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Airbus halts operations of its oversized cargo division

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Airbus halts operations of its oversized cargo division
Policy
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Airbus Beluga Airbus | Wikimedia

Airbus has decided to halt the operations of its outsized air cargo service, Airbus Beluga Transport (AiBT), slightly over a year after it received its Air Operators Certificate (AOC). The fleet of Airbus A300-600ST Belugas, which have been operational for more than two decades, will be returned to the Airbus Transport International (ATI) AOC.

The decision was reported by ch-aviation and marks the end of AiBT, which began operations in early 2022 and became a dedicated airline in November 2023. According to Flightradar24, the last flight using an A300-600ST took place on January 17 from Bremen to Toulouse. An Airbus spokesperson stated, "We confirm that the decision has been taken to terminate the Airbus Beluga Transport business for outsized cargo missions. All flights operated by the BelugaST fleet are suspended as of now. The closure project has just started, and it is too early to predict a completion date. One of our main priorities during this time is to support our employees during the social process."

Although Airbus has not publicly detailed reasons for shutting down AiBT, customers were informed that "economic factors" influenced this decision. The future use of the A300-600STs remains uncertain.

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The Beluga aircraft have served for over twenty years since entering service in January 1996. They were developed as successors to the Super Guppy and initially performed in-house duties before offering outsized freight services globally under AiBT.

In November 2023, AiBT had around 60 employees and operated on existing networks before expanding globally. Over the past year, its fleet reached destinations such as Sydney, Melbourne, Dubai, Bahrain, Hyderabad, Hamburg, Sharm el-Sheikh, and Shenzhen. However, as of January 2025, all five BelugaSTs are stored in Bordeaux and Toulouse.

The introduction of six new-generation BelugaXLs replaced the older fleet at AiBT. These aircraft are based on the larger A330-200 model and provide 30% more transport capacity than their predecessors. The final aircraft joined ATI's fleet in June 2024 after serving as a test vehicle.

Currently, all six A330-700STs are active with ATI for shorter inter-site missions across Europe. The XL version can carry up to 51 tonnes over a range of 2,200 nautical miles and is designed to transport large sections like those used in producing the A350.

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