Israeli company confirms Cargojet deal for Boeing 777 cargo conversions

Fuselage of an aircraft in a production hanger.

Israel Aircraft Industries on Monday announced that it will structurally modify four Boeing 777-300 passenger jets to carry heavy cargo on the top deck for Canadian all-cargo carrier Cargojet, confirming independent reporting by FreightWaves.

The 777 is a larger aircraft than Cargojet (TSX: CJT) currently operates and opens the door to longer-haul business in Asia. The airline publicly declared in November it would buy conversion service for two 777-200s from startup aviation engineering firm Mammoth Freighters, but without fanfare subsequently exercised options for two planes and placed an order with Israel Aircraft Industries. The statement from IAI makes the order, which includes purchase rights for more aircraft, official and brings Cargojet’s projected 777 fleet to eight aircraft. 

Cargojet functions as an express air carrier within Canada for companies such as Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), FedEx (NYSE: FDX), UPS (NYSE: UPS) and Purolator, and provides tailored airlift for other customers with a fleet of 31 freighters, mostly medium widebody 767s.  

Michigan-based Kalitta Air will get the first 777-300 off IAI’s production line sometime in the first half of 2023 after aviation regulators certify the aircraft is safe to fly with the structural modification package. IAI tweeted that the first prototype 777 cargo jet is finishing its conversion process. The aerospace and defense firm will convert two more 777s for Kalitta, as well as four for Emirates.

Last year, IAI established extra conversion facilities in Abu Dhabi, Ethiopia and South Korea.  Etihad Engineering, part of the Etihad Aviation Group in Abu Dhabi and the largest maintenance center in the Middle East, will convert the Emirates aircraft under contract with IAI.

The expansion of conversion centers suggests that IAI has many more orders for the 777-300 conversion than publicly acknowledged. In announcing the South Korean production facility last year, it said partner Sharp Technics would retrofit six 777-300 Extended Range and 777-200 Long Range aircraft per year beginning in 2024.

AerCap, the largest aircraft leasing company in the world, is providing the aircraft being converted by IAI, and then leasing them to all-cargo carriers. The lessor’s cargo chief recently said that the “Big Twin” program, so named because of the plane’s twin-engine capability, has already secured 50 orders and preliminary commitments, with more customers still to be disclosed, according to a CargoFacts report.

Conversion work involves stripping the cabin interior and installing reinforced floor beams and panels, a wide cargo door, a protective barrier behind the cockpit and a cargo handling system for maneuvering large containers. 

Click here for more FreightWaves/American Shipper stories by Eric Kulisch. 

Related News:

Canada’s Cargojet quietly quadruples order for 777 freighters

777 aircraft conversions: Mammoth Freighters takes on the ‘Big Twin’

Source: freightwaves - Israeli company confirms Cargojet deal for Boeing 777 cargo conversions
Editor: Eric Kulisch

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