Flight Paths Forward Roundup: Top 10 Articles
July 30, 2020
CEO Interview: David Calhoun’s Mission To Fix Boeing
When he was appointed CEO of Boeing last December, David Calhoun already had his hands full with the Boeing 737 MAX grounding. Then the coronavirus crisis hit, decimating demand for air travel and new airplanes. Wearing a mask and properly socially distanced, Calhoun met at the company’s offices in Arlington, Virginia, with AW&ST Editor-in-Chief Joe Anselmo and Senior Air Transport and Safety Editor Sean Broderick. Senior Propulsion Editor Guy Norris joined the conversation by phone.
- “Tremendous progress” on MAX recovery
- Why the next airplane cannot wait for revolutionary advances
- Prioritizing new airplanes over the aftermarket
- Why the Embraer deal was scuttled

Lengthy F-35 Upgrade List To Transform Strike Fighter’s Future Role
A decade may seem too short for such an evolution in one program, but it is possible. Ten years ago, the F-35 was still in crisis mode: With the flight-test fleet grounded for most of 2009, the supply chain was reeling. Ashton Carter, who was then the undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, later acknowledged that proposals to cancel the program had been briefly considered during that period.
Read the full article to see the vision for the Lockheed Martin F-35 program in 10 years.

Airbus CEO Faury Sees Huge Uncertainties In Market Recovery
Guillaume Faury became CEO of Airbus Group in April 2019 after just over a year as president of the company’s commercial aircraft business. With only one year in the job behind him, the 52-year-old has to steer Airbus through the worst crisis commercial aviation has ever faced, cutting costs where possible while protecting substance where needed. Faury met with Aviation Week Executive Editor for Commercial Aviation Jens Flottau at Airbus headquarters in Toulouse. With air travel all but impossible throughout the spring, it was their first in-person meeting in several months.
- Faury expects suppressed narrowbody production for two years
- Long-haul aircraft demand slump to last much longer
- European governments’ hydrogen research funding supports next-generation aircraft technology
- Carbon-neutral narrowbody could enter service in 2035

Raytheon Technologies CEO On Riding Out The COVID-19 Crisis
- Raytheon chief looks ahead
- Commercial aviation recovery will take years
- Investing in hypersonics
- Game-changing technologies for a next-generation narrowbody

Boeing’s Long Road To Recovery
Flight Paths Forward: Future of Boeing
A year may seem like a long time in politics, but for Boeing, two years in aerospace must be an eternity as it begins the slow recovery from the unparalleled series of setbacks, accidents and downturns that have struck it since 2018.
- Boeing faces multifaceted drama
- Likely 737 MAX comeback coincides with crisis peak
- No new program launch expected for five years or more
- High debt to burden company recovery

Suppliers Face Existential Decisions After COVID-19 Crisis
Flight Paths Forward: Future of the Commercial Aerospace Supply Chain
Suppliers across the western aerospace and defense industrial base faced an existential crisis entering the second half of 2020.
Commercial air travel, the lifeblood of industry, took a body blow in the first half of the year with the one-two punch of the Boeing 737 MAX crisis and then the outbreak of COVID-19. Passenger air traffic could end 2020 at about 55% of 2019’s total level, according to financial analysts, and in 2021, the question will be whether a significant uptick can occur without a vaccine against the novel coronavirus.
- Pandemic starts two years of declining industrial capacity
- The supplier base entered COVID-19 outbreak suffering hiccups but expecting historic growth

18 Civil Aircraft You Have Not Seen At An Air Show—Yet
See the full gallery of civil aircraft you have not seen at an airshow —yet.

Podcast: Why Rolls-Royce Is Charging Ahead With The UltraFan
As an UltraFan demonstrator is prepared for 2021 tests, chief engineer Andy Geer tells Aviation Week editors about Rolls-Royce’s faith in a market recovery—and why UltraFan will be an engine for all seasons.

How Pratt & Whitney Plans To Grow Its Military Business
More than 7,000 Pratt & Whitney engines are in service in military aircraft worldwide, and the company is adding about 150 F135 and dozens of F100 engines to that total every year. As new opportunities for fighter engine upgrades and Boeing B-52 engine replacements come up for grabs, Aviation Week Editors Steve Trimble and Guy Norris talked with Pratt Military Engines President Matthew Bromberg about the company’s priorities for seeking growth amid a disruptive health pandemic.
- Company on track to qualify 188 parts to replace Turkish suppliers on the F-35
- Why the PW800 is the “best damn engine” for the B-52

Post-Pandemic Commercial Aircraft (Re-)Builders
The COVID-19 pandemic is changing airline fleet planning fundamentally. Some older models such as the Airbus A340 or the Boeing 747 are being retired as passenger aircraft, yet others will survive and be used to rebuild air travel once demand comes back. See the full overview of likely candidates.
From Boeing's CEO explaining the company's future plans, what you could have seen at an airshow this year to the potential future for defense, air transport and supply chain. A roundup of the most viewed content from Aerospace & Defense Week 2020.