Videos
Photos
Infographics
Data
Agenda
News
Breaking news
  • 14/04Israel says 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones were intercepted by multi-layered air defence system
  • 13/04Iran launches 110 ballistic missiles, 36 cruise missiles and 185 drones in strike toward Israel
  • 11/04A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a U.S. Space Force military weather monitoring satellite.
  • 09/04ULA launched a classified US NRO spy satellite on the final flight of the Delta 4 Heavy rocket
  • 07/04SpaceX launched the 1st in a new line of dedicated rideshare missions delivering 11 satellites into mid-inclination orbits
  • 06/04Greece confirms intent to purchase 35 UH-60Ms from Sikorsky
  • 03/04AutoFlight delivers Prosperity eVTOL to unspecified Japanese operator
  • 02/04Korean Air has firmed up an order for 27 Airbus A350-1000s and 6 A350-900s
  • 30/03Space X Falcon 9 launches 5,000 kg Eutelsat 36D satellite from Kenedy Space Center
  • 27/03Chinese Long March 6A launches second Yunhai-3 satellite
  • 23/03A Soyuz-2.1a send the Soyuz MS-25 crewed spacecraft with Russian, American and Belarusian cosmonauts to the ISS
  • 15/03US Navy takes delivery of first MQ-25 autonomous refueller
  • 14/03Bell extends H-1 production with $455m order for 12 AH-1Z attack helicopter from Nigeria
  • 13/03DRO-A and B Chinese spacecraft, apparently intended for lunar orbit, have been lost following an issue with a Long March 2C rocket
  • 12/03The 1st flight of a privately developed Japanese Kairos rocket ended in catastrophic failure after liftoff
  • 14/04Israel says 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones were intercepted by multi-layered air defence system
  • 13/04Iran launches 110 ballistic missiles, 36 cruise missiles and 185 drones in strike toward Israel
  • 11/04A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a U.S. Space Force military weather monitoring satellite.
  • 09/04ULA launched a classified US NRO spy satellite on the final flight of the Delta 4 Heavy rocket
  • 07/04SpaceX launched the 1st in a new line of dedicated rideshare missions delivering 11 satellites into mid-inclination orbits
  • 06/04Greece confirms intent to purchase 35 UH-60Ms from Sikorsky
  • 03/04AutoFlight delivers Prosperity eVTOL to unspecified Japanese operator
  • 02/04Korean Air has firmed up an order for 27 Airbus A350-1000s and 6 A350-900s
  • 30/03Space X Falcon 9 launches 5,000 kg Eutelsat 36D satellite from Kenedy Space Center
  • 27/03Chinese Long March 6A launches second Yunhai-3 satellite
  • 23/03A Soyuz-2.1a send the Soyuz MS-25 crewed spacecraft with Russian, American and Belarusian cosmonauts to the ISS
  • 15/03US Navy takes delivery of first MQ-25 autonomous refueller
  • 14/03Bell extends H-1 production with $455m order for 12 AH-1Z attack helicopter from Nigeria
  • 13/03DRO-A and B Chinese spacecraft, apparently intended for lunar orbit, have been lost following an issue with a Long March 2C rocket
  • 12/03The 1st flight of a privately developed Japanese Kairos rocket ended in catastrophic failure after liftoff
  • 14/04Israel says 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones were intercepted by multi-layered air defence system
  • 13/04Iran launches 110 ballistic missiles, 36 cruise missiles and 185 drones in strike toward Israel
  • 11/04A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a U.S. Space Force military weather monitoring satellite.
  • 09/04ULA launched a classified US NRO spy satellite on the final flight of the Delta 4 Heavy rocket
  • 07/04SpaceX launched the 1st in a new line of dedicated rideshare missions delivering 11 satellites into mid-inclination orbits
  • 06/04Greece confirms intent to purchase 35 UH-60Ms from Sikorsky
  • 03/04AutoFlight delivers Prosperity eVTOL to unspecified Japanese operator
  • 02/04Korean Air has firmed up an order for 27 Airbus A350-1000s and 6 A350-900s
  • 30/03Space X Falcon 9 launches 5,000 kg Eutelsat 36D satellite from Kenedy Space Center
  • 27/03Chinese Long March 6A launches second Yunhai-3 satellite
  • 23/03A Soyuz-2.1a send the Soyuz MS-25 crewed spacecraft with Russian, American and Belarusian cosmonauts to the ISS
  • 15/03US Navy takes delivery of first MQ-25 autonomous refueller
  • 14/03Bell extends H-1 production with $455m order for 12 AH-1Z attack helicopter from Nigeria
  • 13/03DRO-A and B Chinese spacecraft, apparently intended for lunar orbit, have been lost following an issue with a Long March 2C rocket
  • 12/03The 1st flight of a privately developed Japanese Kairos rocket ended in catastrophic failure after liftoff
  • 14/04Israel says 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones were intercepted by multi-layered air defence system
  • 13/04Iran launches 110 ballistic missiles, 36 cruise missiles and 185 drones in strike toward Israel
  • 11/04A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a U.S. Space Force military weather monitoring satellite.
  • 09/04ULA launched a classified US NRO spy satellite on the final flight of the Delta 4 Heavy rocket
  • 07/04SpaceX launched the 1st in a new line of dedicated rideshare missions delivering 11 satellites into mid-inclination orbits
  • 06/04Greece confirms intent to purchase 35 UH-60Ms from Sikorsky
  • 03/04AutoFlight delivers Prosperity eVTOL to unspecified Japanese operator
  • 02/04Korean Air has firmed up an order for 27 Airbus A350-1000s and 6 A350-900s
  • 30/03Space X Falcon 9 launches 5,000 kg Eutelsat 36D satellite from Kenedy Space Center
  • 27/03Chinese Long March 6A launches second Yunhai-3 satellite
  • 23/03A Soyuz-2.1a send the Soyuz MS-25 crewed spacecraft with Russian, American and Belarusian cosmonauts to the ISS
  • 15/03US Navy takes delivery of first MQ-25 autonomous refueller
  • 14/03Bell extends H-1 production with $455m order for 12 AH-1Z attack helicopter from Nigeria
  • 13/03DRO-A and B Chinese spacecraft, apparently intended for lunar orbit, have been lost following an issue with a Long March 2C rocket
  • 12/03The 1st flight of a privately developed Japanese Kairos rocket ended in catastrophic failure after liftoff
  • 14/04Israel says 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones were intercepted by multi-layered air defence system
  • 13/04Iran launches 110 ballistic missiles, 36 cruise missiles and 185 drones in strike toward Israel
  • 11/04A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a U.S. Space Force military weather monitoring satellite.
  • 09/04ULA launched a classified US NRO spy satellite on the final flight of the Delta 4 Heavy rocket
  • 07/04SpaceX launched the 1st in a new line of dedicated rideshare missions delivering 11 satellites into mid-inclination orbits
  • 06/04Greece confirms intent to purchase 35 UH-60Ms from Sikorsky
  • 03/04AutoFlight delivers Prosperity eVTOL to unspecified Japanese operator
  • 02/04Korean Air has firmed up an order for 27 Airbus A350-1000s and 6 A350-900s
  • 30/03Space X Falcon 9 launches 5,000 kg Eutelsat 36D satellite from Kenedy Space Center
  • 27/03Chinese Long March 6A launches second Yunhai-3 satellite
  • 23/03A Soyuz-2.1a send the Soyuz MS-25 crewed spacecraft with Russian, American and Belarusian cosmonauts to the ISS
  • 15/03US Navy takes delivery of first MQ-25 autonomous refueller
  • 14/03Bell extends H-1 production with $455m order for 12 AH-1Z attack helicopter from Nigeria
  • 13/03DRO-A and B Chinese spacecraft, apparently intended for lunar orbit, have been lost following an issue with a Long March 2C rocket
  • 12/03The 1st flight of a privately developed Japanese Kairos rocket ended in catastrophic failure after liftoff
Your are here : Home / News / How Airbus conquered the Andes
AERONAUTICS

How Airbus conquered the Andes

Published by Patrick Laureau

Some names are sticky. Some, you wish you never thought of them. And some are just grand, and deliver the essence of your dreams. Once upon a time, there was a little Airbus exploring a new world, a brave, new, Latin world. But a world filled with big, strong competitors, who already knew these wild hunting grounds, and would have no mercy in the battle to come. What about poor little A319?

Time was 1994, and place was the Chilean FIDAE aerospace show, in Santiago, Chile, a place renowned for being still in summer when every other airshow in the Northern hemisphere is chilling, and for being quite welcoming. This was the time for Airbus to probe a market which promised a quick growth, a market that looked like the right one. This was, obviously, the time for a good communication idea.

When brain storming is a standard condition, lightning strikes as a normal fallout. Soon it appeared obvious that brave little Airbus should have a name to match the grandeur of this Cordillera that it was bound to cross over and over again. Then the name popped up, just like that. It should be the name of the higher point of the continent. Two days later, with the concourse of Father Sebastian, the head chaplain of the Chilean Air Force, brave little A319 was soaring the blue Andes sky, proudly sporting the name “Aconcagua”. Since then, Airbus has never missed a FIDAE show, following the deep attraction that someday brought Aéropostale to Colina.

The rest of the story is far less private. In fact, a success like Airbus’s in Latin America is not a common occurrence. Eighteen years later, every Airbus model has been seen flying over the continent, from Avianca to LAN, from TAME to Aerolíneas Argentinas, from Conviasa to Surinam Airways, and all the new models have been adopted by the market, from the original A319, also in service as Corporate Jets for the Venezuelan and Brazilian governments, to the newest A350 of which Synergy Aerospace (Avianca and SAM in Columbia, OceanAir in Brazil, VIP in Ecuador) is acquiring ten -800s, and TAM, in Brazil, 27 more, while at the same time being the continental launching customer for the A320Neo.

Success has to be fed with more success. Soon the Airbus family was clocking record figures. Just two years after this baptism, it was selling 94 aircraft in the region, of which 90 covering a common order passed by LAN, TAM and TACA. In 2011, Airbus improved its performance with 100 aircraft sold, grabbing 91% of the total orders for aircraft over 100 seats, including the biggest order ever in the history of Mexican aviation (Volaris), of which 30 A320neos. In other terms, US$ 9,500 million…and new records are still to come, as the region keeps being one of the best promises around.

According to Airbus Global Market Forecast, Latin America will require over 2,000 new aircraft over 100 seats before 2030, of which 701 for Brazil, 412 for Mexico and 135 for Colombia, in order to cover an exceptional 6.6% traffic growth rate, and a regional traffic expected to triple over the next twenty years, enough for a good many more records, fuelled by a GDP that should improve by 144% over the same period.

So, what’s in a name? Probably the amount of efforts and expectations that you put in it. But nobody can say that the name bestowed on poor little A319 in 1996 did not live up to everybody’s expectations, bringing Airbus on the top of Latin American aviation world. Up and counting…

Previous
Next
Poland : French aircraft intercept Russian Ilyushin
Nexter becomes a European leader in the ammunition sector
Suggested files
GISEC in 90 seconds
Published by ASDS MEDIA
EVENTS
1098 17
Apr 2024
GISEC 2023 was the Arab world’s largest cybersecurity exhibition and conference, from 21 to...
FACh MH-60 Blackhawk
Published by ASDS MEDIA
PRODUCTS
32 4
Apr 2024
MH-60 Blackhawk of the Fuerza Aerea de Chile at FIDAE 2024.
ENAER at FIDAE 2024
Published by ASDS MEDIA
EVENTS
28 0
Apr 2024
ENAER booth at FIDAE 2024.
Agenda
Post of the day
EVENTS
1098 17
Apr 2024
GISEC in 90 seconds
Published by ASDS MEDIA
Login to read more

Username

Password

Partners
Follow Us
We are social !