Airbus Board Huddle Puts Leadership Focus on India Scale Up
Airbus is reportedly convening its board in New Delhi for a strategy session, affirming India’s role in its growth and sourcing plans
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Airbus is putting India closer to the center of its map. For the first time, the European planemaker’s board is holding a strategy session in New Delhi this week, a move that underscores how quickly India has become both a growth market and a manufacturing base for the company, The Economic Times reported.
The trip follows a string of India-facing commitments. On 28 August, Airbus Helicopters awarded Mahindra Aerostructures Pvt. Ltd an “additional source” contract to make the main fuselage of the H125, its best-selling single-engine helicopter, with industrialization beginning immediately at Mahindra’s Bengaluru site and first deliveries targeted for 2027, the companies said.
That award came on the heels of an April order for H130 fuselages to the same Indian supplier.
Pilot training is part of the same arc. In January 2024, Airbus and the Tata-owned Air India announced a 50:50 joint venture to establish the Tata Airbus Training Centre in Gurugram, equipped with 10 full-flight simulators to train roughly 5,000 new pilots over a decade.
Initial operations were slated to begin with four A320 simulators, subject to approvals, Airbus and Air India said at the time.
On the sourcing side, Airbus chief executive Guillaume Faury has said the company plans to lift annual procurement from India to around $2 billion before 2030, highlighting the country’s role in the supply chain beyond final assembly.
He has ruled out a final assembly line in India for current-generation jets, while leaving the door open for next-generation programs.
Put together, the Delhi board meeting looks less like a one-off and more like the next step in a deliberate build-out: deepen local manufacturing on helicopters, expand training capacity with a JV, and broaden the supplier base for commercial aircraft.
Industry data points to a tailwind. Global primes have accelerated “China-plus-one” diversification since 2022, and India’s aerospace suppliers have been winning higher-value work as Western factories wrestle with labor tightness and parts shortages, Reuters noted earlier this year.
Big aerospace contractors have accelerated ‘China-plus-one’ diversification since 2022, and India’s suppliers have been winning higher-value work as Western factories struggle with labor and parts, Reuters reported earlier this year.
India’s domestic demand story is the other magnet. IndiGo and Air India have placed record narrow- and wide-body orders, and India is on track to add hundreds of aircraft this decade.
To sustain that fleet, the ecosystem around pilots, maintenance, parts, and simulators needs to scale, which is what the Gurugram training center and the helicopter work packages are designed to address.
Airbus and Tata Advanced Systems also inaugurated the C295 final assembly complex in Vadodara in October 2024 for the Indian Air Force, a defense program, but one that has catalyzed local capabilities and supplier depth relevant to civil work, too.
For Airbus, India offers volume, cost-competitive suppliers, and policy support for “Make in India,” while for Delhi, the attraction is technology transfer, skilled jobs, and a path to climb the value chain from build-to-print parts toward complex sub-assemblies and systems.