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List of Airbus A330 operators

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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

An Airbus A330 of Finnair,Registration OH-LTO

A list of active operators of the Airbus A330, as of 15 November 2019.[7]

Airline A330-200 A330-200F A330-300 A330-300P2F A330-900neo Total
Republic of Ireland Aer Lingus 5 8 13
Russia Aeroflot 5 17 22
Argentina Aerolíneas Argentinas 10 10
Libya Afriqiyah Airways 2 1 3
Algeria Air Algérie 8 8
Malaysia AirAsia X 24 24
New Caledonia AirCalin 1 2 3
Canada Air Canada 13 13
Guadeloupe Air Caraïbes 3 4 7
China Air China 30 28 58
Spain Air Europa 9 2 11
France Air France 15 15
Greenland Air Greenland 1 1
Hong Kong Air Hong Kong 2 2
Egypt Air Leisure 3 3
Mauritius Air Mauritius 2 2 4
Namibia Air Namibia 2 2
Senegal Air Senegal 1 1
Serbia Air Serbia 1 1
Canada Air Transat 16 4 20
Italy Alitalia 14 14
Egypt Almasria Universal Airlines 1 1
United States American Airlines 15 9 24
South Korea Asiana Airlines 15 15
Republic of Ireland ASL Airlines 1 3 4
Colombia Avianca 6 2 8
Colombia Avianca Cargo 6 6
Brazil Azul Brazilian Airlines 8 2 10
Belgium Brussels Airlines 3 11 14
China Beijing Capital Airlines 7 4 11
Hong Kong Cathay Dragon 25 25
Hong Kong Cathay Pacific 30 30
Philippines Cebu Pacific 8 8
Taiwan China Airlines 23 23
China China Eastern Airlines 30 24 54
China China Southern Airlines 14 33 47
Germany Condor 1 1
France Corsair 2 2 4
United States Delta Air Lines 11 31 4 46
Switzerland Edelweiss Air 2 2
Egypt EgyptAir 7 4 11
Germany Eurowings 7 4 11
Taiwan EVA Air 3 9 12
Spain Evelop Airlines 1 3 4
Fiji Fiji Airways 5 1 6
Finland Finnair 8 8
Indonesia Garuda Indonesia 7 17 3 27
Governments; Executive And Private Jets 54 54
Lithuania Getjet Airlines 1 1
China Hainan Airlines 9 25 34
United States Hawaiian Airlines 24 24
Portugal Hi Fly 2 2 2 6
Malta Hi Fly Malta 2 1 3
Hong Kong Hong Kong Air Cargo 4 4
Hong Kong Hong Kong Airlines 16 10 26
Spain Iberia 12 8 20
Russia I-Fly 5 2 7
Iran Iran Air 2 2
Iraq Iraqi Airways 1 1
United Kingdom Jet2.com 1 1
Jordan Jordan Aviation 1 1
Netherlands KLM 8 5 13
South Korea Korean Air 8 21 29
Kuwait Kuwait Airways 5 5
Spain LEVEL 7 7
Libya Libyan Airlines 4 4
Indonesia Lion Air 4 2 6
China Lucky Air 4 4
Germany Lufthansa 15 15
Malaysia Malaysia Airlines 6 3 15 24
Lebanon Middle East Airlines 5 5
Turkey MNG Airlines 1 1
Nepal Nepal Airlines 2 2
Russia Nordwind Airlines 2 2
Oman Oman Air 4 7 11
Turkey Onur Air 10 10
Portugal Orbest 1 1
Philippines Philippine Airlines 15 15
Australia Qantas 18 10 28
Qatar Qatar Airways 11 13 24
Qatar Qatar Airways Cargo 5 5
Qatar Qatar Amiri 2 2
Rwanda RwandAir 1 1 2
Saudi Arabia Saudia 8 32 40
Sweden Scandinavian Airlines 9 9
China Shanghai Airlines 2 2
China Shenzhen Airlines 6 6
China Sichuan Airlines 8 7 15
Singapore Singapore Airlines 13 13
South Africa South African Airways 6 5 11
Sri Lanka SriLankan Airlines 7 7 14
Denmark Sunclass Airlines 1 3 4
Switzerland Swiss International Air Lines 14 14
Portugal TAP Air Portugal 8 16 24
Thailand Thai AirAsia X 10 2 12
Thailand Thai Airways 15 15
Thailand Thai Lion Air 2 2 4
China Tianjin Airlines 4 2 6
China Tibet Airlines 5 5
Tunisia Tunisair 2 2
Turkey Turkish Airlines 18 10 39 67
Undisclosed customers 24 3 22 43
United Kingdom Virgin Atlantic 4 10 14
Australia Virgin Australia 6 6
Spain Wamos Air 7 7
Total 607 32 731 2 37 1,409

Data at 15 November 2019

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.[8]

Government operators

Airbus A330-200 of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Following countries operate A330-200 for VIP use.

Former operators

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. ^ a b "Airbus orders and deliveries" (Microsoft Excel). Airbus S.A.S. 30 September 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Airbus A330/A340 Operators". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
  8. ^ "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