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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Airbus maintains ramped up production despite 'fragile' supply chain

The aerospace giant has reported revenue and order book growth during the first nine months of this year

An Emirates Airlines Airbus A380 lands at Heathrow Airport (Image: Robert Smith/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Airbus bosses have said the aerospace giant is maintaining its ramped up commercial aircraft production targets, despite a supply chain left “fragile” by the war in Ukraine, Covid and energy issues.

The company, which employs thousands of people at its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sites in Filton, South Gloucestershire, and Broughton, North Wales, reported €38.1bn (£32.9bn) revenue for the first nine months of this year - up from €35.1bn (£30.3bn) at the same point in 2021.

Adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) for the first three trading quarters of 2022 were up 3% from a year earlier at €3.5bn (£3bn).

The group posted a 27% rise in revenue in the third quarter to €13.3bn (£11.5bn), which it said reflected higher commercial aircraft deliveries, including higher contributions from its defence and helicopter divisions, and the strengthening of the US dollar.

Airbus said it had taken net orders for 647 commercial aircraft for the year so far, after cancellations, up from 133 a year earlier. It currently has an order backlog amounting to almost 7,300 aircraft as of September.

Production of the firm’s A320 family of aircraft is progressing towards a monthly rate of 65 aircraft in early 2024 and 75 in 2025.

In its outlook for the rest of the current financial year, the company's board said it was still targeting delivery of 700 commercial aircraft and around €5.5bn (£4.7bn) of adjusted EBIT in 2022.

Chief executive Guillaume Faury hailed Airbus' “solid” financial performance in a a “complex operating environment”.