Air India orders 30 Max jets and converts A321neos to XLRs
January 30, 2026
Air India has ordered another 30 Boeing 737 Max aircraft and converted 15 Airbus A321neo orders to the extra long-range variant. The new Boeing orders brings its total outstanding commitment to the US airframer to 198 jets. Air India says the new deal comprises 20 Max 8s and 10 Max 10s, the largest Max variant. It follows on from a 220-strong order for Boeing aircraft agreed in 2023, split between 190 737 Max jets, 20 787s and 10 777X aircraft. A total of 52 of these – 51 Max 8s and one 787-9 – have already been delivered, with the narrowbodies being allocated to the Air India Express low-cost subsidiary. "This additional order is part of our broader fleet strategy to position Air India firmly for the future," says chief executive Campbell Wilson. "It supports the steady deliveries and fleet upgrades planned over the next few years as we build the world-class global carrier that India deserves." Paul Righi, Boeing vice-president of commercial sales for India, says the order "underscores the strong performance of their existing 737-8 fleet as they continue to expand connectivity across India and the South Asia region". In terms of its Airbus commitment, the Indian flag carrier says the A321neo conversions to the A321XLR form part of its orders placed with the European airframer in the 2023-24 period, comprising a total of 50 A350s and 300 A320neo-family jets. The conversion to A321XLR applies to 15 of 210 A321neo aircraft ordered, while the remaining 90 A320neos continue as originally structured. Deliveries of the 15 A321XLRs are scheduled for the 2029-30 period. An earlier version of the story has been updated with information about the A321XLR order conversion
Solomon Airlines appoints new chief executive
January 29, 2026
Solomon Airlines has announced that Matthew Findlay will take charge as its new chief executive from 16 February. He will replace interim chief executive Paul Abbott who has helmed the carrier since June 2025. Findlay joins the carrier from Ailevon Pacific Aviation Consulting where he was director of global markets for over six years, and prior to that held commercial roles at Northern Territory Airports and Newcastle airport. "Matthew's extensive experience and exposure to the challenges of Pacific aviation will enable Solomon Airlines under his leadership, to further solidify our operational aspirations and to realise enhanced growth opportunities," says the airline's chairman Frank Wickham. Findlay comments: "It's an exciting time for Solomon Airlines and for Solomon Islands as the company navigates current challenges in some markets, and explores vast potential in others, to support the nation in diversifying its economy." Cirium fleets data shows that the airline operates two Airbus A320ceos and three De Havilland Canada DHC-6-300 Twin Otters. It has another Twin Otter and a Dash 8-100 in storage.
Malaysia Airlines and SIA formalise joint business
January 29, 2026
Malaysia Airlines and Singapore Airlines have formalised their joint business partnership after receiving approvals from Malaysia's civil aviation authority. The deal will see the two airlines deepen their commercial partnership on their services between Singapore and Malaysia, and could include revenue sharing flights, joint fare products, coordinated schedules and joint corporate travel arrangements, SIA states. "This collaboration brings together complementary frequencies and aligned schedules, enabling deeper connectivity between Malaysia and Singapore," says Malaysia Aviation Group managing director Izham Ismail. "Over time, it reinforces Malaysia Airlines’ competitive position by enhancing scale, relevance, and network resilience across key markets." Singapore's competition regulator approved the partnership in July 2025, and the deal was contingent upon approval from the Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia that was obtained earlier this month. The two carriers already have a codeshare arrangement in place on several routes between Singapore, Malaysia and their respective longhaul networks.