IATA MRO Smart Hub is the solution for MRO industry

IATA MRO Smart Hub is the solution for MRO industry:


24 September 2019: The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has launched the IATA MRO SmartHub, an online tool that brings much-needed transparency to the market for aircraft components and parts. It will allow subscribing airlines and maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) providers to transparently list items to buy or sell on the new platform and will cut down over-payments by making the assessment of fair market value (FMV) more accurate.

The total MRO market is valued to be $81.9 billion annually*, a large portion of which is attributed to material costs. IATA MRO SmartHub is predicted to shave 10-15 per cent of these material costs through efficiency gains in the supply chain and more accurate assessments of FMV.

Also, the IATA MRO SmartHub will allow the accurate valuation of parts inventories at any point in time, Increase confidence in planning, procuring or selling aircraft components and parts, Allow better-informed decisions on which aircraft components and parts to procure and use and enhance trust in buyer/vendor relationships.

''This new service will make the supply chain for aircraft components and parts more efficient. Greater transparency will enable airlines and MRO companies to buy and sell the right components and parts at the right price. This is a major modernisation that will lead to significant and much-needed cost savings for airlines,'' said Gilberto Lopez Meyer, IATA's Senior Vice President, Safety and Flight Operations.

"The IATA MRO SmartHub is a global platform that is useful for all players in the MRO sector. The market really needs this. By creating greater transparency, it will generate real fair market values. It will rebalance the aviation value chain and help airlines save money," said Fabricio La-Banca, Lufthansa Technik's Head of Group Purchasing Surplus, one of the launch customers for this new platform.

Presently, there is no single central reference for the value of surplus aircraft parts, nor upfront visibility of a part's cost or timely availability. This leads to higher costs by making it challenging to accurately evaluate inventories, resell surplus material or calculate the cost and timing of repairs.