16.682 The Aerospace Industry
April 13 Class
Special Guests:
Heidi Wood
Myles Walton
Col. John Keesee
Plan for the Class
3:05-3:10 Announcements and Introductions
Write one question about Market Focus on 3X5 card
3:10-3:35 Cargo Aircraft Growth & Lean Thinking
3:35-3:55 Market Focus - Heidi Wood
3:55-4:05 Break
4:05-4:50 Av Week Article Discussions
? The US Government should give higher priority to R&D
investment in Zero Point Energy than scramjet propulsion.
? NASA should use commercial space transportation exclusively
4:50-4:55 Muddy cards
4:55 Adjourn
?Air cargo growth correlates with GDP growth
?World GDP expected to average 3.2% growth per year
?World air cargo traffic expected to grow at 6.4% per year
Source: Dan Morales, Commercial Cargo Needs, Market, Metrics, 16.886 presentation, Feb 25, 2004
However, most major market forecasters predict that world GDP will make a strong recovery, which will then of course be the impetus for strong recovery in the air cargo market. The predictions for the next twenty
years are for world GDP to grow on average 3.2% per year and for world air cargo traffic to grow on average 6.4% per year.
Courtesy of Daniel Morales. Used with permission.
Commercial Drivers for Growth in Air Cargo
? Globalization trends
– Longer distances between producers and consumers
– Emerging markets, e.g. China, South America, Africa
? Lean manufacturing
– Focus on “flow” to eliminate waste, e.g. JIT
– Faster response to market demands
? Air freight operators looking for new markets
– Most transoceanic freight shipped by surface
– Gap in capability- “middle market”
? Ship is inexpensive but takes 18-30 days
? Air is expensive but takes only a few days
? Operating economics drive
– Increased capacity per air freighter
– Reduced crew and fuel costs
Regional Growth
?Asia growing fastest; mature markets growing slower
?Air cargo growth (domestic and international) through China
airports expected to grow 11.2% per annum for next 20 years
Jiang, et al (MIT ICAT), “Market and Infrastructure Analysis of Future Air Cargo Demand in China”
Source: Dan Morales, Commercial Cargo Needs, Market, Metrics, 16.886 presentation, Feb 25, 2004
Now here is a chart of the top ten air freight markets in the next twenty years according to the Global Market Forecast produced by Airbus. As is evident, the fastest growing markets are those linking Asia to other
regions as well as Intra Asia whereas the domestic US market and other maturing markets will grow much more slowly.
Courtesy of Daniel Morales. Used with permission.
Responses to Drivers
? Existing technology
– More wide body aircraft
? Many converted passenger aircraft
– Larger aircraft - A380
? Advanced technologies
– Blended Wing Body
– Wing in Ground Effect
– Lighter than air craft
– Formation flight
(Image removed due to copyright considerations.)
(Image removed due to copyright considerations.)
The Boeing 747-400SF Program
Discussion points for AvWeek Article
? What units comprise the program core enterprise?
? What organizations comprise the program
extended enterprise?
? What other programs within Boeing compete or
interact with the 747-400SF?
? What factors would influence a value proposition
for converting passenger aircraft to freighters
rather than purchasing brand new freighter aircraft
models?
? What other Lean Enterprise Value “footprints” do
you see in reading these articles?
Points Captured from Class Discussion
The US Government should give higher
priority to R&D investment in Zero Point
Energy than scramjet propulsion.
?Pros
– Applications are much
larger for ZPE
– More stakeholders
? Auto, space,…
– New energy source to wean
us from fossil fuels
? Cons
– Looking at applied science for
scramjets vs science fiction for
ZPE
– Wide variety of applications
? Military, commercial
? SSTO
– Challenge is engineering
complexity. Does not need
new physics like ZPE
– Would drive student interest
– Now have a data point with
recent test flight
Points Captured from Class Discussion
NASA should use commercial space
transportation exclusively.
? Cons
– Is not tailored to NASA’s
objectives and missions
– Not human rated
– If industry goes up, NASA
priorities go down
– If industry goes down,
NASA looses launch
– Loose internal competency
? What does NASA become
?Pros
– Less time to launch with more
providers
– More options
– Spread liability
– Better wages, better engineers
– Leaner, no bureaucracy
– More stable industry
– Allow NASA to focus on R&D
– Eliminate internal NASA
competition
– Could open new markets