The A320 program, launched in March 1984 in
anticipation of the airlines' fleet expansion, marked
Airbus Industrie's entry into the single aisle aircraft
market. 1989 marked the beginning of A321 development,
an enlarged version of the A320, and in 1994 production
got underway on A321-200, a modified version featuring
an increased take-off weight and a longer range, which
will enter service in 1997. The Airbus A319/A320/321
family (the A319 is a smaller version of the A320) has
received more than 1,110 firm orders from 54 different
customers. Major operators of the A321 presently
include Lufthansa, Alitalia, Air Inter, Air Macau,
Austrian Airlines, Swissair and TransAsia Airways.
Airbus Industrie was formed in 1970 as a multinational
effort between Germany, England and France to create a
high-capacity twin-jet transport (this developed into
the A300). Today Airbus Industrie has become the
world's second largest manufacturer of civil airliners
which seat over 100 passengers. In it's first 25 years
Airbus has sold over 2,100 aircraft, with more than
1400 in service worldwide. The consortium is
headquartered in southwest France near the city of
Toulouse and owned by Europe's four leading aerospace
companies (Aerospatiale of France, Daimler-Benz
Aerospace Airbus of Germany, British Aerospace, and
Casa of Spain).
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