Peach Aviation Ltd will introduce two Airbus A321LR aircraft for its middle-haul LCC business to be launched in fiscal 2020.
The airline revised its purchase agreement withAirbus concluded in November 2016, updating its order from 10 A320neos to eight A320neos and two A321LRs. The A321LR is the newest member of the A320 family of jets, the best-selling single-aisle jet in the world, and based on the A321neo.
The model boasts a range of 7,400 km, the longest in the world for a single-aisle jet, and will greatly extend Peach’s reach throughout Asia. Peach will be the first Asian airline to operate the A321LR. The two A321LRs covered in this purchase agreement are expected to be delivered in fiscal 2020.
As of 2020 and after completing the integration of Vanilla Air, the Peach fleet will consist of more than 50 aircraft, (including the A321LR), operated across more than 50 routes.
Peach CEO Shinichi Inoue had the following to say about the introduction of the A321LRs: “As Japan’s first LCC, Peach has grown earnings and generated profits for five consecutive years. However, Peach continues to transform itself and evolve. By taking on the challenge of establishing a middle-haul LCC business in Japan, we will continue to play a leading role in shaping the history of LCCs in Japan and Northeast Asia. The introduction of the A321LR in fiscal 2020 will be the next major step in the evolution of our business and will further accelerate Peach’s transformation into the leading LCC in Asia."
By entering the middle-haul LCC business, Peach said it will expand its role as a bridge between Japan and Asia and greatly stimulate inbound demand to Japan in support of the Japanese government’s goal of 40 million foreign visitors in 2020 and 60 million in 2030.
© Japan Today
4 Comments
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JonathanJo
Flying that far in a single-aisle plane sounds a bit claustrophobic.
Clint Anthony Dangaran
i think twas philippine airlines first asian user of airbus 321neoLR launched weeks ago for long haul flight( manila to brisbane)
Netgrump
Once upon a time there were only single-aisle planes :)
Arrrgh-Type
@JonathanJo
It's not being on a single-aisle jet that concerns me... it's being stuck in LCC class economy seats for hours on end that is the real concern. What's the seat pitch going to be on these long flights?