The value of engines boosts teardowns and strains the freighter chain.

Engines are sometimes worth more than the plane: “teardowns” are accelerating and the freighter conversion chain is tightening Context: Engines are sometimes worth more than the plane: “teardowns” are accelerating and the freighter conversion chain is tightening

A strong signal is shaking up the economy of aeronautical assets: aircraft are being dismantled earlier than before, not because they are unusable, but because their engines have gained such value that they sometimes exceed that of the complete aircraft. This reversal of logic, highlighted by a specialized market analysis, is already changing the trade-offs made by operators and lessors — and, indirectly, the balance of supply in air freight.

The mechanics are simple, but its impacts are massive: when the scarcity of engines and the pressure on maintenance drive up rents and prices, the temptation increases to “monetize” the aircraft thru its components rather than keeping it in service. However, this trend particularly affects families of aircraft that are widely used in the cargo ecosystem, especially in narrow-body formats often favored for feeding regional and express networks.

For freight, the stakes are strategic: a significant portion of the capacity comes from converted aircraft. If airframes that would normally have served as “candidates” for conversion disappear too early from the market (through dismantling), the reserve of convertible aircraft is reduced. Possible result: pressure on capacity availability, more constrained fleet choices, and an indirect effect on operating costs and network planning.

This evolution also reconfigures investment decisions: instead of reasoning solely in “classic” life cycles, stakeholders must integrate a now central factor — the value of the engine, workshop availability, and MRO bottlenecks. In a market where speed and reliability count as much as price, air cargo faces a new challenge: securing its future capacity in an environment where the upstream supply chain (parts, engines, maintenance) can dictate the pace more than demand itself.

The post The value of engines boosts teardowns and strains the freighter chain. appeared first on The Logistic News.

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