Airlines

Korean Air’s fuel-efficient A200 fleet paves the road to recovery in South Korea

Korean Air flies the larger A220-300 aircraft, each with 140 economy seats in a 2-3 seating configuration.
The airline offers A220 flights to and from several cities and airports in the country, including Seoul-Gimpo, Busan, Cheongju, Jeju and Ulsan

25 November 2020: Many countries across the global are struggling to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic effects, to boost passenger travel and restore their confidence in safe travelling. Korean Air is using their A220 fleet to restore its regional and domestic passenger network and provide much-needed connectivity in South Korea, in turn providing a welcome boost to local economies. The airline offers A220 flights to and from several cities and airports in the country, including Seoul-Gimpo, Busan, Cheongju, Jeju and Ulsan.

“Korean Air has been operating ten A220s and these aircraft are used on our domestic and short-haul routes. Thanks to its more fuel-efficient engines, Korean Air’s GTF-powered A220s have lower operating cost, which enables us to utilize the fleet effectively,” said Lee Soo Keun, chief operating officer at Korean Air. “It’s important to us that we continue to support efforts that repatriate and reconnect people to their loved ones, while also sustaining the economy with the continued flow of goods and essential supplies.”

Korean Air flies the larger A220-300 aircraft, each with 140 economy seats in a 2-3 seating configuration. The aircraft is also renowned for its passenger comfort, including lower noise thanks in large part to the Pratt & Whitney GTF engine.

The A220 is powered exclusively by GTF engines and offers significantly lower operating costs compared to previous generation aircraft. The engines deliver double-digit improvements in fuel and carbon emissions. They also provide a 75 per cent reduction in noise footprint, based on a 75 dB noise contour, and produce NOx emissions 50 per cent below the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) CAEP/6 regulation.

This means that airlines can take advantage of the lower costs per trip and per passenger to add capacity by moving up from regional jets, to right-size capacity by moving down from larger single-aisle aircraft, and to open new, longer routes  all more profitably than before.

“Many airlines have continued flying the GTF-powered A220 throughout the downturn,” said Mary Ellen Jones, vice president of customer business for Asia Pacific at Pratt & Whitney. “For others, the A220 was one of the first aircraft that airlines put back into service, due to its superior flexibility and fuel efficiency. This is why the GTF-powered A220 has been one of the commercial aircraft with the highest utilization throughout the crisis and early recovery.”

Apart from this, Korean Air is also using the A200’s health monitoring unit, supplied by Pratt & Whitney, which captures thousands of engine and aircraft data parameters throughout the full flight cycle. This system allows Korean Air and Pratt & Whitney to better monitor engine performance, minimize disruptions, schedule preventive maintenance and increase aircraft utilization.

The greater capacity and lower operating cost of Airbus A220 and its Pratt & Whiney GTF engine is leading the recovery in South Korean aviation sector.