World’s Longest Flight Is a Triumph Over Oil Prices

Oct 12, 2018

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(Bloomberg Opinion) -- The world’s longest commercial airplane flight took off this week, connecting Newark and Singapore via 19 no-cattle-class hours in Singapore Airlines’ brand-new Airbus A350-900 Ultra Long Range plane. At 10,400 miles, it’s farther than Qantas Airways’ Perth-to-London flight, or Qatar Airways’ Doha-to-Auckland flight.

It’s also a rebirth: In October 2013, Singapore Airlines made its last Newark-to-Singapore flight with its four-engine Airbus A340-500, which was “no match for the economic cruelties of volatile fuel prices.” Five years on, with a new two-engine plane, it’s back. Oil (and jet fuel) prices are cyclical, but technological improvement is structural, and the numbers suggest that’s what brought the flight back.

When Singapore Airlines canceled the route five years ago, kerosene prices were above $120 a barrel; it announced plans to restart two years later, when the price had dropped by 50 percent. It takes off now with prices 50 percent higher than they were in October 2015, with the possibility of going higher still.

But the new A350-900 is lighter, more comfortable and far more efficient than the A340. As my Bloomberg News colleagues Angus Whitley and Kyunghee Park note:

Lightweight composites including carbon fiber make up the bulk of the A350-900ULR, while new wing tips help reduce drag, Airbus says. The revamped model consumes 25 percent less fuel than aircraft of a similar size and performance, according to Maria Luisa Lucas Ugena, Airbus’s head of A350 product marketing.

The plane has a higher ceiling, bigger windows and a wider body, with less noise in the cabin and LED lighting that is designed to reduce jet lag. Composite-based planes can also tolerate higher cabin pressure, which means more oxygen and moisture in the air, making for a more comfortable flight.

Oh, and the A350-900 holds 60 percent more passengers (admittedly, a configuration choice on the airline’s part) at less than half the per-passenger fuel load of the A340-500:

Weight savings alone won’t get the plane to Newark in one hop. Airbus rejigged the fuel system on a standard A350-900 and pumped 17 percent more jet kerosene into the tanks in the wings. The plane can now hold about 43,590 gallons of fuel, or more than 270 gallons per passenger on a full flight. The A340-500s that plied the route until 2013 had 58,870 gallons for only 100 customers.

The A350’s improvement over its predecessors will resonate in aviation for years or even decades, given how long an airframe can last. It’s a new floor on fuel consumption and a new ceiling on comfort; eventually, it will also be a ceiling on fuel consumption. That’s technology at work: Today’s best in class is tomorrow’s minimum standard.

Weekend reading

  • Zoë Knight of HSBC’s Centre of Sustainable Finance says that “financing growth in a way that is transparent on addressing sustainability challenges is a must for future prosperity.”
  • Bankers are reworking the same securitization techniques that nearly collapsed the global economy in order to save the planet.
  • In a second straight year of record-extreme climate events, a “small but growing number” of investment funds “are testing strategies to take advantage of those signs of climate change.”
  • The manager of a $1.5 billion wealth management company in South Florida has been telling his clients to get out of South Florida real estate.
  • As its wildfires increase, California no longer has a true “fire season,” and perhaps there is no longer a fire country, either.
  • Hurricane Michael will muddle U.S. economic data for months.
  • The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has launched its Transit Tech Lab “to identify and test promising new technology and other products that will accelerate modernization of New York’s public transportation.”
  • Tesla Inc.’s largest investor (after Elon Musk) has taken an 11.4 percent stake in Chinese electric-vehicle maker NOI Inc.
  • Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo division just crossed 10 million self-driving miles on public roads.
  • Alphabet’s Google has detailed, with hourly granularity, its quest to power its operations on carbon-free electricity.
  • Three commandments for reasonable technology optimism, and a reminder: “Our Neanderthal cousins never evolved our powers of innovation. They died; we did not.”
  • Six past predictions of the future of work, some of which are spot on, some of which are definitely not.
  • If connected gadgets “take off without any intervention or supervision from the government, we could be inviting a nightmarish set of security and privacy vulnerabilities into the world.”
  • Asia and Europe are challenging the U.S.’s “long-held singular dominance of startup and venture capital activity” — once, 95 percent of all start-up and VC activity was stateside; now, it is just over 50 percent.
  • Global value chain expansion “seems to have ground to a halt in recent years,” and with it, the employment consequences for developing countries are disappointing.

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To contact the author of this story: Nathaniel Bullard at nbullard@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Brooke Sample at bsample1@bloomberg.net

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Nathaniel Bullard is an energy analyst, covering technology and business model innovation and system-wide resource transitions.

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.