List of Airbus A330 operators

The Airbus A330 is a wide-body twin-engine jet airliner made by Airbus. Versions of the A330 have a range of 7,400 to 13,430 kilometres (4,000 to 7,250 nmi) and can accommodate up to 335 passengers in a two-class layout or carry 70 tonnes (150,000 lb) of cargo.

The origin of the A330 dates to the 1970s as one of several conceived derivatives of Airbus's first airliner, the A300. The A330 was developed in parallel with the A340, which shared many common airframe components but differed in number of engines. Both airliners incorporated fly-by-wire flight control technology, first introduced on an Airbus aircraft with the A320, as well as the A320's six-display glass cockpit.[1] In June 1987, after receiving orders from various customers, Airbus launched the A330 and A340. The A330 was Airbus's first airliner offered with the choice of three engines: General Electric, Pratt & Whitney, and Rolls-Royce.[2]

The A330-300, the first variant, took its maiden flight in November 1992 and entered passenger service with Air Inter in January 1994.[3] Responding to dwindling sales, Airbus followed up with the slightly shorter A330-200 variant in 1998, which has proved more popular. Subsequently, developed A330 variants include a dedicated freighter, the A330-200F, and a military tanker, the A330 MRTT. The A330 MRTT formed the basis of the proposed KC-45, entered into the U.S. Air Force's KC-X competition in conjunction with Northrop Grumman, where after an initial win, on appeal lost to Boeing's tanker.[4][5]

Since its launch, the A330 has allowed Airbus to expand market share in wide-body airliners. Airlines have selected the A330 as a replacement for less economical trijets and versus rival twinjets. Boeing has offered variants of the 767 and 777 as competitors, along with the 787 which entered service in 2011. Airbus's A350 also shares this wide-body airliner market. As of September 2017 the A330's order book stood at 1,694, of which 1,368 had been delivered and 1,336 were in service.[6] The largest operator is Turkish Airlines with 64 aircraft.[6]

Airline operators

A list of active operators of the Airbus A330, as of 30 September 2017:[6]

Airline A330-200 A330-200F A330-300 A330-300F Total
Aer Lingus4711
Aeroflot51722
Aerolíneas Argentinas1010
Afriqiyah Airways213
Air Algérie88
Air Berlin1717
Air Canada88
Air Caraïbes246
Air China302959
Air Europa10212
Air France1515
Air Greenland11
Air Hong Kong22
Air Italy22
Air Leisure33
Air Mauritius22
Air Namibia22
Air Serbia11
Air Seychelles22
Air Transat14418
AirAsia X3030
Aircalin22
Alitalia1414
American Airlines15924
Arik Air22
Asiana Airlines1515
AtlasGlobal22
Avianca628
Avianca Brazil314
Avianca Cargo66
Avianca Peru11
Azores Airlines11
Azul Brazilian Airlines77
Berkut Air11
Brussels Airlines4610
Capital Airlines628
Cathay Dragon2424
Cathay Pacific3434
Cebu Pacific88
China Airlines2424
China Eastern Airlines332457
China Southern Airlines162642
Corsair224
Czech Airlines11
Delta Air Lines113142
Edelweiss Air22
EgyptAir7411
Etihad Airways18624
Eurowings718
EVA Air3811
Evelop Airlines123
Fiji Airways516
Finnair88
French Blue11
Garuda Indonesia71724
Governments; Executive And Private Jets4242
Gulf Air66
Hainan Airlines81422
Hawaiian Airlines2424
Hi Fly33
Hong Kong Air Cargo Carrier22
Hong Kong Airlines931123
Iberia12820
I-Fly325
Indonesia AirAsia X22
Iran Air22
Iraqi Airways11
Jet Airways448
Jet211
Jordan Aviation11
KLM8513
Korean Air82129
Kuwait Airways55
LEVEL44
Libyan Airlines33
Lion Air33
Lucky Air11
Lufthansa1919
Malaysia Airlines531523
Middle East Airlines55
MNG Airlines11
Nepal Airlines22
Nordwind Airlines22
Oman Air4610
Onur Air88
Orbest11
Philippine Airlines1515
Qantas181028
Qatar Airways1381334
RwandAir112
Saudia62935
Scandinavian Airlines88
Shaheen Air44
Shanghai Airlines336
Shenzhen Airlines44
Sichuan Airlines6612
Singapore Airlines2121
South African Airways6511
SriLankan Airlines6713
SunExpress Deutschland66
Swiss International Air Lines1414
TAME11
TAP Air Portugal14418
Thai Airways1717
Thomas Cook Airlines66
Thomas Cook Scandinavia134
Tianjin Airlines44
Tibet Airlines33
Tunisair22
Turkish Airlines1893764
Undisclosed customers2311943
Unical Aviation22
Vietnam Airlines88
VIM Airlines33
Virgin Atlantic1010
Virgin Australia66
Wamos Air33
Windrose Airlines11
WOW air33
XL Airways France314
Total 635 34 704 2 1,375

Data at 30 September 2017.[6]

Military operators

As of August 2015, seven countries have placed order for a total 41 of Airbus A330 MRTTs, specialised for tanker operations: Australia, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, France, Singapore and South Korea.[7]

Government operators

Airbus A330-200 of Qatar Amiri Flight

Following countries operate A330-200 for VIP use.

See also

Footnotes

References
  1. Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 27
  2. Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 44
  3. Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 84–85
  4. Shalal-Esa, Andrea (2 March 2008). "Northrop, EADS tanker win sparks controversy in U.S". Reuters. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  5. Trimble, Stephen (24 February 2011). "UPDATED: USAF selects Boeing for KC-X contract". Flight Global. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Airbus orders and deliveries" (Microsoft Excel). Airbus S.A.S. 30 September 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  7. "Airbus D&S Orders & deliveries pdf" (PDF). Airbus S.A.S. August 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
Bibliography
  • Norris, Guy and Mark Wagner. Airbus A340 and A330. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-0889-6.
  • Airbus Orders and Deliveries
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