The International Air Transport Association (IATA) identified four priorities to address persistent failures in the aerospace supply chain at the inaugural IATA World Maintenance and Engineering Symposium in Madrid:
Supply chain failures were a focal point at IATA’s recent
Annual General Meeting.
“The aircraft order backlog is over 18,000. And the average
fleet age has reached a record 15.2 years. Moreover, being short over 5,000
more fuel-efficient replacement aircraft that airlines had counted on, means
missed efficiency gains, not to mention higher lease rates and increased
maintenance costs. In total, supply chain failures cost airlines at least $11
billion in 2025. Today’s higher fuel prices will only make that worse,” said
Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General in his Report on the Air Transport
Industry.
“Alongside aircraft delivery delays, engine durability
issues, shortages of materials and spare parts, and constrained maintenance
capacity are disrupting airline operations. Addressing these challenges will
require practical action and cooperation across the aviation value chain,” said
Stuart Fox, IATA’s Director, Flight and Technical Operations.
Fox presented the Symposium with four measures which could
contribute to improving the situation:
“The supply chain is under real pressure, but this is not a
reason for pessimism. It is a reason for action. These four priorities alone
are not complete solutions. But they would be an important step for OEMs,
suppliers, MROs, lessors, regulators, and airlines working together to achieve
the resilient aerospace supply chains that global connectivity needs,” said
Fox.
Make Aircraft Mandates Deliverable
IATA also called for realistic and globally coordinated
timelines for mandates requiring new aircraft equipment or avionics upgrades.
Compliance deadlines must take account of equipment
certification and availability, installation capacity and wider supply chain
conditions. IATA has raised these concerns with the International Civil
Aviation Organisation (ICAO), including in relation to requirements connected
with the Global Aeronautical Distress and Safety System (GADSS), Runway Overrun
Awareness and Alerting Systems (ROAAS), and Automatic Dependent
Surveillance–Broadcast (ADS-B).
“This is not about delaying safety. It is about making safety deliverable. Global safety improvements require globally coordinated implementation timelines that reflect certification, equipment availability, and installation capacity,” said Fox. -TradeArabia News Service