China’s post-pandemic air travel to see 8,600 plane purchases in next 20 years – Boeing

China's expected recovery in air travel after the Covid-19 pandemic is expected to result in 8,600 new airplane purchases over the next 20 years, according to US manufacturer Boeing.

In its 2020 Commercial Market Outlook, Boeing said that, to meet rebounding demand and to replace its maturing fleet, China was likely to be in the market to purchase around 6,450 single-aisle planes – including the likes of Boeing’s 737 – with around 1,590 purchases of bigger, wide-bodied planes. 

Amounting to some $1.4 trillion, the purchases would be accompanied by $1.7 trillion worth of commercial aviation services, Boeing said, pointing to a robust post-pandemic recovery being supported by China’s booming middle classes and increased economic growth. Boeing said China would take a leading role in growing passenger travel globally.

“China’s commercial jet fleet has expanded sevenfold since 2000 and around 25% of all aviation growth in the [past] decade has come from China,” Boeing said.

However, an anticipated slow recovery in global long-haul traffic saw Boeing cut its projection for wide-bodied planes by 4 percentage points to 18% over the next 20 years.

Boeing expects China’s annual passenger traffic growth to be about 5.5% over the period.

Various advanced composites and metals are used in the construction of Boeing’s airplanes, including titanium for load-bearing areas, aluminium for engine cowlings and wing tips, and carbon laminates and sandwich structures for the fuselage.

Around half the material used in modern aircraft construction is carbon fiber-reinforced plastic, while the main metals used are aluminium alloys (20%) and titanium (15%), although steel (10%) also continues to feature because of its strength and corrosion resistance.

What to read next
The following price was affected: MB-STE-0923 Flat steel reduced carbon emissions, daily inferred, exw China, yuan/tonne, scheduled for 5-6pm China Standard Time (Shanghai), was published at 9:13pm. This price is part of the Fastmarkets steel package. For more information or to provide feedback on the delayed publication of this price, or if you would like […]
Based on preliminary market feedback, market participants noted that smaller-sized spot market transactions may be skewed and not reflective of the wider market. The aluminium P1020A(MJP), cif Japan, assessment specification which has a minimum tonnage of 100 tonnes will be amended to 500 tonnes after the proposed change. The proposed new specifications are as follows, […]
The publication of Fastmarkets’ MB-STE-0421 Steel scrap shredded, index, import, cfr Nhava Sheva, India was delayed because of a peer reviewer error. The Fastmarkets pricing database has been updated.
Fastmarkets is also proposing to clarify the names of the four containerboard assessments: As part of the process of standardizing price nomenclature for forest products, their names will be as follows: The prices are part of the Fastmarkets Paper Packaging price package. The consultation period for the proposed change to publication frequency and the standardized […]
South China, which includes the provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian, accounts for 25 million tonnes of containerboard capacity annually, about a quarter of China’s total, according to Fastmarkets’ database. The region also holds around one-third of the nation’s corrugated converting capacity and remains a key manufacturing and trading hub with significant demand for corrugated […]
The function of treatment and refining charges (TC/RCs) for copper concentrates is being partially displaced by a broader set of commercial levers amid elevated byproduct values – including readjusted gold and silver payables, sulfuric acid tolling arrangements between miners and smelters, and renewed trade in gold-bearing pyrite materials – copper concentrates market participants told Fastmarkets at CESCO Week 2026 in Santiago, Chile, from April 13-17.