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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Airbus earnings up despite supply chain issues impacting output

The aerospace giant which employs thousands of people at its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sites in South Gloucestershire and North Wales has announced its production target for commercial aircraft in 2023

Airbus production site in Filton, Bristol.(Image: Rowan Griffiths)

Aerospace giant Airbus has targeted the delivery of 720 commercial aircraft in 2023 after supply chain pressures impacted its production last year.

The company, which employs thousands of people at its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sites in Filton, South Gloucestershire, and Broughton, North Wales, reported increased revenue for 2022 of €58.8bn (£52.2bn) - up from € 52.1bn (£46.2bn) in 2021.

Adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) also rose by 16% to € 5.6bn (£4.9bn), with bosses targeting a rise to €6bn (£5.3bn) for the current financial year.

Airbus recently revealed it delivered 661 commercial aircraft to 84 customers last year, retaining its position as the world’s largest aircraft manufacturer.

Bosses said this was not as many as the firm had “originally planned” due to its supply chain not recovering as quickly as expected, amid an “adverse operating environment”.

Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said: "We are adapting our production to match supply. As we move forward in 2023 we are focused on our industrial activities and the longer-term transformation of the company. The solid 2022 financial performance and our confidence in the future lead us to propose a higher dividend payment this year.”

Airbus said it secured 1,078 new orders (820 net) across all programmes and market segments in 2022, and would be ramping up production in 2023 to make its ways through an order backlog which stood at 7,239 aircraft at the end of December 2022.

Consolidated order intake value increased to €82.5bn (£73.2bn) from the €62bn (£55bn) recorded for 2021, with the consolidated order book valued at €449bn (£398bn) at the end of 2022, compared to € 398bn (£353bn) 12 months earlier.