ARC NEWS
US airfares up 21% in April
May 13, 2026
US airline fares were up 21% year on year in April, and 6.3% versus the previous month, data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics indicates. Fares have been raised by carriers seeking to recoup the higher cost of jet fuel amid the ongoing Iran war. Meanwhile, energy costs for US consumers increased 18% year on year in April and were likewise up 6.3% from March levels. The "all items" consumer price index, commonly used as a measure of US inflation, rose 3.8% during the 12 months ended in April, compared with 3.3% for the 12 months ended in March.


Embraer expects lower full-year E‑Jet orders after 'amazing' 2025
May 12, 2026
Embraer foresees that its commercial aircraft orders will come in below 2025's total this year but remains confident in E-Jet demand. During first-quarter earnings call on 8 May, Embraer chief executive Francisco Gomes Neto said the Brazilian airframer was currently involved in E-Jet sales campaigns in "almost all" regions across the globe. "We are optimistic that we will have a good year as well," he says, but he adds: "Not as good as last year, because last year we had amazing sales of E-Jets." Cirium data shows that Embraer received 221 E-Jet orders last year. These comprised 142 E195-E2s, 15 E190-E2s and 64 E175s. Orders had totalled 120 in 2024 and 75 in 2023. Gomes Neto acknowledges that airlines have reduced capacity and cut costs as a result of fuel-price increases amid the Middle East conflict. "Our commercial aviation team is looking at that very closely. But so far, we haven't seen any impact," he says, adding: "We haven't seen any customer postponing [aircraft acquisition] campaigns or having even asked us to delay the delivery of aircraft." In the realm of production, Embraer has made progress in efforts to ease supply-chain bottlenecks and spread deliveries more evenly across the year, it says. "We still have some pacers that we are working with very closely [which are] pushing our deliveries further to the next quarters," notes Gomes Neto. "But we have seen a lot of improvements." Deliveries of Pratt & Whitney PW1900G engines for E190-E2s and E195-E2s are "under control", while supply of GE Aerospace CF34-8E engines for the E175 is "improving", he says. Overall, Gomes Neto sees no risk to Embraer's February-issued guidance of 80-85 E-Jet deliveries in 2026, up from 78 last year. Efforts to spread deliveries more evenly across the year will continue into 2027, he says. Work with suppliers is underway to ensure "we will have a better start in '27 than we had in '26". During the first quarter, the manufacturer delivered 10 E-Jets, up from seven last year. Embraer targets annual production of 120 E-Jets by the end of 2029, says Gomes Neto. The commercial aircraft division's first-quarter adjusted EBIT loss nearly tripled to $28 million, from $9.7 million last year, while its revenue grew 45% to $293 million as a result of increased deliveries and pricing. Group-wide adjusted EBIT increased 52% to $94 million on the back of 31% growth in revenue, to $1.45 billion.


EASA issues safety guidance for Jet A adoption amid fuel crisis
May 12, 2026
European regulators have published guidance for the use of both Jet A-1 and Jet A fuel to alleviate potential supply shortages amid the Middle East crisis and to avoid confusion between the two fuel grades. "Aviation and fuel supply stakeholders are reviewing the feasibility of introducing [Jet A] at locations traditionally supplied with Jet A-1," the European Union Aviation Safety Agency says in a safety information bulletin. It notes that Jet A-1 is "predominantly used" in Europe and "many other parts of the world", citing Africa, Australia, India and southeast Asia as examples. EASA observes that "Jet A is used daily for flights from and within the USA and Canada". Adopting Jet A in other locations "would not generate safety concerns provided that its introduction is properly managed", the agency says. But it warns: "The transition to Jet A in a Jet A-1 environment, when not properly managed, creates risk of fuel grade confusion, particularly in the communication between fuel suppliers, flight crews, and airlines. This may lead to a mismatch between the actual fuel properties and the assumptions used for flight planning, fuel temperature monitoring, and crew procedures." EASA highlights a higher maximum freezing point and lower electrical conductivity of Jet A compared to Jet A-1. If an aircraft was fuelled with Jet A but its pilots assumed that Jet A-1 was delivered – for example through incorrect electronic transmission of a fuel ticket – it could result in the aircraft "flying outside of its safe operating limits", EASA warns, adding: "These risks may be further exacerbated by inconsistent fuel grade availability across airports, increasing the likelihood of mixing fuel grade and associated assumption mismatches." In addition to aircraft and aerodrome operators, the bulletin is directed at fuel producers and suppliers, organisations involved in storing and dispensing of aviation fuel at aerodromes, authorities, and design approval holders. The regulator stresses that the bulletin is "addressing a transitory situation" and providing guidance. "It shall not be interpreted as an authorisation or endorsement, nor shall it be construed to promote the transition towards turbine jet fuel of Jet A grade in Europe," it asserts.


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