PARIS (Reuters) - The chief executive of Norwegian Air (OL:NWC) said he was interested in the possibility of a longer-range version of Airbus' (PA:AIR) A321LR, which the European planemaker is studying in response to Boeing's (N:BA) work on a new 'mid-market' jet.
Reuters revealed this week that Airbus is considering adding endurance to the longest-range flying version of its single aisle A321 jet in a potential new variant dubbed A321XLR.
The A321XLR would carry extra fuel and extend the range of the A321LR aircraft, which recently claimed a long-distance record for single-aisle jets in testing.
Asked at the Paris Air Forum if an A321XLR was of interest, CEO Bjorn Kjos replied: "Definitely, yes. An A321 with a long range is an extremely interesting plane."
U.S. rival Boeing (N:BA) is studying plans for what industry sources describe as a hybrid jet combining a wide cabin and a restricted cargo space, shaped to fly efficiently in a space between the industry's single-aisle jets and wide-body long-haul aircraft.
Kjos said it was "a very interesting concept".