Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Record Orders Recast Regional Aviation: Embraer's $31.3 Billion Backlog


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Embraer has closed the third quarter of 2025 with the largest order book in its history-$31.3 billion-and 62 deliveries in the quarter. For readers outside Brazil, this is more than a corporate milestone.

It's a sign that the center of gravity in short- and medium-haul flying is shifting toward“right-sized” jets, business aircraft resilience, and a Brazilian defense platform winning converts abroad.

The commercial story leads. Embraer's nine-year-high commercial backlog of $15.2 billion is anchored by firm commitments for the E195-E2 from Avelo and LATAM, plus additional demand from lessors.

Airlines are betting that smaller, fuel-efficient jets can open new point-to-point routes profitably-especially in secondary cities where a larger single-aisle would be too much metal for too few passengers.

Behind the headline is a market gap that Embraer has quietly filled: Bombardier exited commercial jets, Mitsubishi canceled the SpaceJet, Boeing is focused on larger narrow-bodies, and Airbus's A220 is heavily backlogged.

That leaves Embraer's E2 as the only fresh, scalable regional family available in meaningful numbers.


Record Orders Recast Regional Aviation: Embraer's $31.3 Billion Backlog
Business aviation adds an underappreciated pillar. Embraer's executive-jet backlog rose to $7.3 billion, with 41 aircraft delivered in the quarter and the company's 2,000th business-jet handover in August.

The sweet spot is midsize and super-midsize jets-workhorses for companies that want range and cabin comfort without the long-haul price tag.

Defense and services round out the picture. The defense backlog reached $3.9 billion as Portugal took delivery of another KC-390 transport and new A-29 Super Tucano orders came from Panama and a U.S. buyer.

In October, Sweden agreed to buy C-390s, signaling broader European interest in a versatile, lower-cost airlifter.

Meanwhile, a record $4.9 billion services backlog-helped by a new U.S. maintenance site and a large support deal with Republic Airways-locks in recurring, less cyclical revenue.

Why this matters: Travelers can expect more nonstop choices on thinner routes. Brazil gains high-skill jobs and export heft from São José dos Campos to overseas facilities. Governments get a credible alternative in tactical airlift.

And investors see multi-year visibility across a diversified portfolio-commercial jets, executive aircraft, defense, and services-built not on hype, but on orders in hand.

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