What is The Best Aircraft For Long-haul Routes In Africa?

Airports & Airlines
Nick Cummins
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min read
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July 28, 2020
In last February, Airbus and Green Africa announced a strategic partnership with MoU for 50 A220s

Africa is a unique and vast continent, and crossing it is even more challenging. In today's modern age of commonplace jet travel, what aircraft is best suited for this ruggedly beautiful landscape?

The nature of African Aviation

Africa has some pretty challenging factors when it comes to aviation.

  • Quality of airports and airstrips. Africa's airport infrastructure is different from that of Europe, where instead of A380 ready airports, many lack the facilities for larger aircraft. Thus the perfect plane needs to be agile and able to takeoff from progressively shorter runways.
  • The distance is between destinations is also gargantuan. The perfect plane will need to be able to do the range and carry enough passengers to make it profitable.
  • Speaking of passengers, the plane will also need to be fuel-efficient and able to operate long thin routes - sometimes two destinations might not have enough demand to justify a huge aircraft (like an Airbus A350 or Boeing 777) and thus need something that doesn't require a small army to fill.

Our contender aircraft are as follows:

Airbus A220 series

The new Airbus A220 is a total game-changer for Africa. The small aircraft series has the following variants:

  • Airbus A220-100 - 120 passengers with 36 inches of pitch (very generous) up to a range of 3,400 nautical miles.
  • Airbus A220-300 - 150 passengers with up to 38 inches of pitch (even more generous) up to a range of 3,350 nautical miles.

Rumor has it that these performance numbers can be extended with additional fuel tanks. Airbus has revealed that it is working on a goal of building an extended range A220-300 that can fly from 3,350 nautical miles up to 4,000 nautical miles. This would allow the aircraft to be capable of taking 130 passengers as far as most of Western Europe (France, Germany, Spain, although not England), Moscow, all of Africa, the Middle East, India, and even as far as Singapore.

Four thousand nautical miles from Julius Nyerere International Airport (IATA: DAR), Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

The A220 fits all the criteria for our' perfect aircraft'. It is lighter than both the A320 series (six tonnes lighter) and the Boeing 737 MAX (eight tonnes lighter). This means that the aircraft is 12% and 15% cheaper to operate than the latter two airframes. Because the plane is built on a separate production line to the A320 there is not as much backlog delay (some airlines are facing many years to get their A320s).

Bombardier, the original designers of the A220 claimed an overall 15% lower seat-mile cost, 20% lower fuel burn and a CO2 emissions advantage, a 25% reduction in maintenance costs, and a four-fold reduction in the noise footprint compared to existing production aircraft. The aircraft is 70% cheaper to operate than the A330.

Passengers love the aircraft. Quieter spacious cabins (tall people can stand fully upright), wide aisles, big windows, and huge bins (the most enormous overhead bins on any aircraft). The generous space onboard for passengers means that long-haul flights are an option and are comfortable to do so.

Lastly, the A220 meets our airport infrastructure criteria. The aircraft only needs one of the shortest runways to take off (only 4,800 ft / 1,463 m, allowing it to land at many regional airports). Because it is profitable with such a small cabin, those thin routes to local areas will make money. An enterprising airline could fill in a market gap and run point to point international routes between regional cities to international hubs, skipping established flag carriers hub airports (no longer would passengers have to fly through Addis Ababa, for example, if going to Europe).

Air Tanzania has picked up four A220-100s from Airbus. The A220 will allow Air Tanzania to develop further its domestic and regional market as well as open new routes to India and the Middle East from its home base at Dar es Salaam.

"The A220's unrivaled passenger comfort, combined with its remarkable performance and economics, will be an excellent asset to develop Air Tanzania's network further," said Tito Kasambala, Acting CEO, Tanzanian Government Flight Agency (TGFA). "With the addition of the A220 in our fleet, we are confident that we will expand our footprint in the growing African markets and beyond, as we unlock additional routes and regain our position as a key player in the African air transport market," added Ladislaus Matindi, Managing Director & CEO, Air Tanzania Company Limited.

In last February, Green Africa Airways, Nigeria’s Lagos-based airline which was at the time due to start operations this year, had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for 50 A220-300 aircraft, "one of the major orders to be placed globally for the A220 program and the largest ever from the African continent" according to Airbus.

A worthy alternative to the Airbus A220 would also be the Embraer Ejet E2 series.

Embraer Ejet E2 series

Brazilian Embraer has a new series of aircraft that are ideally suited for the African continent. There are three variants of the new E2

  • E175-E2 - 80 to 90 passengers to a range of 2,017 nautical miles (3,735 km)
  • E190-E2 - 96 to 104 passengers to a range of 2,850 nautical miles (5,280 km)
  • E195-E2 - 120 to 132 passengers to a range of 2,600 nautical miles (4,800 km)

While it may not have the same range as the A220, it is certainly cheaper, The average price of an E2 jet is around $50 million US while an A220 is around $85 million on average at list prices. Essentially an airline that needs frequency over range may opt for two E2 aircraft over the A220.

"Africa has long been a market with low frequencies and long thin routes. As airlines start to ramp up their operations, the E2 family of aircraft is perfectly positioned to right size routes previously operated by narrowbodies, while keeping frequencies and adjusting capacity to new levels"

said Raul Villaron, Vice President Sales, Africa, and the Middle East, Embraer Commercial Aviation

Only in May did Congo Airways decide to order four of the E2 series for its route expansion and to replace its turboprop aircraft.

"These new jets will be replacing our legacy turboprops and will allow us to extend our operations within the Democratic Republic of Congo, and regionally to West, Central, and Southern Africa. Despite the current difficult circumstances, the fundamentals of our market have not changed; so we expect the momentum we've seen in the past to redevelop. I said in December that we may need to make an additional order for E2s due to the agility required to adapt to market changes – we have now reached that point."

Airbus A330-800neo and Boeing 787-8

The A220 isn't the only perfect plane for Africa. Both the Boeing 787-8 and Airbus A330-800neo come close as worthwhile comparisons.

  • Boeing 787-8 - 246 passengers to a range of 7,850 nautical miles.
  • Airbus A330-800neo - 252 passengers to a range of 8,150 nautical miles.

The added advantage of these two aircraft compared to the former Airbus A220 is that they are widebodies, can fly further and carry more passengers. However, that last perk, more passengers, means that they are restricted to more in-demand routes.

The Airbus A330-800neo edges ahead of the 787-8 by being bigger, landing smaller runways, and having a more extended range. Plus, because its essentially a neo version of the A330, it is cheaper for airlines to acquire and operate.

Uganda Airlines has moved ahead for two of the aircraft, realizing its potential for African Aviation.

"The A330-800neo combines low operating costs, long-range flying capability, and high levels of comfort. We are looking forward to launching operations and offer our customers best-in-class service"

said Ephraim Bagenda, CEO of Uganda Airlines.

If you are an airline looking for their next aircraft fleet (big or small), get in touch with Eways Aviation today. With certified experts on hand to help you make a selection perfect for your next mission, we are ideally suited to be your ongoing support partner in the aviation space.

BY
Nick Cummins
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Copywriter - Aviation Journalist
Journalist - Working in news media for over a decade with outlets including 9News and the Discovery Channel, Nick is an airline marketing specialist with a Masters level education. Working closely with AirAsia, Virgin Australia, Turkish Airlines and others, Nick provides unique insight and analysis on a variety of aviation topics. Based in Sydney, Australia.

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