Regional jet


A regional jet is a jet airliner and a regional airliner with fewer than 100 seats. The first one was the Sud-Aviation Caravelle in 1959, followed by the widespread Yakovlev Yak-40, Fokker F-28 and BAe 146. The 1990s saw the emergence of the most widespread Canadair Regional Jet and its Embraer Regional Jet counterpart, then the larger Embraer E-Jet and multiple competing projects. In the US, they are limited in size by scope clauses.
The market was consolidated as Bombardier Aviation sold its airliner programs between 2017 and 2019, leaving Embraer as the sole large independant regional jet manufacturer, while emerging players try to push competitors: the Mitsubishi Regional Jet, Sukhoi Superjet 100, Comac ARJ21 and Antonov An-148.

Definition

Regional Jet is a term in industry jargon and not a regulatory category.
Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University defines the regional jet as up to 100 seats in capacity.
This is also the limit capacity for two flight attendants.
FlightGlobal sort the 66–146 seat Embraer E-Jet/E2 as a regional aircraft, but the 116–141 seat Airbus A220 as a mainline airliner.
Regional Jet is used in the name of multiple airliners:
The scope clauses, limiting the aircraft size and number in US regional airlines, is often a design point for regional jets. Since 2012, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines cap their regional airlines' jets at 76 seats and maximum take-off weight at 86,000 lb.
These aircraft are widely used by commuter airlines such as SkyWest and American Eagle. The low rate of fuel consumption, which translates to low cost of operation, makes regional jets ideal for use as commuter aircraft or to connect lower traffic airports to large or medium hub airports. Regional jets are heavily used in the US Essential Air Service program.

History

1960s–1970s

In 1959 was introduced the Sud Aviation Caravelle, ordered by Flag Carriers, the first purpose-built short-haul jetliner, a twin turbojet design for inter-European routes. The Caravelle used the forward fuselage nose section of the de Havilland Comet, the first commercial jetliner, not effective for continental-European flights. The BAC One-Eleven was then introduced in 1965.
In 1968, Aeroflot introduced the 32 seat Yakovlev Yak-40 and the 65–85 seats Fokker F28 Fellowship was introduced in 1969. In 1975, the 40–44 seats VFW-Fokker 614 saw service entry with its distinctive overwing engines, 19 were built. Some business jets like the British Aerospace 125 and Dassault Falcon 20 were operated by small airlines from the 1960s, and the small Aerospatiale Corvette was used as a regional airliner from the 1970s.

1980s

In 1978, the US Airline Deregulation Act led to route liberalization, favouring small airliners demand. US passengers were disappointed by these, lacking aircraft lavatories or flight attendants of larger jet aircraft. As feeder routes grew, regional airlines replaced these small aircraft with larger turboprop airliners to feed larger airline hubs. These medium airliners were then supplanted by faster, longer range, regional jets like the first Bombardier CRJ100/200. Early small jets had higher operating costs than turboprops on short routes. The gap narrowed with better turbofans, and closed with the higher utilization due to higher speeds.
In 1983 British Aerospace introduced its BAe 146 short-range jet, produced in three sizes between 70 and 112 seats: the −100, −200 and the largest −300, later renamed the Avro Regional Jet. Low aircraft noise and short takeoffs were suited to city-center to city-center service, a small market niche, like the de Havilland Canada Dash 7, but four engines led to higher maintenance costs than twin-engine designs and BAe did not produce a lower operating cost twin-engine design, unlike the Dash 8.
In 1988 was introduced the 97–122 seats Fokker 100, a stretched F28, followed by the shorter, 72–85 seats Fokker 70 in 1994.

1990s

Low fuel prices drove the development of the regional jet: in the '90s oil prices were around $10–20 per barrel. Turboprop manufacturers wanted to develop their portfolio. Canadair's purchase by Bombardier in 1986 enabled a 50-seat stretched development of its Challenger business jet, green-lighted by then chief executive Laurent Beaudoin in March 1989. The first Bombardier four-abreast Canadair Regional Jet was delivered in October 1992 to Lufthansa CityLine.
Embraer then developed the 50-seat three-abreast ERJ 145 from the EMB-120 Brasilia turboprop, which was introduced in December 1996. They replaced the turboprops thanks to their better perceived image and larger range. On small-capacity long routes, they could offer a better service by increasing frequencies at a smaller capacity and could replace mainline jet airliners like McDonnell Douglas DC-9s and Boeing 737s.
They can be used for direct airport-to-airport flights, to the detriment of the hub-and-spoke model.
Since 1999, the Fairchild Dornier 328JET was also competing but the type did not enter large scale production as Fairchild Dornier went bankrupt, also ending the larger Fairchild Dornier 728 family development. The CRJ/ERJ also resulted in the end of the BAe 146 line.
The CRJ and ERJ success also played a minor part in the failure of Fokker, whose Fokker 100 found itself squeezed on both sides by new models of the Boeing 737 and Airbus A319 on the "large" side and the RJs on the "small side". On 5 February 1996, Bombardier started looking at a takeover of a struggling Fokker, producer of the Fokker 100 100-seater. After evaluating Fokker's opportunities and challenges, Bombardier dropped the prospect on 27 February. Bombardier was feeling that the 100-seat market was already saturated by designs like the A319, a decision that looked foolish with the successful introduction of the E-Jets.

2000s

The share of US domestic flying by 32 to 100 seats regional jets grew to one-third from 2000 to 2005, as network carriers subcontracted low-volume routes to cheaper commuter airlines with smaller planes. Amid regional jet usage saturation, bankruptcy of regional airlines and shrinking of Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines, cramped 50-seaters were evolving to more spacious 70–100 seaters, limited by union rules.
In late 2005, Bombardier suspended its CRJ-200 production line.
Between 2000 through 2006, 385 large planes were grounded while 1,029 regional jets were added.
By June 2007, nearly a third of US domestic flights on major airlines were late, as using more smaller jets led to more crowded skies and runways in an already saturated system.
US major carriers high pilots' wages led them to subcontract flights to regional airlines with lower labor costs. Pilot unions then demanded to regulate subcontracted aircraft size to a 50 seats maximum scope clause. In turn, large routes were served by suboptimal 50-seat jets which accelerated demand for those types in North America. Embraer envisioned a market for more than 500 aircraft and planned to produce up to 80 a year, but at peak delivered 157 ERJs in 2000 while Bombardier delivered 155 CRJs in 2003.
After 9/11, high fuel prices returned and jets had to grow to keep seat-mile costs down. Airlines renegotiated scope clause limits to 70-seat jets as the market consolidates. Larger aircraft came back on regional routes for their efficiency and on short routes turboprops don't lose too much time for a lower cost, reversing the 1990s trend. Bombardier delivered its last 50-seat CRJ in 2006 and Embraer its last ERJ in 2011.
Bombardier switched to its lengthened 70- to 100-seat CRJ700/900/1000, while Embraer launched the four-abreast E-Jet170/175/190/195. 50 seats jets demand is lower with high fuel prices, and it reflects on a lower market value. A majority of them will be scrapped.
Bombardier and Embraer have been locked in a series of counter-lawsuits over export taxes and subsidies. The ERJ's success led to a totally new version, the Embraer E-Jets series.
Although not as economical as the turboprop, by flying directly to and from smaller airports, they reduced the need for low-cost regional airliners.
The 68–99 seats Antonov An-148, designed and produced by Antonov in Ukraine, made its maiden flight on 17 December 2004 after a development started in the 1990s, its was certified on 26 February 2007 and introduced in 2009. The stretched An-158 can seat 99 passengers.

2010s

subsidiary Sukhoi developed the Superjet 100, it made its maiden flight on 19 May 2008 and was introduced in April 2011 with Armavia. It typically seats 98 passengers and is powered by two PowerJet SaM146 turbofans from a Safran/NPO Saturn joint venture.
Many CRJ100/200 were retired since 2003 and in 2013 the first Embraer ERJ were disassembled: 50-seaters value was dwindling down as US carriers were dropping them.
The ERJ retirements could be exacerbated because Rolls-Royce plc restricts parts choice, making engine maintenance more expensive, but its TotalCare agreements provide cost predictability.
The Comac ARJ21 is a 78-90 seat jet manufactured by the Chinese State owned aerospace company Comac.
Development began in March 2002, the first prototype was rolled out on 21 December 2007, and made its maiden flight on 28 November 2008.
It received its CAAC Type Certification on 30 December 2014 and was introduced on 28 June 2016 by Chengdu Airlines.
Resembling the McDonnell Douglas MD-80/MD-90 produced under licence in China, it features a 25° swept, supercritical wing designed by Antonov and twin rear-mounted General Electric CF34 engines.
Bombardier Aerospace developed the 108 to 160-seat CSeries powered by two Pratt & Whitney PW1000G geared turbofans. The smaller CS100 entered service in July 2016 with Swiss Global Air Lines and the larger CS300 entered service with airBaltic in December. After the April 2016 CSeries dumping petition by Boeing, Airbus acquired a 50.01% majority stake in the program in October 2017 and renamed it the A220-100/300 in July 2018.
In 2017, Embraer started calling large, almost narrowbody regional jets "crossover" jets, for the Embraer E-Jet E2 and the CSeries.
While those rival the A320neo, the smaller MRJ and SSJ100 could be stretched.
They are often the largest airliners which can access City Airports like London City Airport, benefiting from their longer range and lower fuel burn to open new markets while making lower noise for better local community acceptance.
In 2019, after attempting to renegotiate scope clauses, United Airlines ultimately decided to order fifty CRJs for its regional affiliates; the aircraft will be sourced from existing CRJ700 airframes and reconfigured with 50 seats in three classes. Bombardier will recertify the aircraft as the CRJ550 model, with a lower MTOW to comply with the scope clauses, and hopes to sell this new configuration to replace up to 700 existing 50-seaters with US regional airlines.
By August 2019, there were 1,100 50-seat jets operated worldwide including 700 in the US, often more than 20 years old.
SkyWest wants to replace 150 of its 200 ageing Bombardier CRJ200s and ERJs and while Many have logged 30,000 cycles, their life may be extended to 60,000 cycles for 10-15 more years of service.
SkyWest asked Bombardier, Embraer and Mitsubishi Aircraft to develop a new aircraft but the market is regulated by scope clauses.
should be delivered from mid-2020
The Mitsubishi SpaceJet, seating 70–90 passengers and manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation, made its first flight on 11 November 2015. After several delays, deliveries are scheduled to start by mid-2020.
After Bombardier Aviation divested its CSeries and Dash 8 programmes, it sold the CRJ programme to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries on 25 June 2019, in a deal expected to close in the first half of 2020.

Operations

Costs

A smaller airplane is more costly per seat mile than a larger plane, but it mostly depends on the airline: in 2005, Bombardier was estimating regional jet costs at 9 to 10 US cents per seat mile while flying a Boeing 737 costs less than 8 cents per seat mile at Southwest Airlines but 15 cents at Continental Airlines.

Routes

While designed primarily for medium stage lengths, regional jets may now be found supplementing major trunk routes alongside traditional larger jet aircraft. RJs allow airlines to open new "long, thin" routings with jet equipment which heretofore did not exist, such as Atlanta to Monterrey, Nuevo León. RJs have also meant a return of jet service to cities where full-size jet service had departed over a decade ago, such as Macon, Georgia, and Brownsville, Texas.
The idea that regional jets would provide point-to-point service and bypass the hub-and-spoke system may not be materializing as it was expected. As of January 2003, 90% of all regional jet flights in the United States had a hub or major airport at one end of that flight, and this number has been gradually increasing since 1995.

Models

ModelSeatsSeats
/Row
Intro.Prod.
end
BuiltStateIn serviceOrders
Sud Aviation Caravelle80–1405195919722820
Yakovlev Yak-4032419681981101122
Fokker F28 Fellowship55–705196919872411
VFW-Fokker 61440–44419751977190
BAe 146/Avro RJ70–112519832001387118
Fokker 10097–122519881997283109
Bombardier CRJ100/200504199220061021498
Fokker 7072–855199419974823
Embraer ERJ family37–5031997in prod.12135050
Fairchild-Dornier 328JET30–3331999200411011
Bombardier CRJ700/900/100066–10442001in prod.82277754
Embraer E-Jet family66–12442004in prod.14141346133
Antonov An-14868–9952009in prod.4271
Sukhoi Superjet 10087–10852011in prod.15911427
Comac ARJ2178–10552016in prod.95103
Embraer E-Jet E2 family80–14642018in prod.83153
Mitsubishi SpaceJet family 69–9242022in prod.70203

Fleet

Aircraft prices

AircraftList Mkt Value DiscountSeatsMkt/Seat
E-19552.734.834%106
E-19049.833.134%94
E-17545.029.435%78
CRJ100049.025.543%97
SSJ100-9535.025.328%87
CRJ90046.025.046%76