The company's 2024 Pilot and Technician Outlook (PTO) shows the industry will require nearly 2.4 million new professionals to support the growing commercial fleet and meet the long-term increase in air travel.
According to the latest PTO, commercial carriers will need the following new personnel through 2043 to sustain the global commercial fleet, including 674,000 pilots, 716,000 maintenance technicians, and 980,000 cabin crew members.
“Driven by aviation traffic trending above pre-pandemic levels, personnel attrition and commercial fleet growth, the demand for aviation personnel continues to rise,” said Chris Broom, vice president, commercial training solutions, Boeing Global Services.
“We are focused on being a reliable and innovative partner in the lifecycle of aviation training. Our offerings are rooted in competency-based training and assessment programmes to help ensure high-quality aviation training starting in flight schools and in commercial operations while helping enhance aviation safety through immersive and virtual training solutions.”
Through 2043, the PTO projects demand for new personnel will be driven primarily by single aisle aeroplanes, except in Africa and the Middle East where widebody aeroplane demand leads.
Eurasia, China, and North America will drive demand for more than half of new industry personnel. South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Africa are the fastest-growing regions for personnel, with staffing demand expected to more than triple over 20 years. Two-thirds of new personnel will address replacements due to attrition, while one third will support the growth of the commercial fleet.
The PTO forecast includes these projections for industry needs through 2043:
30 pilots depart from Bamboo Airways Bamboo Airways, the third-largest airline in Vietnam, finds itself amidst a turbulent phase with reportedly around 30 foreign pilots - over 10 per cent of its total - resigning, anonymous sources revealed. |
Boeing intent to turn safety corner Aircraft manufacturer Boeing has committed to goals for global aerospace safety, innovation, diversity, and community engagement. |
Boeing 777-9 granted FAA certification following test flight The Boeing 777-9, the largest and most fuel-efficient twin-engine jet in the world, conducted its first certification flight test successfully on July 12. |
Boeing announces firm order for 35 737 MAX aircraft Embattled aviation giant Boeing on Monday announced that it had finalized a firm order with leasing company Aviation Capital Group for thirty-five 737 MAXs, its flagship aircraft, worth almost $4.5 billion at list price. |
What the stars mean:
★ Poor ★ ★ Promising ★★★ Good ★★★★ Very good ★★★★★ Exceptional