Airbus A350-2000

Charter

Well-known member
Hi Friends.
I did not know Airbus was studying a project to stretch the A350-1000 creating the -2000 variant: about 4 meters longer than the -1000, 45 seats added and a competitor of Boeing B777-9 and the next B777-10.
The usual Emirates Airlines asks for the variant and Airbus Is considering the possibility to develop the project and the possible engines.

Airbus is actively studying a stretched variant of the A350-1000, tentatively dubbed the A350-2000, designed to seat over 400 passengers and directly compete with the Boeing 777-9. This proposed aircraft would feature a ~4-meter fuselage extension, adding roughly 40-45 more seats. While not yet officially launched, strong demand from airlines for high-capacity, efficient, long-haul, twin-engine jets has accelerated studies.
Key Details of the Potential A350-2000:
  • Purpose: Replaces the A380/747 capacity, filling the gap for high-density, long-haul routes.
  • Design Changes: A roughly 4-meter stretch, likely requiring stronger landing gear and additional cabin exits.
  • Engines: Requires a more powerful version of the Rolls-Royce Trent XWB-97 or potential new-generation engines.
  • Timeline: While studies are advancing in early 2026, Airbus has not yet given the program a formal, immediate launch, focusing first on current production capacity.
  • Market Position: It aims to offer lower seat-mile costs than competitors, with significant interest from airlines looking for high-capacity, twin-engine alternatives.
This stretch is considered a "natural evolution" of the platform by Airbus leadership.


 

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I think it will be interesting to see what happens. On one hand, this sounds like a promising evolution of the A350 and I am looking forward to this A350-2000 but on the other hand I also have some doubts. Firstly, the base A350 has been flying for more than 10 years so Airbus might also look into updating the A350 and maybe offer the A350-2000 as part of this 'A350neo' family. Maybe the A350 doesn't need such an extensive upgrade for now. I also have doubts because the A350-1000 isn't selling as well as the A350-900 and I fear that most airlines interested in such a plane have already ordered the 777-9. Sure the A350-2000 could be interesting for A350 centric operators willing to have extra capacity without adding fleet complexity and even 777X customers could chose to adopt the type as they already did with the A350-1000 (British Airways, Lufthansa, Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, Air India, China Airlines, Korean Air).
But Airbus hasn't officially launched the A350-2000 yet, so wait and see...
 
I think it will be interesting to see what happens. On one hand, this sounds like a promising evolution of the A350 and I am looking forward to this A350-2000 but on the other hand I also have some doubts. Firstly, the base A350 has been flying for more than 10 years so Airbus might also look into updating the A350 and maybe offer the A350-2000 as part of this 'A350neo' family. Maybe the A350 doesn't need such an extensive upgrade for now. I also have doubts because the A350-1000 isn't selling as well as the A350-900 and I fear that most airlines interested in such a plane have already ordered the 777-9. Sure the A350-2000 could be interesting for A350 centric operators willing to have extra capacity without adding fleet complexity and even 777X customers could chose to adopt the type as they already did with the A350-1000 (British Airways, Lufthansa, Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, Air India, China Airlines, Korean Air).
But Airbus hasn't officially launched the A350-2000 yet, so wait and see...
Agree. It depends on what Emirates wants: 100 or 200 A350-2000? The A380 was a "lucky failure" especially because of 123 (now 116) Emirates airplanes. It depends: better to develop a new airframe to be B777-9/10 competitor or better to stretch the A350-1000 also according to a possible (very, very) huge Emirates order?
 
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Agree. It depends on what Emirates wants: 100 or 200 A350-2000? The A380 was a "lucky failure" especially because of 123 (now 116) Emirates airplanes. It depends: better to develop a new airframe to be B777-9/10 competitor or better to stretch the A350-1000 also according to a possible (very, very) huge Emirates order?
I don't think Airbus would launch a stretched A350 just for Emirates. In my opinion, it would be foolish of them. It is more likely that should they do so, they must have identified other possible customers. Another thing to note is that the A350-1000 and the 777-9 can complement one another which a reason I suspect some airlines have ordered both. I'm not saying there isn't a market for an A350-2000 but I can't think of many airlines other than Emirates that could order the A350-2000. I can see Turkish Airlines ordering the A350-2000, maybe Air France/KLM too but they reduced their order for the A350-1000 from 11 to just 3 and converted the rest to the A350-900. Maybe Japan Airlines too, if they need a bigger aircraft...
 
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