A legal dispute is brewing between Airbus and Pratt & Whitney. Airbus is calling on its contractual rights to force P&W to deliver the contracted number of Geared Turbofan engines for this year, Group CEO Guillaume Faury confirmed today during the FY25 results earnings presentation
. Lower engine deliveries are slowing the projected ramp-up of A320neo family production, making the 2026 guidance of 870 deliveries rather provisional.
Airbus openly blamed Pratt & Whitney in the earnings release: “On the A320 Family, Pratt & Whitney’s failure to commit to the number of engines ordered by Airbus is negatively impacting this year’s guidance and the ramp-up trajectory. As a consequence, the Company now expects to reach a rate of between 70 and 75 aircraft a month by the end of 2027, stabilising at rate 75 thereafter.”
Richard Schuurman is a freelance aviation reporter since 2016 and covers commercial aviation and the aerospace industry. He has contributed before to AirInsight between 2018-2024.