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Latest News Headlines

CAPA - Centre for Aviation, in a report entitled: 'Latin America aviation: Growth accelerates as structural constraints tighten', stated (03-Jun-2026) aviation in Latin America has entered a rare phase in which growth and constraints are advancing simultaneously. Passenger traffic continues to expand at rates exceeding many developed markets, premium demand is reshaping airline economics, and regulatory liberalisation in key countries is opening opportunities that appeared politically unattainable only a few years ago. Yet the region's operating environment remains among the most challenging globally. Infrastructure bottlenecks, taxation, currency volatility, aircraft availability constraints and regulatory fragmentation continue to erode profitability despite strong demand fundamentals. [more - CAPA Analysis]

Background

IATA said Latin America's aviation sector combined strong growth potential with persistent structural challenges, with Latin American airlines posting an 8.6% year-on-year traffic increase in 2025 amid high operating costs, regulatory complexity and infrastructure underinvestment.1 IATA regional VP for the Americas Peter Cerdá said excessive taxation, regulatory complexity and widespread airport congestion constrained growth, citing policy debates in Colombia, Mexico and Brazil and criticising Lima's transfer fee.2

Airports Corporation of Vietnam (ACV), via its official LinkedIn account, announced (03-Jun-2026) the following progress on the construction of Long Thanh International Airport:

  • Project entered the final sprint with nearly 76% completion. The project has achieved construction value of VND65.602 trillion (USD2.49 billion) out of a total contracted value of VND86.357 trillion (USD3.28 billion);
  • Runway 1 completed and commissioned for technical operations;
  • Airfield infrastructure package 4.6 reached 94.46% completion;
  • Passenger terminal apron package 4.7 achieved 88.36% completion;
  • Aircraft fuel supply system package 4.9 reached 92.64% completion;
  • External road connection packages 1 and 2 achieved 89.55% completion;
  • Passenger terminal reached 64.16% completion. All major structural works are complete and construction activities are now focused on architectural finishing, equipment installation and system integration;
  • ACV launched a 180 day acceleration campaign to complete the project and bring the airport into operation in 2026.

CAPA - Centre for Aviation, in a report entitled 'Charleston's aviation industry poised for worldwide growth and opportunity', stated (02-Jun-2026) as economic growth across the Southeastern US continues to accelerate, Charleston is establishing itself as a steadily expanding aviation market, supported by rising passenger demand, continued aerospace investment, and a coordinated programme of long term infrastructure development at Charleston International Airport. For airlines, Charleston increasingly represents a market offering a rare combination of economic resilience, scalable infrastructure and diversified demand. The airport's trajectory also reflects a wider evolution in US aviation, where long term growth opportunities are progressively shifting toward high performing regional markets capable of sustaining expansion beyond the traditional hub system. [more - CAPA Analysis]

CAPA - Centre for Aviation, in a report entitled 'Kuala Lumpur International Airport seeks more routes to Europe as it builds connectivity', stated (01-Jun-2026) Kuala Lumpur International Airport faces strong competition from other transit hubs in its region and is aiming to boost its international network by adding more long haul routes, with a particular focus on Europe. The airport has a strong network within Southeast Asia and can leverage that position to lure more carriers to launch or expand European services. It has routes to key Western European points, with notable growth occurring in 2025. More routes are in the pipeline, from both local and overseas carriers. [more - CAPA Analysis]

UN Tourism reported (02-Jun-2026) the following highlights for 1Q2026:

  • 307 million tourists travelled internationally, up 2% year-on-year. Early 2026 saw sustained travel demand overall (+2.5% cumulative growth in Jan/Feb-2026), but the Middle East conflict impacted performance in Mar-2026 (+0.4%);
  • The conflict is expected to reduce growth in international arrivals by 1pp to 2pp compared to UN Tourism's initial forecast of 3% to 4% for 2026, "depending on the conflict's duration and scope". Aside from disruptions in flights to, from and within the Middle East and effects on traveller confidence, the spike in oil prices and jet fuel shortage in some markets is increasing airfares and reducing flight capacity in other regions. UN Tourism noted: "More expensive travel coupled with uncertainty about air connectivity, could redirect demand towards closer tourism destinations while also affecting overall travel demand";
  • Europe recorded more than 130 million international tourists in 1Q2026, a 4% increase and building on "strong" momentum of 5% in 2025. Some destinations benefited from the redirection of tourism flows. Southern Mediterranean Europe and Northern Europe both grew arrivals by 4%. Central Eastern Europe (+6%) continued its recovery;
  • Africa arrivals (+4%) continued to grow. North Africa recorded a 4% increase supported by "strong" figures in Mar-2026 (+18%). Arrivals in Sub-Saharan Africa increased 4%;
  • Asia Pacific recorded 3% growth, "somewhat slower" than expected due to mixed performance among destinations. Strong results were recorded in Feb-2026 (+9%) but were more moderate in Mar-2026 (+2%), as disruptions affecting Middle Eastern air hubs contributed to a 27% decline in South Asia. Oceania (+9%) and North East Asia (+5%) saw "particularly robust" results. Arrivals in Asia remained below pre-pandemic values at 89% of the 1Q2019 level;
  • The Americas recorded 2% more international arrivals, with "strong" growth in Central America (+18%) but weaker in South America (-1%);
  • Middle East arrivals dropped 14%, impacted by the conflict. Several Gulf destinations recorded "strong" declines, while Egypt (+16%) recorded a "robust" increase. This follows a "strong" rebound in the Middle East after the pandemic, with arrivals in 2025 climbing 40% above 2019 levels;
  • Among destinations reporting growth in arrivals, the best performers included Paraguay (+46%), New Zealand (+45%), El Salvador (+43%), Mongolia (+39%), Palau (+37%) and Uzbekistan (+37%). In terms of receipts, several countries reported double digit growth, including Pakistan (+60%), South Korea (+38%), Morocco (+24%), Brunei (+22%) and Brazil (+12%).

UN Tourism Secretary General Shaikha Al Nuwais stated: "The ongoing conflict in the Middle East is disrupting travel patterns well beyond the region itself, including rising inflation, particularly in transport and accommodation. This is placing pressure on travellers, businesses and destinations alike". [more - original PR]

Qantas Airways announced (03-Jun-2026) its first Project Sunrise A350-1000ULR completed its maiden test flight from Toulouse. The flight focused on testing the aircraft's primary systems including the specialised fuel system, which features an additional 20,000L rear centre fuel tank to enable flights of up to 22 hours nonstop. The flight will be followed by a two month testing campaign, during which the aircraft will complete approximately 80 hours of flight testing and undergo on-ground checks and certification of new and redesigned components. The second Project Sunrise aircraft is progressing through Airbus' final assembly line and is scheduled for delivery in Apr-2027. Qantas plans to announce its first Project Sunrise route and timing of its inaugural commercial services later in Jun-2026. [more - original PR]

Background

Airbus confirmed supply chain issues delayed Qantas' A350-1000ULR deliveries to Apr-2027, although Qantas said the next four aircraft would follow quickly, restoring the schedule by Nov-20271. Qantas previously reported its first A350-1000ULR had exited the Toulouse hangar with Rolls-Royce Trent XWB engines installed ahead of final ground checks and a two-month flight-test campaign2. Qantas also said its second aircraft entered Airbus' Toulouse final assembly line, with major structures joined and the tail installed3.

Most Read News Headlines

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US FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford, speaking at the CAPA Airline Leader Summit Americas, stated (28-May-2026) he expects the Boeing 737 MAX 7 and MAX 10 will be certified by the end of 2026, suggesting the 777X will follow in 2027. Mr Bedford stated Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg has "got the right mindset" for the company, noting: "Boeing first and foremost has to design great aircraft, and then they have to build them at a high level of quality and that, frankly, is the lowest cost solution for Boeing". He stated the FAA has put significant resources into its aircraft certification team, primarily in anticipation of eVTOL aircraft, but also out of a desire for the FAA to be more collaborative. He continued: "It's self interesting, frankly, for us to want to partner with industry to understand what they're trying to accomplish, because it helps us align our resources so that we're not the bottleneck". Mr Bedford added: "It's a change of mindset, but I think it's designed to help unlock innovation. We'd love to see Boeing produce the next big market aircraft here in the US... so how can we start having that conversation today, to make sure that we aren't the bottleneck for achieving that outcome". [more - Aviation Week]

Background

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said the 737 MAX 7 and MAX 10 certification programmes were in their final stages, with more than 80% of flight testing completed and full FAA authority in place for the flight test regime.1 Boeing CFO and EVP finance Jesus Malave also said it remained on track for certification, with the MAX 7 having completed TIA flight testing and the MAX 10 remaining in the TIA phase.2

Lufthansa announced (28-May-2026) plans to introduce its Allegris cabin interior to additional destinations in winter 2026/27. Boeing 787-9 aircraft with the Allegris cabin will be available services from Frankfurt to Vancouver, Houston, Denver, Atlanta, Detroit, San Jose, Seoul and Kuala Lumpur, and to Chennai from Mar-2027. New Allegris destinations from Munich will include Singapore, Washington and Cape Town. Lufthansa also plans to increase frequency from Frankfurt to Rio de Janeiro, San Jose, Bogota, Lagos and Hyderabad, and from Munich to São Paulo, Mexico City, Johannesburg and Washington in winter 2026/27. [more - original PR]

Background

Lufthansa began deploying Boeing 787-9s with the Allegris cabin on Frankfurt-Toronto from mid Oct-2025, later adding Rio de Janeiro, Bogota, Hyderabad and Austin from Dec-2025.1 Lufthansa subsequently put its first 787-9 with 25 of 28 Allegris business seats certified on sale from 15-Mar-2026, and planned summer 2026 Allegris roll-outs to Cape Town, Shanghai, Hong Kong, New York JFK, Los Angeles and Delhi.2 Lufthansa also planned an A350 Allegris deployment on Munich-Singapore from 26-Oct-2026.3

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