<p>Airbus slowed the production ramp-up of its best-selling A320neo-family jet and targeted 2023 jet deliveries in line with its original estimate for last year as the world's largest planemaker bowed to industrial pressure on supplies.</p>.<p>The France-based group also targeted an adjusted operating profit of 6.0 billion euros ($6.4 billion) in 2023 after posting a stronger than expected 5.627 billion for last year, up 16 per cent from 2021 and helped by positive pension effects.</p>.<p>The new targets for single-aisle jets confirm a shallower trajectory disclosed by industry sources last month, with the goal of 65 A320neo-family jets a month slipping to end-2024 and the rate of 75 slipping to 2026 from "middle of the decade".</p>.<p>"We are adapting our production to match supply," Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said on Thursday.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/air-india-to-buy-250-airbus-aircraft-pm-terms-it-landmark-deal-1191119.html" target="_blank">Air India to buy 250 Airbus aircraft; PM terms it 'landmark deal'</a></strong></p>.<p>Industry sources have said Airbus is currently producing 45 of the workhorse jets a month.</p>.<p>Revenues rose 13 per cent to 58.763 billion euros, buoyed by higher deliveries compared to the previous year and a strong dollar.</p>.<p>Airbus delivered 661 jets last year, up 8 per cent, but fell well below its original target of 720 units, which was later trimmed to 700 and ultimately abandoned weeks before end-year.</p>.<p>In a results statement, Faury blamed an "adverse operating environment that prevented our supply chain from recovering at the pace we expected".</p>.<p>In January, <em>Reuters </em>reported that Airbus was tempering the pace of production increases and cited a senior industry source saying the delivery goal may not significantly exceed 720 jets.</p>.<p>In an internal call last week, Faury deplored weaker than expected January deliveries and warned executives Airbus must not deliver fewer jets this year than it had targeted in 2022.</p>.<p>Airbus confirmed it would, however, increase A330neo wide-body output to 4 a month in 2024 from around 3 now.</p>.<p>It announced plans to hike A350 output to 9 a month at the end of 2025 from around 6 now after selling 40 of the jets to Air India as part of a record deal.</p>.<p>The decision to push towards pre-Covid levels reflects growing demand for wide-body jets. Industry sources had previously said A350 output was scheduled to remain steady at 6 a month throughout 2024 and 2025, up from 5.6 a month in 2023.</p>.<p>The Wall Street Journal reported higher output on Tuesday.</p>.<p>In other business, Airbus took a fresh charge for its A400M military airlifter, bringing the 2022 hit to 477 million euros. The loss of two imaging satellites in the December failure of Italy's</p>.<p>Vega C rocket also weighed on defence and space profits.</p>.<p>Airbus' net cash rose to 9.4 billion euros, closing in on a threshold previously identified for potential share buybacks.</p>.<p>Faury told investors in September he would discuss buybacks with the board "as soon as we hit the 10 billion euros mark."<br /> </p>
<p>Airbus slowed the production ramp-up of its best-selling A320neo-family jet and targeted 2023 jet deliveries in line with its original estimate for last year as the world's largest planemaker bowed to industrial pressure on supplies.</p>.<p>The France-based group also targeted an adjusted operating profit of 6.0 billion euros ($6.4 billion) in 2023 after posting a stronger than expected 5.627 billion for last year, up 16 per cent from 2021 and helped by positive pension effects.</p>.<p>The new targets for single-aisle jets confirm a shallower trajectory disclosed by industry sources last month, with the goal of 65 A320neo-family jets a month slipping to end-2024 and the rate of 75 slipping to 2026 from "middle of the decade".</p>.<p>"We are adapting our production to match supply," Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury said on Thursday.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/air-india-to-buy-250-airbus-aircraft-pm-terms-it-landmark-deal-1191119.html" target="_blank">Air India to buy 250 Airbus aircraft; PM terms it 'landmark deal'</a></strong></p>.<p>Industry sources have said Airbus is currently producing 45 of the workhorse jets a month.</p>.<p>Revenues rose 13 per cent to 58.763 billion euros, buoyed by higher deliveries compared to the previous year and a strong dollar.</p>.<p>Airbus delivered 661 jets last year, up 8 per cent, but fell well below its original target of 720 units, which was later trimmed to 700 and ultimately abandoned weeks before end-year.</p>.<p>In a results statement, Faury blamed an "adverse operating environment that prevented our supply chain from recovering at the pace we expected".</p>.<p>In January, <em>Reuters </em>reported that Airbus was tempering the pace of production increases and cited a senior industry source saying the delivery goal may not significantly exceed 720 jets.</p>.<p>In an internal call last week, Faury deplored weaker than expected January deliveries and warned executives Airbus must not deliver fewer jets this year than it had targeted in 2022.</p>.<p>Airbus confirmed it would, however, increase A330neo wide-body output to 4 a month in 2024 from around 3 now.</p>.<p>It announced plans to hike A350 output to 9 a month at the end of 2025 from around 6 now after selling 40 of the jets to Air India as part of a record deal.</p>.<p>The decision to push towards pre-Covid levels reflects growing demand for wide-body jets. Industry sources had previously said A350 output was scheduled to remain steady at 6 a month throughout 2024 and 2025, up from 5.6 a month in 2023.</p>.<p>The Wall Street Journal reported higher output on Tuesday.</p>.<p>In other business, Airbus took a fresh charge for its A400M military airlifter, bringing the 2022 hit to 477 million euros. The loss of two imaging satellites in the December failure of Italy's</p>.<p>Vega C rocket also weighed on defence and space profits.</p>.<p>Airbus' net cash rose to 9.4 billion euros, closing in on a threshold previously identified for potential share buybacks.</p>.<p>Faury told investors in September he would discuss buybacks with the board "as soon as we hit the 10 billion euros mark."<br /> </p>