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Airbus receives aft fuselage for first A350F at Toulouse assembly line

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Airbus receives aft fuselage for first A350F at Toulouse assembly line
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Joost van der Heijden, Senior Vice President Marketing at Airbus | LinkedIn

The aft fuselage of the first Airbus A350F has reached the final assembly line in Toulouse, marking a significant step for the program. This section, which left Airbus’ Hamburg facility on September 1, arrived in Toulouse earlier this week and will be joined with other parts including the front and rear fuselage sections and wings.

Airbus is assembling two A350F test aircraft that are scheduled for flight tests throughout 2026 and 2027. The commercial entry into service for the freighter is now expected in the second half of 2027, following a delay from its original timeline. The company highlights that the A350F will offer increased efficiency, reduced emissions, and updated technology.

Joost van der Heijden, Senior Vice President Marketing at Airbus, commented in a LinkedIn post: “The entire fuselage of the first A350F has arrived in Toulouse! Coming from multiple Airbus sites in France and Germany, the front, center and rear sections of the fuselage have moved in with the wings and are now getting ready to be assembled in the coming weeks. Watch this space as more parts will be making their big move for final assembly in the next few weeks!”

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The various components for assembly are produced across different locations: center section from Nordenham (Germany), engine pylons from Toulouse (France), rear section from Getafe (Spain), front section from Montoir de Bretagne (France), wings from Broughton (UK), and stabilizer also from Getafe. These logistics require coordination among several Airbus production sites throughout Europe.

The first set of wings was completed at Broughton by late May before being transported to Bremen for equipping and then shipped to Toulouse using BelugaXL transport aircraft. Final assembly activities are planned to begin at summer’s end 2025.

Aurelia Desbordes, VP - Head of CDT A350 & A330 Program at Airbus, stated that over 100 mechanics and electricians worked on fitting out key systems—such as electrics, hydraulics, air conditioning, and water pipes—on these major sections prior to shipment.

The design approach allows cargo version wings to be manufactured alongside passenger model wings using composite materials intended to lower weight while increasing aerodynamic performance. Two Rolls-Royce Trent XWB-97 engines will power each aircraft.

Based on information reported by ch-aviation (https://www.ch-aviation.com/portal/news/132796-air-france-klm-reduces-a350f-order-to-six-aircraft), there have been up to 68 orders placed for the new freighter variant so far; customers include Etihad Airways and Starlux with ten units each ordered; CMA CGM Air Cargo with eight; plus thirteen units purchased by undisclosed clients. France’s CMA CGM is expected to serve as launch customer.

Recent months have seen some cancellations or reductions: Air France-KLM lowered its order due to delays while US-based lessor Air Lease withdrew an initial commitment for seven planes.

Airbus designed this model specifically to comply with ICAO CO2 emission standards effective starting 2027. The company recently celebrated delivery of its hundredth A350-1000 passenger jet—a platform upon which much of the freighter's design is based but adapted with a slightly shorter fuselage suited for cargo use.

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