Tags
Air Arabia, Airbus, Airbus A350XWB, Airservices Australia, Boeing, Business Aviation, Dash 8-400, De Havilland Canada, Dubai, Dubai Airshow, Emirates, Searidge Technologies, Sharjah, UAE
DUBAI – Deals worth $54.5 billion were reached at the latest edition of the Dubai Airshow, which closed on Thursday, the event’s organizers said.
Airbus was the biggest winner — it secured two blockbuster deals worth $30 billion. Dubai’s Emirates Airline ordered 50 A350-XWB jets, valued at $16 billion.
Airbus also signed an agreement to sell 120 A320neo aircraft to the budget carrier Air Arabia, based in the neighboring emirate of Sharjah. That deal was worth $14 billion.
Emirates, meanwhile, finalized a purchase agreement for 30 Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners, valued at $8.8 billion.
De Havilland Canada, which returned to the show after many years, won a number of orders for its Dash 8-400 aircraft from companies in the UAE, Russia and Nigeria.
Searidge Technologies, a Canadian company providing remote tower and digital airport solutions, was a first-time exhibitor.
Airservices Australia selected Searidge’s digital tower solution for an initial prototype at Sydney Airport.
The program’s define stage is currently underway and scheduled to be completed by March 2020, Searidge said.
The 2019 show recorded a 10% rise in exhibitor attendance, and the organizers are now predicting an even bigger event in 2021.
“We always want to outperform our last show, and 2019 has gone above and beyond expectation, with so much great business being done alongside an engaging and innovative program of conferences, exhibits and flying displays,” said Michele van Akelijen, managing director of show organizers Tarsus F&E LLC Middle East.
“We have already seen exhibitors rebooking for the next edition.”