulouse, France, took an ambitious step by introducing fly-by-wire computer controls to a mainstream airliner - a pioneering move that met resistance from unions and some carriers but ultimately became an industry standard.
The brainchild of Airbus co-founder Roger Beteille, its development was shaped by arguments over whether to prioritise U.S. airline demands for a jet in the new 150-seat market, supported by the French, or continue focusing on wide-bodies, backed by Lufthansa.
The project narrowly escaped collapse when French President François Mitterrand and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, unaware they had chosen the same intermediary - Bavarian politician Franz-Josef Strauss - asked him to mediate their dispute by drafting letters between them. The episode is recounted in Airbus: The First 50 Years, a history commissioned by Airbus but withdrawn, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters.
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