Good morning. I don't know about each of you, but if you're an employee of GE, that video sends shivers down your spine. It does for me anyway. Anyway, welcome everybody to GE's 2022 Investor Day. For those of you who were here with us last night and couldn't quite stick it out, Clemson beat Michigan State 4-2, pitcher's duel, six hits, okay? I know we've received some questions on that front. Now, what you're used to hearing from me before we start are the following. Investor materials are available on our website. You've got our statements that are forward-looking in nature and as such are based on our views, our best views of the world as we see it today and our businesses as we see them today.
As described in our SEC filings and on our website, those elements can change as the world changes. Now it is great to be here in person with so many of you in Greenville, South Carolina, one of GE's largest facilities. You've come to Gemba, the place where the work actually is. That is meaningful, and we hope you see it and enjoy it. What that also means is that we start off all of our significant moments at GE with a safety moment. Remember, SQDC, safety is always first. As such, we have John Kenney, our Greenville Plant Manager here to kick us off. John, welcome.
Welcome. My name is John Kenney, and I'm the site leader here at the Greenville site. I have the privilege of doing two safety moments with you this morning. One, on your personal safety for the day, and two, to tell you about some of the safety improvements we've made here at the Greenville site. First, we'll talk safety today. In this room, in case of emergencies, you have exits in the front and exit on either sides of the building. Prior to the tours today, you will be given all the personal protective equipment you need, along with additional safety instructions. Currently, our COVID policy does not require face masks, which is great, and I'm sure everybody's pleased with that part.
Above all, if anything comes up today, anything safety-related comes up that you're not sure about or you have a question, please stop work and ask, and let's address the issue. Now I'd like to talk a little bit about how our lean transformation has helped improve the safety here at the Greenville site. We started our lean journey a little over four years ago, and safety has been one of the biggest benefits. A specific example that you're gonna see on the tour today is how we transformed our turbine blade manufacturing area. This is the turbine blade is a critical component in the gas turbine, and we manufacture over 50,000 of these annually.
Prior to our lean transformation, these 50,000 blades traveled over 10 miles per day to 100 different locations across the factory to get the necessary operations done before they're ready to go out to our customers. We started our lean work and our lean transformation in this area by putting the operator at the center of our lean Kaizen action workouts. In total, we had over 300 operators participate in these events. We worked with the operator to identify waste and motion associated with their standard work. As a result of this, we connected flow, or connected operations, resulting in the 5 lean lines we have in that area today. You'll get to see our newest lean line on the tour today. One of the biggest we had two big safety benefits from connecting these flows.
The first one, by connecting the lines, we were able to eliminate the need for operators to lift parts which weigh 20-25 pounds apiece in and out of boxes at every operation. In total, this is equivalent of 400,000 lifts annually, or we were asking our employees to lift 10 million pounds per year. And secondly, by putting the operations in line, we were able to eliminate 10 mi of forklift or part movement traffic daily. This eliminated any risk associated with that movement. These improvements, along with many other Kaizen events, has allowed the Greenville site to reduce our number of recordable injuries by over 60% since we started our lean journey. Safety is our number one priority, and our lean journey is helping us make a safer workplace for our coworkers.
Thank you, and I look forward to seeing you on the tour later today.
Thanks, John. That is so great just to continue to hear about continuous improvement, which you'll see. We've made a lot of progress. There's always more to go, but it's just great to hear that. I'm joined here by Larry Culp, our Chairman and CEO for GE, Carolina Dybeck Happe, our CFO. We have our business CEOs, Peter Arduini of GE HealthCare, Scott Strazik, who runs our portfolio of energy businesses, and John Slattery, who leads our aviation business, and their respective teams. Many of you got to interact last night, this morning, hopefully through the day today. We have a packed agenda for the day. We have innovation showcases around you and upstairs. Hopefully, you had a chance to explore those. If you haven't, you'll be seeing those on your tours today.
We have lean tours at both the power and aviation facilities, and I am personally excited for I hope you see what we see, which is not just the results that we're delivering, not the what, but the how, and it's the how that drives those results on a sustainable basis. For me, that's been the most enlightening thing over the last few years here at GE. With that, I'll share logistics at the conclusion of the webcast. Without further ado, Larry.
Thank you, Steve. Thank you, John. I am so excited that you're gonna get a chance to see what John and his team have done here in Greenville. I met John three years ago, beginning the lean journey and, well, I don't wanna ruin the rest of that. You'll see it for yourself. Steve, thanks for giving me a couple of minutes here. We have a very packed agenda, but we're just really thrilled that so many of you were able to make the trip to Greenville, particularly those of you who were with us last night.
I know the GE team really enjoyed the informal interactions with each of you talking about a whole host of things. You know, the handshakes, a few hugs, just it's good to be back operating in this way. We've got a lot to cover, but I just at the outset here, wanna make sure that we not only recognize everybody in the room, but everyone who has dialed in, that we've got people all around the world who have joined us, bright and early here in Greenville. We'll work through a lot of material here, but hopefully, you come away with a better sense of where we are today, more importantly, where we're going tomorrow. I do wanna make a couple of comments, though, at the outset relative to the events in the Ukraine.
I'm sure we are all just devastated, if not depressed, with respect to what we've seen over the last two weeks. Make no mistake, the GE team stands, and stands proudly, with the Ukrainian people in the face of these unrelenting attacks on their homeland. There are a couple of things that we can do as a company, and we have done those thus far. The first is we have suspended our operations in Russia, with the exception of some mission-critical activities, primarily in Pete's business in healthcare. We've also made a $4.5 million contribution, primarily in the healthcare space, to assist those that have been directly impacted by the events over the last several weeks. Like every company directly or indirectly exposed to what's happening, there's more uncertainty today with respect to what lies ahead than we saw just a month ago.
There are many things we don't know, but with each day, we certainly learn more. As we learn more, we're gonna share that with you. What I do know, I know two things. One, given what's happened in the last two years in the wake of COVID, the GE team is a resilient team. This is a team that will figure out how to move forward, serve our customers, and serve you as our investors. The other thing I know is that we'll be focused, hyper-focused on controlling the controllable. There are gonna be things that are out of reach, but there's many things that we can do. I think we've demonstrated that in the last couple of years. That will continue. Let's jump into it. The foundation of what you're gonna see during the course of the morning really is the businesses.
Three strong franchises that we're excited about relative to where they are and the growth opportunities, let alone the margin expansion cash opportunities that we see in the future. I'm thrilled that you're here because you're going to see how we're running the businesses differently. That really starts with the teams. You met a number of our leaders last night. You'll meet more through the course of the day. Really, I think a strong combination of GE experience and new perspectives. Peter Arduini, a great example in that regard, took the helm at Healthcare just the first of the year. He'll follow me here in a moment. We've got a number of other new leaders that have joined us very recently. I see Frank Jimenez, the new general counsel. Frank, put your hand up.
At GE HealthCare, just joined us, Betty Larson right here, working with Frank and Pete in GE HealthCare, leading the HR organization. Scott Reese is somewhere here as well. Scott's in the back. Scott's just come over from Autodesk to lead our digital operation. It's a strong team in my view. I hope you feel the same way as we part. We'll talk a lot about Lean. You got a little bit of a taste of that from John's slide. I think you'll also see the way we're running the businesses differently with an eye toward decentralization. That simply means running the business from the bottom up because it's the 30 P&Ls that deal with customers every day, not those of us in Boston.
That's been a mindset shift, one that has served us well, but as Pete was reminding me just the other day, one that really is just gathering momentum, and that's exciting relative to what lies ahead. You've seen the financial results that have come as a result of this work, $87 billion of debt by the boards, nearly $6 billion of free cash last year. That really sets us up to have made the announcement that we did last November relative to the creation of three independent GEs in the not-too-distant future. There's a lot that we're excited about, but it's not about yesterday. It's a little bit about today. Most importantly, it's about tomorrow. I won't dwell on this slide.
There's a lot of detail you'll see from each of the CEOs and their teams, but I do wanna reiterate that GE today starts from a very strong position, right? Over $425 billion of backlog, over $70 billion of revenue, with half of that in services. We all like the financial characteristics of services, but what I like most of all is the fact that we are day in, day out, side by side with our customers, good times and bad, helping them sort through what's important relative to what they're trying to do, be it a healthcare provider, be it a utility, let alone an airline. It's what makes coming to work at GE every day exciting, challenging, and dare I say, important.
You will hear a lot about Lean, and in many respects, what I hope you take away are a few core principles. The first is, at its essence, Lean is about the customer, serving the customer to the fullest and best extent possible. Lean is also about the elimination of waste. You saw on John's slide some great examples of how we've wrung out muda from the business. Imagine those lifts, imagine those walks, neither of which serve customers, represent safety hazards, clearly cost. Gone. There's more where that comes from. You've got to see it to be able to remove it, and you have to know how to remove it in a sustainable way. I think you'll see that. Finally, priorities.
Many of you have heard me talk before about how I have been so impressed by the sheer ambition of this company over the last three and a half years. Even GE can't do everything, so we need to prioritize. Be it in the two facilities that you'll see today, be it in the three businesses that we'll give you an overview of. That ruthless prioritization is also a critical element in a real Lean transformation. I know many of you want to understand, well, what does that mean to me as an analyst, as an investor? Where do I see that in the P&L? Where do I see that in the cash flows? I would argue you see it everywhere because Lean is, when it's fully implemented, ubiquitous in that way.
I would argue the most important impact and what we're really driving for at GE is not the financial impact, it's the cultural change. Now, I realize some of you just had your eyes roll over. That's okay, because we know this is the way we're going to make GE the most valuable enterprise, and in time, the three most valuable enterprises we possibly can. Because it's that cultural change, driving humility, rewarding transparency, and reinforcing focus at every turn that's going to allow GE to realize its full potential. I hope you come away with a sense of that from what you hear today. More importantly, we brought you to Greenville so you could see it, you could smell it, and in some instances, safely, you can touch it, both in John's facility and then in Tim's facility down the road in aviation. Results do matter, though.
As Steve highlighted at the outset, when we talk about results with respect to Lean, it's safety before quality before delivery before cost. Cost is important, particularly in this inflationary environment, but that is not an acronym, it's a priority set that we are striving to make instinctive in our company on a regular basis. There are a host of ways we do that, but with that operational foundation, we really do set ourselves up to accelerate the profitable growth in the company. I think throughout the course of the presentations, you'll see examples of how this is setting us up to be more aggressive and more effective commercially, expanding the visibility we have on opportunities in our served markets, let alone increasing our win rates where we want to win.
In turn, setting us up not only to spend more in new product introductions, but to really put those investments where they have the most impact with customers. That's new product development done well. All the while continuing to make the longer-term technology bets, be it in CMCs, be it in superconducting generators, to make sure that GE does as it has for over a century, and that is lead in technology. When we do that, the flywheel begins to spin, and that sets us up all the more, both in terms of the balance sheet and frankly, in terms of underlying capability to do more inorganically, right? Just look over the last 12 months. This team has put forward a very creative approach to exit our aircraft leasing business. Really pleased to join forces with Aengus Kelly and the team at AerCap.
In turn, you'll hear more from Roland Rott in what we're doing in healthcare ultrasound with our BK Medical acquisition. More recently, what Scott and his team have done with the steam power divestiture to EDF. A whole host of different transactions, all of which build on that operational foundation and what we're doing by way of organic growth to set us up, I think, for a strong outlook with respect to sustained profitable growth with these businesses. The outlook that we shared with you at earnings and reiterated in Miami just two weeks ago remains intact. High single-digit organic growth, at least 150 bips of op margin expansion. We think that will drive EPS in the $2.80-$3.50 range, free cash in the $5.5-$6.5 billion range. Again, no change.
Mindful that there are a host of things that we do not know relative to the situation in Ukraine. Too many uncertainties, and it's probably premature to try to incorporate that today. What we do know is that Russia represents less than 2% of our overall sales. From an operational perspective, what we're most focused on today is the safety and well-being of our teams in Ukraine, in Russia, and elsewhere in the region. We're doing all we can to help and support them in that regard at this precarious and unfortunate time. We'll build off that base in 2022. As we look forward, we continue to see continued progress financially. We think we've got $10 billion of operating profit translating into $7 billion of free cash flow in 2023.
Also in 2023, you're gonna see us take action in the wake of the announcement from November to create three independent GEs, sharing a common GE heritage, but all with targeted, focused, independent futures. We're excited about this. I think we've seen this in, frankly, the last month in the run-up to this meeting, not only in terms of what employees and customers and many investors have shared with us relative to their support and their enthusiasm for this path. I think as importantly, what we're seeing just in the run-up to coming to see you, relative to the business' sense of accountability. Okay, we're making commitments now, right? I think that's a beautiful thing. That's when we talk about accountability and focus, that's part of why the board took the decision that we took.
We've also talked about alignment. Right from the boardroom through management, the entire team in each of the three businesses, all the way through to you as investors, that alignment's gonna be critical to our success. While we're talking about the board for just a moment, I hope you saw the announcement we made earlier this week. Three outstanding individuals coming to join the GE team. Steve Angel, former CEO at Linde. Derek Kerr, the former CFO at American Airlines, and Tomislav Mihaljevic, the current CEO of the Cleveland Clinic. Outstanding individuals, clearly have domain relevant to the future of GE. We're excited to have them joining us to really help us set us up for the path that we're on. Finally, with respect to capital allocation, we know that we've got a lot in front of us now.
many respects what we couldn't envision even a couple of years ago. As we look forward, each of these three boards is going to have a wealth of capital allocation options in front of them. You saw the buyback authorization we put in place on Sunday, but one in the near term. Each of these three boards will tailor the capital allocation strategies to the businesses appropriate to those opportunities and those outlooks. We're excited about that. Let's get to it. I wanna get the CEOs up here. We're gonna go in this order. We'll start with HealthCare. We'll talk to Energy and then Aviation. You know, I think the HealthCare algorithm, we've talked about mid-single-digit growth. Rest assured that doesn't satisfy Pete. I'm excited about that.
Continuing to drive margin expansion, we think we can get in that high teens-20% range. We should be able to do that with excellent cash conversion. You've seen the team demonstrate that the last couple of years. We wanted to begin to frame up, though, what is that algorithm for both energy and for aviation. As you can see on the slide, energy may well be a lower growth business, but tremendous opportunity for continued margin expansion, particularly in renewables. That'll take a little bit of time. Scott will take you through that. We think this can be a high single-digit business with strong cash conversion. Aviation, we know is on the cusp of not only a post-COVID recovery, but an OEM ramp with our major airframer customers that we're excited to support and see through.
This is a business, clearly, that should be a mid-single-digit grower, probably higher in the near term. John will take you through that, with excellent margin potential here as well. As you'll see at Tim's facility later in the day, an opportunity to convert that in a high quality, strong cash flow performance way. With that, I appreciate everybody again joining us today. We hope we'll make this trip worthwhile to you. Without further ado, Peter Arduini.
Thanks, Larry. Good morning, everybody. What a great kickoff. It's great to be here in Greenville, and an opportunity to talk about healthcare, our business, the opportunities we have for growth. I think some of you that were here get a chance to see the showcase and some of the cool toys that we have up there, make a difference for clinicians every day. I've got a few members of my team. I'll introduce them in a second as we get to that slide. Some of you may know that I was with GE HealthCare for 15 years earlier in my career. I left and went to Baxter Healthcare, where I ran the hospital business. Then for the last 11 years, I was running a public company called Integra LifeSciences, which is an interventional therapeutic-focused company.
Look, I'm a healthcare guy and super excited to be back here at GE. What have I been focused on? You see in the chart here, these four areas. It's been 60 days in the role looking at growth opportunities. What's our pipeline look like? What's our commercial structure look like? And seeing those kind of things that are out there. The other part is focus and fundamentals. Larry mentioned focus. What are we putting our time on? Is it the right things? What's our capabilities? We have some really good skills. Where are some things that customers are saying we need to do a little bit more effectively? Those are the fundamental areas and things that I've been focused on.
Obviously, this last piece here about optimizing for speed and agility, it's a big deal. I came from a midcap company, and speed and agility were crucial for survival. That focus is something that I wanna continue to bring into GE HealthCare, particularly using the lean toolkit to do that. You see number four up here, our bold path forward, spinning out, getting the right people in place, the right constructs, so that in early 2023, we can be ready to spin. I'll just leave you with this little anecdote. I mean, I had a chance last fall to join John and the team at Lynn, at the aviation facility, which is a super cool facility to begin with.
I did a week-long Kaizen with the team before I started, and it was my vacation week that I went, and it was just a great week to really see the power of lean, both for customers, but for our folks on the floor, and just the range of effect, as Larry mentioned, on culture. Let's jump in a little bit further here relative to markets and things. What we are focused on at GE HealthCare is to be an innovator in enabling personalized care, and I'll talk more about what that means, precision health. This integration of clinical data, the integration of the patient journey, as well as the devices, is what this really comes down to. If you think about precision health, all of us are slightly different, right?
What may be a cure for you could actually be an effect negatively for me. How do we determine that with genomics data, better imaging, and the convergence of that? That's all great stuff, and you're gonna hear more about our impact on that capability. Look, what we focus on from a purpose standpoint is really improving lives in the moments that matter, both for patients, but also caregivers on this journey. Our market has multiple needs, but these are three of the big ones. Efficiency is a huge deal around the world. I think obviously we all know the labor challenges that have been in the marketplace. I was just out with three CEOs of big systems out in the United States, and one of the number one things is somewhere between 15%-20% turnover in their core staff.
What can you guys do to help us with productivity? You'll hear more of the focus that we have there. Improved outcomes, obviously. We're in the business of helping people be healed. What can we do with our devices and technologies to help the caregivers? Digitization. So much data explosion, what role we can play in getting the right data at the right time. All of that while providing better access to patients, as well as doing it in a sustainable way. That's really what we're broadly focused on here. Look, our messages today are really threefold, as you can see here on the page. First is about a strong global franchise. This is a great business. I love this business when I grew up in it, and I love it even more coming back to it.
You know, I'll talk about our numbers, about the scale of this business, but we are at the middle of this precision healthcare capability, and we're one of the very few companies that has the reach and capability to make that difference. That's what's super cool about it. You're gonna hear more about that. Secondly is driving operational excellence using lean. This focus on safety, quality, delivery, and cost resonates. It makes a difference for our customer satisfaction focus and also delivers to the bottom line. Third is obviously the spin. The key about the spin is I view it really as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take hundred-year-old company that has all this great capability and optimize it to be a faster, more agile company that results in better growth and also results in better profitability. That's really our opportunity that's out there.
Look, we've got a bunch of our healthcare leaders here. Some are gonna be presenting that are up here, but I also have some others spread out here I'll quickly introduce. Larry mentioned this. We're setting up our structure to move less matrix and index more towards P&L. Why? Because it drives accountability. In most of our businesses as well, they're very scientifically and clinically focused, so aligning from that customer back can make a big difference. Let me just quickly introduce. You'll see on the chart here, Jan Makela. Jan, stick your hand up, you guys. Jan's in the back of the room. Roland Rott, who's leading our Ultrasound business. Tom Westrick, I think Tom's in the back, leads our Life Care Solutions business. Kevin O'Neill as well, Pharmaceutical Diagnostics. Catherine Estrem, who's President of our United States and Canada business.
Yihao Zhang, you'll meet on video here shortly, who runs China. Helmut is our Chief Financial Officer. Betty Larson, Chief People Officer. There's Betty, and also Frank Jimenez, who is our General Counsel. As Larry mentioned, both Frank and Betty joined from public positions just one week and two weeks ago. Also on the chart are Rob and Ellie in Intercontinental EMEA. We left them back to keep selling while we're here in Greenville. Look, energized team. We're really focused on making a difference for patients, customers, and obviously, ultimately for our shareholders. A little bit about GE by the numbers that I'd mentioned about. We touch 1 billion patients a year with 48,000 employees, and really around 2 billion procedures.
It's quite a large reach into the health system around the world. 4 million+ pieces of installed base equipment, and we'll talk more about the makeup of some of that. Four business units that I'll go through here shortly. We spend about $1 billion in overall R&D. $18 billion in revenue, the company is, and 50% of that is fundamentally services or recurring revenue, which is gonna be a continued focus for us as we move more and more into the digital space. 55% of our revenue comes from outside the U.S., so it's quite a diversified global base. You can see our margins here in 2021 were at 16.7%.
We started 2022 with strong demand, supported by a strong market, and we see that continuing again as the pickup here in precision health continues to drive the need for, in many cases today, more imaging. I'll touch on a little bit of the highlights for 2021, and some of the reasons that our demand remains strong is some of the products that you see up on this page and some of the products that came out just the year before. We've had actually a really nice lift in R&D investment over the last couple years, and the result are some of these leading products that come out. Obviously, for some folks on webcast, you haven't seen all these. Some people in the room had.
Everything from our Vscan Air, first handheld tetherless ultrasound unit, our SIGNA Hero, which is a 3T low helium consumption magnet. There's an assortment of applications that have been enhanced either for productivity or better clinical outcome using artificial intelligence and machine learning. We have a platform called Edison you're gonna hear more about. It's a really important component of how we see changing the game and baseline of imaging. In many cases, the imaging of just five years ago is completely being viewed differently with artificial intelligence tools. Then we've done some big refreshes. This Revolution Apex that's up here on the CT scanners, a completely new platform redo that really allows scalability from a mid-tier all the way to a premium to upgrade ability to future capabilities, which is super cool. I'll just point out one other one on there, StarGuide.
You may hear the term theranostics, which is an up-and-coming therapeutic approach to use a radioactive tracer to go to a cell and zap it, and you need to know how well it works and how you track it. That's really one of the only key devices in the world that does that effectively. We just launched that this year. You're gonna hear about a couple acquisitions and partnerships we did. Zionexa is a biomarker company, great fit for our plays with AI. BK Medical, our interventional ultrasound product, Roland's gonna speak to in a few minutes.
Look, one of the things, just quickly on this convergence around precision care, if you look at this triangle here, this is what's happening, and you feel it, but you probably don't see it every day when you're involved in the healthcare system. There's just this integration of imaging and data. I mean, how many people out here have done a 23andMe or something like that that have done any type of data on your genomic data? That's gonna become more and more a part of how your doctor makes a diagnosis, with the images that we take, with other types of capabilities. That's great. That drives personalization, but it also drives this explosion of data. Same thing's happening on the therapy side. There are very few cases where someone says, "Take this pill and you're cured," or this one surgery. It's usually a combination of things.
Same thing with the follow-up and monitoring, particularly around chronic disease. We play a critical role in that. This convergence is where GE really can make a significant difference in the convergence of these devices, but also kind of lassoing around this data to take all these disparate pieces of data and bring them back in insightful ways that your clinician can make the best decision for you. That's really what the hope is of precision health and really one of the reasons that we're all excited about this journey going forward. What do we do? We are a top player in all the markets that we compete today. Here's our four segments that are listed up here today, Imaging, Ultrasound, Life Care Solutions, and Pharmaceutical Diagnostics.
Imaging covers the wide gamut of things from MRIs to CAT scans, to women's health, to interventional cardiology. Twenty-three billion dollar equipment market, we have $10 billion in sales of equipment and service. You see our ultrasound business, Roland will go through this in a little bit more detail, $3 billion dollar or sales for us today. Life Care, which is a composite of critical care things, the anesthesia machine that's used in every surgery, monitors throughout the hospital, a million-plus size installed base, EKG systems, we are a leader in those areas, and that's about a $3 billion in revenue business as well. Then our pharmaceutical and diagnostics business, which is the contrast agents used to inject in someone to get a better image, we are a leader in that area, as well as a growing leader in molecular imaging.
The agents to actually track and diagnose Parkinson's disease, or the biomarker amyloid beta plaque to actually diagnose Alzheimer's, we have those products as well, and that will be a growing business for us. Down below, you see these products that run horizontally, so we have a very big service operation. Probably one of the largest on-the-ground service organizations throughout the world. That's about a $6 billion revenue generator. A really strategic asset for us on how we can maintain and manage uptime and remote fix. We have our digital enterprise business I'll talk more about, but that's about a $1 billion in revenue. This is software sales. It's a host of other products that are involved in there around this digital arena. All these come together then around these care pathways.
We look at cardiology all the way through how these devices connect. We think of oncology, how they connect. That tying together, again, is a critical part of our future. Let's flip forward here, and I'll just wanna talk about. I had mentioned lean when I opened. I mentioned about my aviation experience and stuff, and how foundational it is to driving growth and capabilities with customers. You know, it may not sound that intuitive. When you think about safety, there's obviously a safety for our employees, but patient safety in my world is everything as well, and a focus on safety, a focus on quality, mission-critical products that cannot break when you're in an operating room. Delivery, can I get them at the right time when I need them, and the right cost with all these dynamic markets around the world.
I want you to hear just a quick example from Ralston Baker, who's our Lean Leader in Ultrasound, talk about a recent project.
My name's Ralston Baker, the Lean Leader for our ultrasound business. We believe that world-class product availability and on-time delivery are key drivers of profitable growth. Our journey started two years ago by addressing urgent needs within the four walls of our sites. One example of this was a transition from push to pull replenishment on our probes, a key component driving missed deliveries. This approach delivered the throughput and speed required to go from three to five inventory turns over a two-year timeframe. In addition, we laid the foundation needed to carry us into the future, establishing lean fundamentals and expanding our Lean IQ. We are not done. As we continue our lean journey, we are now taking a more holistic wing-to-wing approach. We are getting closer to our customers and getting our suppliers close to us.
This results in a better customer experience, improved inventory performance, and a more resilient supply chain. This focus on our customer and the systematic elimination of waste results in a win-win.
Thank you, Ralston. Look, for us in healthcare, this is really just the beginning. We've got many, many projects throughout the company, but when we talk about optimization to drive 17%-20% margins, this is a huge part of that toolkit. Look, before I hand the microphone over to Helmut to talk a little bit more about, I wanna talk a little bit more about our long-term outlook. First starting with, we are focused on being a mid-single digit grower. Do I think there's upside down the road?
Yes, I do, but I think as our core markets are maturing, growing as we enter into other markets, this is critically a focus area for us, is being able to be a mid-single-digit grower, and we have some good dynamics that are happening in the marketplace today. The other part here is this pathway to 17%-20%. We see the benefits of Lean, being a separate organization, and again, really optimize the business around the customer, particularly this focus in individual businesses. I think you'll get more of a feel of that as we walk through some of the presentations here this morning. With that, I'll hand the microphone, or excuse me, the clicker over to Helmut.
Helmut joined us just a year ago from Medela, a publicly traded company. Helmut.
Thank you, Peter, and good morning, everyone. It's great to be here, and I'm super excited to talk to you about the opportunity ahead for GE HealthCare. The market fundamentals are strong, with need for better patient outcomes, improved productivity, and digitalization of healthcare. Precision Health is really coming to life. You see on this page our financial model and our outlook for 2022. We expect to grow our margins low- to mid-single digits, improve our operating profit 25 to 75 basis points, and our cash flow conversion will continue to be above 100%. I'm gonna take you through now each of those three components in a little bit more detail. We see positive market dynamics in on revenue, driven by mostly investment both from the public and private sector, as well as implementations that we're seeing from our customers.
We continue to invest in R&D and technology, and you see some great examples in our showcase in apps today this morning. We're moving from traditional imaging offerings into therapy and surgery solutions, which is really exciting. About 50% of our revenues are recurring from traditional services offerings to solutions in digital applications as well as contrast media and consumables. Our order backlog and order book is strong. We expect to grow our revenue by low- to mid-single digits in 2022 and mid-single digits in 2023. Let me move to gross profit margin performance. Lean is the key enabler for our productivity, and we will continue to use Lean as a tool to optimize our footprint and portfolio. Pricing discipline is very critical in the current market environment, as well as inflationary management that we are managing, you know, very, very tightly.
We will continue to do targeted M&A acquisitions where it makes sense, and you've seen the examples of BK Medical and Zionexa earlier today. We expect to expand our gross profit margins by 25 to 75 basis points, both in 2022 and in 2023. You can see the range of outcomes here on this page. Majority of the margin expansion in 2022 is gonna come in the second half of this year. For 2023, I wanna caveat these numbers here are excluding any public company costs. Our capital allocation is very, very simple. First and foremost, we expect to be investment grade on the day of our spin, and we will now continue to improve that investment grade rating as we go forward. We will continue to invest back into the business with a high focus on ROI and productivity.
Working capital management is very critical as we improve our cash collections, our inventory performance, and our supply management. We expect our cash flow to be up both in 2022 as well as in 2023, with more than 100% conversion. We've delivered on that conversion over the last couple of years. If I go into the spin update on the next page, we have a small project team working, fully dedicated on the spin, while the majority of our teams are working 100% executing our day-to-day business. We've laid out a couple of key milestones, as you can see on this page here, from the operating model, the corporate governance, branding, as well as the capital structure. We will share more of those decisions as we go throughout the year as we prepare for the spin.
We'll transform where it makes sense, but we will also make sure there's strong continuity as we execute, you know, this spin. I'm very confident that as we execute the spin, deliver on our financial model, we will become a faster, more focused healthcare company that is driving better outcomes for patients and customers. With that said, let me hand over to Roland Rott, our CEO of our Ultrasound business. Roland will talk to you about what's happening in Ultrasound. Roland.
Thank you, Helmut. Good morning. I'm really pleased to talk to you about GE's Ultrasound business today. I'm 11 years with GE HealthCare. I have been in the software industry before. Now, ultrasound is a fascinating technology for healthcare because it allows physicians to look inside the body in real-time without ionizing radiation by just emitting sound waves, right? We have visual insights which can help to understand the condition of a patient. This is a very cost-effective method, and for this reason, ultrasound has been over several decades developed from cardiology and women's health into many new and traditional care areas. That's the reason also why the ultrasound market is a very consistent, resilient, growing market. $7 billion market in 2021, and we expect it to keep growing in mid-single digits towards 2024.
Our ultrasound business in GE HealthCare is actually in a strong leading position today, but we have been a pioneer and an innovator for a long time. We have actually been the company who introduced the first high-resolution 4D ultrasound system for women's health and fetal health. Maybe the parents amongst you will recognize that, Voluson. We have also been amongst the first companies to introduce artificial intelligence in the ultrasound workflow to make ultrasound more efficient and easier to use for our users. We have become a highly respected player in this field, and we serve customers in dedicated clinical segments. You see these different segments here, radiology, women's health, cardiology, point of care, and primary care.
In all these five segments, we have very distinct different customers, customer needs, and for that reason, we have dedicated teams in research and development, but also in the go-to-market side with dedicated channels. Because the understanding of the deep expertise of the cardiologist is very different than of a gynecologist. That's truly an advantage we have. Now, in quarter four, we were excited to close the acquisition of BK Medical. Because with BK Medical, we actually now approach the operating room. BK Medical has developed very innovative real-time surgical guidance solutions. Such solutions now, in combination with our diagnostic ultrasound portfolio, allow us to have a complete range from screening to diagnosing to supporting treatment of certain diseases. Now, this entire portfolio is enriched by a digital platform, Edison, Peter mentioned.
Edison allows us to bring artificial intelligence to these devices, as well as other applications, make the devices smarter, and make the users more efficient using them. Now let me give you two examples of the fastest-growing areas of ultrasound today. First of all, Vscan Air and handheld ultrasound. Handheld ultrasound is the fastest-growing market in ultrasound. Why? Because the way how care is provided in our world has changed, not the least through COVID. It's not only taking place in the four walls of a hospital, but it pretty much can go anywhere, even including the home. We have just launched last year a device, I have it here, it's called Vscan Air, a wireless handheld ultrasound device, which a physician can literally pair with their smartphone and take to any place. It's a whole body ultrasound system which allows to immediately get instant insights.
This category of device, handheld ultrasound, has the potential to truly transform healthcare and actually go to the point of care wherever that may reside. A second example here I have, obviously, to talk about is really BK Medical. BK Medical we welcomed in Q4, and it is really our entry into the operating room. BK is highly complementary as an acquisition because we have not had significant presence in this space before. What BK did is focused ultrasound for surgeons, so assisting surgeons with real-time navigation during operations. The BK team has focused these innovations on specific procedures like neurosurgery, general surgery, or urology. In these areas, there's a lot of minimally invasive and robotic surgery taking place. All these areas are fast-growing categories in healthcare where we did not have a presence in before.
In summary, we couldn't be more excited at GE HealthCare to keep growing the impact of ultrasound in healthcare and further transform healthcare towards precision health. Thank you very much. With that, I hand it further to Catherine Estrampes, our CEO of U.S. and Canada.
Thank you, Roland, and good morning. I'm very happy to be here today to talk about our region structure and capabilities. You heard GE Healthcare is undoubtedly a trusted partner of customers around the globe. You heard Peter talk about the vast installation that we have, which is served by approximately 1,500 channel partners, but also 48,000 employees, 10,000 of them which are commercial people, and another 8,000 of them servicing the technology, as you can see on the right of the screen here. We also have a global infrastructure which allows us to serve our customers where, when, and how they want it, with 41 manufacturing sites and 20 R&D centers around the world.
Finally, our reputation is solidly rooted into a leadership in a position in solutions and technology, whether it is imaging, ultrasound, life care solution, digital or PDX. Four regions, as you can see on the screen. I will quickly walk you through the growth and the revenue in 2021, and please note that those numbers include Healthcare Solutions and PDX. U.S. and Canada is the largest revenue-producing region with approximately $7 billion and a mid-single-digit growth in twenty-one, excluding our ventilation partnership with Ford. EMEA delivered $5 billion. China delivered approximately $3 billion with a double-digit growth. Intercontinental, which is our newly formed region, delivered approximately $3 billion with a high single-digit growth in 2021. Let's shift now to how we serve the growing needs of our customers with our commercial and service structure.
While the combination of our global scale, global platform, our local market expertise, and our in-depth, extensive commercial capability actually allow us to serve our customers in all delivery settings. As you can see, you know, on the screen in the middle. Specifically, we start from understanding and listening to their needs, their challenges, their opportunities, balancing the horizontal value delivery with deep domain expertise. If you think about horizontally, our account executives and our enterprise sales team actually co-create with C-suites and with head of departments, solutions to address efficiencies, digitization, and improving outcomes, which are key challenges in the industry, you know, today. While at the same time, and you heard Roland talk about it, our dedicated product sales specialists bring to bear their technical and clinical expertise to support our customers.
Obviously, throughout the lifecycle of the equipment, our field service engineers and our clinical application specialists constantly engage. Why is this important? This is important for two critical things. Number one, it allows us to deliver and to add value across all departments and think about some of the care areas that, you know, Peter talked about, oncology, cardiology, women's health, all critical to precision health. Number two, it allows us to really deepen and create long-term value partnerships to solve around improving outcomes. A great example of that is HCA, which is a 25-year partner of ours, and one of the largest healthcare service providers in the United States.
Next, you will hear from Marty Paslick, the CIO of HCA, who will share his thoughts, and this will be followed by Yihao Zhang, who is our CEO for GE HealthCare China. Thank you.
Above all else, we are committed to the care and improvement of human life. Hello, my name is Marty Paslick. I am the CIO of HCA Healthcare, and that is the mission of our company. It's important for us to find partners to help us achieve that mission, especially in technology. GE HealthCare has helped us over the last several years to be more innovative and to care for our patients in a more efficient and effective way. We've worked with GE HealthCare on a number of innovative platforms over the last several years. I'd like to highlight three of them. The first is the GE Command Center. The center enabled us to create tiles, and specifically tiles to highlight COVID statistics so that we could better care for that population within our hospitals.
The second innovation that we've worked with GE HealthCare on is called Mural, and it is a technology that further digitizes how we care for mothers and their children. The final one is a product called HART, and it is a product that we use to improve the digital telemetry for our patients. It enables us, instead of using voice calls and using dashboards, to send alerting directly to a nurse's phone in order to take a prompt action. As we continue to pursue the mission of our company, GE HealthCare will continue to be a key partner of ours as we look for more innovative and transformational types of technologies.
Thanks, Catherine, and I'm pleased to be part of this important event. This is Yihao from China. I've been in healthcare business for more than 12 years, with GE HealthCare for almost three years. GE HealthCare China is one of the most successful med tech healthcare company. We have $2.7 billion sales revenue with double-digit growth in 2021. We also have a growing installed base, an important competitive advantage that we have, bring more value to our customer over the product life cycle. We are also a market share leader in CT, MRI, PET/MR, ultrasound, and imaging contrast. Today, GE HealthCare China has approximately 7,000 employees, five manufacturing plants, and R&D team of approximately 1,200 engineers developing innovative products, not just for China market, but also for the world. We have manufacturing in China for more than 30 years.
47% of the product we sold in China last year are locally manufactured. China is among the fastest growth market, with forecasted double-digit growth in healthcare spending. China healthcare market is also very dynamic. Aging population, urbanization, and the rise in key disease driving the future demand. Chinese government has made a great effort in expanding access to quality and affordable healthcare through policy enforcement, such as county-level hospital upgrade, specifying the localization requirement, and the volume-based purchasing. We believe our accelerated localization approach will allow us to continue to capture the growth opportunity in China. Our local main strategy with our agile supply chain will enable us to meet local policy requirement quickly. For example, after new localization requirement policy came out in May, we have already launched a local made premium ultrasound last month. This enable us to better compete locally.
Our local innovation strategy. We innovate and deliver solutions tailored to the specific need of China. For example, China engineering team innovated Revolution Maxima CT can improve scanning efficiency. This innovation played an important role in China fighting against COVID-19. Our local partnership is helping us build a China diagnostics plus therapy, plus digital ecosystem. For example, we partnered and invested in local digital startup to provide a mammography AI solution for breast cancer, which enable unskilled county-level doctor to screen 4,000 patients within three months. We believe GE HealthCare China is best positioned to meet the local policy, serve local customer and local patient, and successfully grow our business in China.
Now, I will hand the presentation back to Peter. Thank you.
Thanks, Yihao. Hopefully, you've now had a chance, obviously, to see some of the team. From Helmut, Katrine, Roland, and Yihao, and you're as excited as we are. I think we've just got a really great opportunity in front of us here. We've got a great team coming together as well. I'd like to wrap up on a thread that you've been hearing throughout the presentation, which is on digital. We think digital is a critical component, really of tying together the capabilities of digital health. You heard the term Edison. Well, what is Edison? Really, it's a data aggregation platform that integrates artificial intelligence, and these are really the four things that it does. It's what's called a data fabric platform.
Some of you might think of it as kind of an operating layer, but allows us to connect once fundamentally into the customer's backbone of their data. Two, it's an artificial intelligence machine learning engine that has an orchestrator tool that enables you to implement different algorithms and such around it. Three, it's a development platform, so for our engineers, not just in our digital group, but in all the businesses to develop applications that work on it, and we're creating this as an ecosystem that emerging companies and partners can develop on. We wanna create a marketplace of multi-vendor applications. Ultimately it's an enterprise data optimizer about how you bring the data together, how do you present these disparate data in different ways.
Look, the platform's designed to be hybrid, deployed, could be in the cloud, could be at your data farm. We're working through, you know, what's right for a customer, and we're focused on it being a SaaS model, that we can deliver this as a services-based, capability, and multi-vendor. That's critical. Most of our customers' ecosystems aren't 100% GE or 100% anyone else, and so how do you bring a solution that deals with that heterogeneity that they have in their installed base? That's the vision. Enough on vision. Let's talk about two products that we're actually shipping today. The first one here is a product in our MRI business called AIR Recon DL. What AIR Recon DL does was really not thought possible just a few years ago.
We can take an older MRI scanner, and with AIR Recon DL and the Edison algorithms, bring the image quality up to state-of-the-art today. At the same time, be able to make that magnet 50% faster. Be able to put that many more patients through it. There's a great example of productivity as well as better clinical outcome. You know, look, this was thought to be not even possible just a few years ago. I think if you look up here in these images, this is what's called a coronal shot. This is someone's head with kind of a cut through this way. The doctor's looking at the detail on these edges here. You can see with your eye just the difference in the image quality.
This is kind of before or after, same magnet, only adding the Edison AI algorithm on it. That's an image that's improved that way that can be faster. Typically in MR, you had to choose one. Do I want better image quality or do I want better speed? Now this paradigm shift that we have with artificial intelligence changed all that. Our magnets that have this, it's a significant difference. You can see on some of the numbers here, we've scanned over a million patients on it, 600 sites around the world, got lots more room to grow it. I think it's a good example here of how we can change paradigms relative to this data platform.
I've had a great opportunity to talk to a lot of customers, some that have been, you know, are friends over the years, some not so much. I've had folks say, "Hey, Look, I've used, you know, some other folks' image quality, and you guys were maybe not my top pick. And with AIR Recon DL, I gotta tell you, Pete, in neuro, in the body, you guys have surpassed them." That's what we're looking at. What can we do to change the game? For those of you who might have heard of the Radiological Society of North America, big imaging show, this was one of the inventions that was viewed as one of the more innovative in 2021. Let's talk a little bit more bigger picture.
How we're using it more broadly. You heard Marty from HCA talk about the Command Center in Katrine's presentation. Currently, we have over 300 of these around the world and growing and evolving at different stages and sizes. What basically the Command Center is, it's a data aggregation engine. That's the part of Edison that's used to bring all these disparate sets of data together in actionable tiles or actionable views so that not retrospective analysis. You come in today, five nurses didn't show up and 10 more people came to the ED, what are you gonna do about it? Let me now have you hear from some of our customers that actually have it implemented.
Not just the Command Center, it's an entirely different approach to managing day-to-day operations. The terrific collaboration between the Johns Hopkins Hospital and GE. The real power of this is this machine learning piece that we have added to it to create a high reliability environment where care is being provided most appropriately and in the safest manner possible. We have taken $10 million of inefficiency out of the organization in less than a year, also support an environment for high-quality, individualized patient care, begin to offer solutions to what they can now see clearly as the problem. There was no single system that brought all those elements together and packaged it in a way that made it useful for everybody. Every patient that comes through an acute hospital has value added to their stay.
We will look back and wonder how we ever managed to deliver healthcare without the support of something like a Command Center.
I'd like to thank all of our customers that contributed here, but you can see just the power of being able to have this capability to bring together data formats and structures in this way at an enterprise level, at a clinical level, and even at a device. We're super excited about this opportunity. We're still early in the journey with lots of directions to go. I'll emphasize again, as I mentioned earlier, our digital solutions business, including the Command Center software, our software, advanced apps, that's about a billion-dollar business today, and we expect that to grow double digits in the future, particularly with the enablement of the Edison platform. I'll wrap up here just quickly by saying, look, we're really excited about the opportunity we have in front of us.
It's a fabulous franchise that touches so many lives in a positive way, that we're all humbled by the opportunity to be able to take this out as a separate company. We've got a great, strong franchise. Hopefully, you got a better feel for the depth and the layers that exist relative to the touch with customer. We're driving performance with Lean. It's real. The focus on safety of our employees, patients, the quality which is so critical in our world, delivering and cost with these markets around the world that have so many different cost requirements. Third is this focus on spin, both bottom and top line, the opportunity for tuck-ins, we're just super excited about that and think we've got a great opportunity in front of us.
With that, thanks for your attention. Steve, let's take some questions.
Great. Thanks, Peter. So, we have time for a few questions. I wanna let everybody know on the webcast as well that given travel difficulties yesterday, as I mentioned in my email this morning, I'll do my best to get to some of the email questions, but we're gonna give priority to those in the room. With that, first question to Deane, then Julian.
Thank you. Good morning. It's Deane Dray with RBC. Pete, appreciate all the color this morning. A couple questions. I'm not sure you have a specific number, but how much of software, just in terms of the value you bring today, how much is software, either standalone like Edison or embedded within the equipment, is in the business today? And then a second question, I don't know if it's for you or for Helmut, but when I see a big number, like $1 billion in R&D, how is that measured? What constitutes success? And is any of that customer funded?
Yeah. I'll touch on both of those. Look, so for the first part, that $1 billion is primarily versions of digital or software. It's some version of a codified product, what's in there. And again, it could be running on a scanner that's a software application, or it could be an application at the executive suite. What our opportunity is to move more of that towards a SaaS model, which is we have parts of it, some of that will come, and so that recurring revenue growth is a part of that, and it's a part of the enablement edge, engine on Edison. On your second one, it's a great question on R&D. Look, we've funded the business, my observations at a quite healthy level, particularly the last couple years.
There's been a focus really in our metrics, specifically around vitality. We've measured that as the percentage of revenues that are coming from new products we introduced in the last year. At least in HealthCare, that's our metric, and that runs around 30%. But part of what we're looking at is, again, you know, not necessarily the percentage of growth of R&D, but the returns on it and where we're putting our bet. You can imagine on that portfolio, there's some stuff that can grow really well at 3% of sales and other stuff needs to be 10%. The real goal is how do we optimize in that area? We're starting and having more and more, I would say, formal, tough rack-and-stack discussions, right?
Does this money to Tom versus the money to Roland, where's the best place to put it to the highest return? That's really what, you know, we're all about. How do we get the best return out of it?
Julian?
Thanks. Julian Mitchell at Barclays. Maybe two questions. One is just around pricing in the long term. There's often the perception that imaging, in particular, has quite tough pricing dynamics. Maybe help us understand kind of segment-wide at HealthCare, what the pricing looks like, sort of right now and medium-term. Then secondly, you know, the spin is coming up quite soon. The financial numbers for 2023 that were laid out were sort of ex, I think, standup costs and the sort of central cost allocation. I wonder if you could give us any color around, you know, how large those will be in 2023, just to make sure there's no kind of shock when that initial guidance for next year is provided.
Yeah. I think on the last one, I think that's probably something we're gonna give more clarity on a little bit later in the year as we think about what standup is and that overall cost. I mean, we're still early innings on that work on our 2023 departure. I would say back on the price question, look, you know, this business and the industry's typically been down two points every year is what that's played out relative to. That's not that uncommon from other areas within med tech. What we've been doing is taking a look at areas where you can change the game relative to value for the customer and not doing cost plus pricing, but value. So just take my AIR Recon DL example.
You know, if I can increase your throughput by 50%, you're down 15%-20% in resources to run your scans. Would you pay more of a premium price for that product? The answer is yes. We're going product by product through our business and taking a look at what we can do to be able to get more value and balance that obviously with our customers' needs, which are tough as well. I would say the other aspect is the more we move closer and connect a diagnostic and a therapeutic to drive a better outcome, so that you can get productivity but also better outcome, you typically can get more value from that.
You know, case in point, the ultrasound business, a BK product that's used in an interventional has a higher growth profile and also has a higher margin profile. We're looking across our whole portfolio, and we've been taking price where it makes sense and being smart about thinking strategically going forward, how we change that. The last point would be obviously with Edison, the more we can have digital integration, not only are the margins on software more than equipment, but that linkage to create value is really what we're looking for.
I have an email question in from Jeff Sprague, and this question is on the financial side. Why is healthcare profit potentially down in 2023, $3 billion-$4 billion versus the $3.1 billion-$3.3 billion this year?
Well, I mean, look, I think we're coming out of COVID still. I think as you all know, it's great that we're maskless now, but if we just remember back a few months, there was a lot of pressure in the beginning of the year, which actually had our recoveries, which are more back-end loaded. I think, you know, that's some of it. Obviously some of the material pressure that's out there. We've been heavily focused on, you know, the future of how inflation looks within the business. Teams did a great job before I got here, getting ahead of this on looking at re-engineering opportunities. Over 5,000 components we started on, I think back in 2020, early 2020. With that, being able to create dual source and opportunities to do that.
It's a combination of that ramp up and then offsetting that. Our third lever, which, you know, we feel pretty good about, is to be able to get a little price here in 2022 to offset some of that.
Thanks, Peter. We'll take a quick question from Josh Pokrzywinski.
Hey, Pete, so just to kind of tie into what Julian was asking around pricing power. Obviously your HealthCare customers have a lot of balls up in the air right now. How much of the portfolio would you say is something that they can look at as being sort of a purchase that has a return, lowers their operating cost, has some sort of patient outcome versus something more tied to like budget or capacity growth? Sort of gets to your point of like what's helping them versus what's just kind of more iron sitting around. Like what do you think that mix is today in the portfolio, and what do you think that mix could look like in a few years as you guys ramp up some of these investments?
Yeah, it's a good question, and I don't know if I have a specific percentage for you. I would say just even take the imaging world. In many cases, a CT or an MR is kind of the core manufacturing equipment in a hospital, right? If your imaging equipment's down, there isn't a lot you can do. It is a big productivity enabler, and we've seen actually during COVID changes. Meaning that we used to do this with you, but because we don't wanna really interact with a COVID patient right away, we don't know, let's actually move you to a higher sophisticated imaging piece of equipment like a CT scanner and actually get most of those answers. We think that a higher percentage of our portfolio hits in that range.
I would say the thing that keeps making it more value is it's not just device by device. It's how does this device that you capture that image lead into this therapeutic planning, lead into this kind of outcome. The more that's connected, we can create more value, we can ask for more price because we're gonna deliver more value for the customer.
Thanks. Thanks, Peter. Thanks, everybody. Larry, if you have any comments?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Team, thank you. Very well done. Yeah, I would just very quickly before we transition over to Scott, we talked at the outset about the customer. Obviously, the customer takes many forms in healthcare, but I hope you saw the thread, whether it's HCA, right? The neurosurgeon, let alone Pete's comments about safety and patient safety, particularly at the outset. That's running strongly across this business. I think I'm well convinced, and Pete's doing a very nice job reinforcing this on a daily basis. When we talk about profitable growth, there's a lot that goes into this. But that focus on the customer in all forms really is gonna be, I think, a big key ingredient to seeing a step up in growth, organic growth in this business.
With that, we're gonna transition, and Scott Strazik, who runs Renewable Energy and Power, is gonna take you through the update on that business, along with his team, who I see gathering.
Thanks, Larry. We're gonna spend the next 50 minutes or so having a conversation on the incredible opportunity we have in front of us as we integrate the power, renewable, and digital businesses together into one company, well-positioned to lead in the energy transition with our customers and for our shareholders. A few macro themes on the first page. The world is gonna electrify, whether it be automobiles, home heating. Demand for electricity is gonna grow by 50% over the next two decades. What that really does is pushes the challenge and opportunity to the power sector that today generates 13 of the 34 man-made gigatons of carbon to simultaneously decarbonize.
Those two macro themes, the electrification of the world with the need to decarbonize the power sector, are at the heart of the energy trilemma that this company intends to lead on, both in protecting for the reliability of the existing system while simultaneously decarbonizing it and providing economic solutions the world can afford. If we shift to the next page on key business themes, the power businesses are on track. This is a set of businesses that are gonna generate substantial cash flow for this company for a long time. The renewables businesses are in a different place. This is a self-help story with a set of businesses that we know the playbook to run and to fix in markets that really matter.
As we do those two things, continue to drive the accelerated improvement in power, fix the renewables businesses, we will have the capacity to invest with conviction in these businesses for the long term to lead in the energy transition. If we shift from here, as much as our leadership team is focused on leading in the future, we have an incredible foundation to build upon today. One-third of the world's electricity is powered with our equipment today. 52,000 wind turbines, 7,000 gas turbines, over $100 billion in backlog. Very solid baseline to build from, but we also know that every day, and every year, we just need to build upon that.
If you look at the next page, 2021 was another one of those years in which we have appreciation for the confidence the customers have given us, pride in what our teams in the field have done, as we had a number of significant wins, whether it be the growth of our Haliade-X offshore wind turbine backlog, to having our aeroderivative book and gas orders growth almost five times relative to the prior two years, to significant strategic wins. Our HA portfolio hit one million operating hours last year. To our Opus One acquisition in grid software. To strategic wins, like with Ontario Power Generation, launching our small modular reactor in Canada, another technology we're incredibly excited about. If we shift from here, I wanted to take a minute and just frame up these businesses as I think about them in the context of the energy transition today.
That really starts with conventional power, gas, steam, nuclear, hydro. These technologies today generate 85% of the world's electricity. More humble growth with clear businesses that are gonna generate substantial cash flow for us for a very long time. Wind. The world is gonna add 1,000 gigawatts of wind capacity in the next decade, more than doubling the wind in the world today. We are very well-positioned in both onshore and offshore to play a leadership role in both segments. Electrification. In this case, we're talking about power conversion, grid solutions, our digital businesses that integrate together the growth in renewables and the reliability of conventional power. If we shift to the long-term view of the financial construct of the combined businesses together, renewables and power, we see top-line growth, low single digits%, in line with electricity generation growth.
A view over the long term that these businesses should be capable of generating high single-digit margins. Before we get to that, we look at 2024 and a marker of getting to mid-single-digit margins, with the foundation being GE Gas Power delivering high single-digit margins in 2023. In the roadmap, we'll walk through on the subsequent pages with renewables improving this year on a pathway to profitability by 2024. All while simultaneously generating 90% free cash flow, investing in decarbonization and growth. Power financials. I wanna just take a step back and triangulate to what Larry framed up in the beginning with the Russia dynamic representing about less than 2% of revenue at a company level. In our power financials, Russia represents somewhere between 3% and 4% of our revenue.
lot of dynamic items we're working our way through right now. Frankly, much more focused on our 5,000 employees in or around the area, and something we're gonna stay close to as we continue to understand what we can and what we can't do in fulfillment, but wanted to frame up that 3%-4% of revenue as it relates to Russia. As we think about these businesses, there is a lot to like today with the GE Power businesses. If we go by them one by one. Gas Power. This is a business very well-positioned to grow earnings and cash flow in 2022 and deliver double-digit margins in 2023 on the strength of the services book and continued aero growth. Steam.
This is a business on the other side of working down our new unit coal backlog and completing our transaction with EDF that we like. It's a much smaller business. It'll be a $1 billion business. Services, that by the time we get to 2024, there's no reason why it isn't yielding double-digit margins. Power Conversion. This is a business this year that's gonna generate high single-digit revenue growth, mid-single-digit margins. Our Nuclear Fuels business, the smallest of the four businesses, services business, but also one that we're excited about with the small modular reactor and what that can represent for the future. You put these businesses together, top-line growth, low single digits, growing cash flow earnings and cash flow in 2022, with a clear pathway to high single-digit margins in 2023 and high single-digit free cash flow yield.
If we shift to Gas Power, this is a business that has improved its earnings over the last three years by $2 billion and its cash flow by almost $4 billion. In that period of time, our revenue has been coming down each of the last three years as we've been remixing from a more complex backlog with more complex projects to a backlog more heavily weighted in equipment only book. This year is an inflection point in that regard. We feel like from 2022 onwards, we can modestly grow the gas power business with the key dynamics being what you can see on the page. It starts with the install base. The reality is our gas turbine install base is twice as large as the next closest peer.
Chart represents our gas turbine utilization nominally growing over the last 18 months, but also growing relative to gas, electricity generation growth in the industry at large. In the middle, one of the key enablers being our HA growth. This is an area of underappreciation for how important this part of this business is for the long term. We have 65 Hs running today. We'll have approximately 100 by the end of the year into early next year. This is a part of the business that in 2020 generated $300 million of services collections, but by mid-decade, that number will be $1 billion. Air derivatives. It's hard to talk about the gas business today without talking about how important and strategic the air derivative book is for us.
This technology, often in, call it 75 MW-150 MW blocks of power, is the perfect complement to the renewables growth. Fast ramping, capable of enabling even faster renewables integration as that perfect complement. The last two years, we've been shipping approximately 20 units. You can see in the chart that that's gonna grow to north of 40 units, both this year, next year, with high confidence that that'll continue for years to come. If we go to the next page, there's a lot of exciting things to see in Greenville in our visits during the course of the day, but if there's one thing I don't want you to miss, it's the live outage demonstration that we're doing on site. This is...
If I just take a step back and think about where we've been with gas power the last three years, the first 18 months, 2019, first half of 2020, very foundational work. SQDC, structural cost, getting the foundation in place. By the summer of 2020, we were starting to really lean into Hoshin. Breakthroughs. How do we really change the profitability curve of this business? As a leadership team, we took a step back and said, "Nothing will transform this business more than if we could reduce our outage cycle time by 30%-50%." That is our most intimate customer touch every day, our outages. We've been at it, working this, putting the operators at the center of how we achieve a 30%-50% reduction in our outage cycle time.
Some of that has been what could be perceived as simple solutions, like keeping common core crews together for an entire outage season. Other things have been more sophisticated, and you'll see that today in the demonstration, where we've changed the crating and the boxing of our parts so that we've eliminated the laydown area. It's set up now that it goes right from the truck to the turbine platform. To inserting different levels of technology for our operators to go from years in which they had 50-page manuals to operate the outages to iPads with visuals that are communicative and iterative with the operator over time to make it easier for them. Huge opportunity for us. Started last fall, 10 outages. 30% reduction in cycle time on the 10 outages we did last fall.
We're gonna do about north of 100 outages this year in an incredible opportunity to transform this business, both leveraging Lean in the field, but also the principles of being able to nurture and take a step back and drive breakthroughs that over the long term impact the customer and the profit curve of this business. With that, I'm gonna share a video on live outage and then have Martin O'Neill, our Gas Power strategy leader, come up and talk about our pathway to decarbonize gas.
With a growing global population depending on electricity for life's every moment, GE's customers work hard to maintain their operations, and the GE and FieldCore teams are there during outages to help them keep the lights on. To deliver on this mission, we've doubled down on our commitment to continuous improvement, transforming how our teams execute and deliver at customer sites.
When you look at industry, when you look at history, there's always this tension to get better, to go forward, to find an answer. That's what live outage is trying to do.
Using lean management and our operators' feedback, we developed live outage, a system that puts needed manuals, documentation, and checklists required to execute work in digital devices available on-site and on the turbine deck.
Having the drawings, having the torque specs, having the part numbers, everything is right there. You can open it up, you can see what it is. I can show the guys, explain to them what they're doing.
That way you can't step or veer off the track throughout the live outage.
What used to take trailer trucks full of paper and binders is now immediately available to the field execution team digitally, ensuring that vital drawings and instructions needed to safely conduct the outage are easy to find and implement. Beyond outage procedures, live outage gives access to real-time feedback and progress tracking from the field, enabling us to learn from outages happening simultaneously around the world and continuously improve our procedures.
GE Engineering Group, FieldCore, our craft technicians helped us to execute our outages in a much safer, more efficient, faster way, and execute these outages at a higher level.
We're excited to gradually implement live outage across a variety of gas turbine technologies and customer sites worldwide. Live outage is implementing lean to the front lines of GE Gas Power. This integrated and scaled standard work simplifies and transforms the way we execute outages, helping our customers' power plants to remain competitive today while preparing for a decarbonized tomorrow.
Thanks very much, Scott. I just want to say hello to everyone, first of all. I want to really talk about the importance of gas turbines in the energy transition, and in fact, as a destination technology. Through pre- and post-combustion, we need to decarbonize gas turbine assets for our customers. They're going to be a fundamental part of the energy landscape on the other side of the transition. In this decade of action, we're gonna see more coal to gas switching. That's decarbonization in real terms, and we're gonna see aero-derivative technologies being added to grids globally so that they can support the more accelerated and rapid addition of renewables technologies. Gas turbines operate in sync with transmission and distribution networks.
They're the connective tissue that hold together grids and grid stability and resilience, and we really need to spend some more time on that narrative, understanding the interplay there with synchronous rotating assets and the massive installed base of gas turbines that we've built up over decades, 7,000 operating assets. How do we decarbonize? If we switch to the first slide, when Secretary Granholm was with us in our GE research facility in Niskayuna, we showed this slide. Basically, when we think about post-combustion carbon capture and sequestration, the U.S. offers massive opportunity. 50 pipelines, already existing 4,500 miles of CO2 removal infrastructure.
Here's where the strength of a large installed base plays to developing and scaling a carbon capture and sequestration market, where the IEA and the IPCC both agree that CCS technologies are gonna account for at least 15% of all carbon removals in all net zero trajectories by 2050. Hard-to-abate sectors like steel, like aluminum, like coal, like chemicals, are gonna need carbon capture and sequestration. That means that this technology is gonna scale, and it's gonna be more economically viable to deploy on our gas turbine installed base so that we can harvest those characteristics that I talked about earlier. We're investing here, we're doing real research work here, and we're winning FEED studies, front-end engineering design contracts on both sides of the Atlantic as we seed and scale this technology with new partnerships that we're building.
We're very excited about this space, and we think that this is certainly an area that deserves much more debate. If we think about pre-combustion then, on the next slide, we move to a world of developing hydrogen economy and low carbon intensity fuels. The good news here, again, is the installed base is key. You have to decarbonize that installed base. It's the fundamental linchpin of operating grids globally. We've eight 8 million hours operating with low carbon intensity fuels already in more than 100 machines around the world. We were doing hydrogen work with the DOE as far back as 2002. We've got embedded capability in our H-Class turbines and our aero derivatives, and we're gonna continue to develop that. We are going to decarbonize either through pre- or post-combustion for our customers.
With an installed base that large, we have to lead in this space, and we will. When you decarbonize gas turbine power generation, it is the relevant destination technology on the other side of the energy transition. Thank you very much. Scott, I'll hand back to you.
Thank you, Martin. Now we're gonna shift to a discussion on renewables. At the start, I wanted to just talk about some recent customer touch points in the market. Two weeks ago, I was in Copenhagen with two of our largest offshore wind customers. Very hard to spend a couple days there with them as they outlined the map in the North Sea and the number of 10-gigawatt offshore farms they plan on building over the next decade and not have conviction that our offshore wind business is gonna play a very important role in the energy transition. Two weeks before that, sitting with some of our largest U.S. developers in understanding the pipeline of zero carbon PPAs they have in line, primarily in the West Coast technology companies that create real demand and opportunity for our onshore wind business.
Sitting down with National Grid in the U.K. and looking at the map of massive grid infrastructure investments they have to make to modernize their grid for a massively changing power gen system. We play in markets that matter, but simultaneously, we need to run these businesses better, and that starts with prioritization. We have teams that have a passion for the technology, for their customers, for their markets they play in, but we've got to focus better. We have businesses that are primarily equipment-based businesses that we need to size structurally for that reality. We have to underwrite to allow our teams to execute right the first time in the field.
In all of those realities, both the market opportunity and those self-help dynamics are what drive the areas of focus on the right-hand side of the page. Rather than hit them one by one now, we're gonna really go through those themes over the course of the subsequent pages. What I wanna really emphasize is, as you look at those key areas of focus, those are exactly the things we've been focused on in turning around gas power the last three years. This is stuff we know how to do. This is stuff within our control, and that's exactly what we are gonna do. We shift to the next page. It is hard to frame up the renewables financials without starting by acknowledging the last three years, the financial results of these businesses have been unacceptable, but also fixable. Unacceptable, but fixable.
If we go through them one by one and start with Onshore Wind, the largest of the Renewables businesses, this is a business that's gonna be down to unprofitable in 2022 on a much smaller North America Wind business. When you look at the Onshore Wind business and project into 2023, I see a clear business that will improve earnings in the international book by $200 million by simply underwriting the book better, smarter pricing, simplification that's long underway. That gives me high confidence that will happen in 2023. I see a business with structural cost with $200 million of opportunities from 2022 into 2023 as we simplify the organization and position it for today's reality.
As we do those things, as the North America market normalizes, more likely into 2023 with orders and liquidation of revenue into 2024, there's no reason this business isn't low single digits in 2023, and then back into mid-single digits in 2024 and beyond. Offshore Wind, different dynamic. This is a business that's been in an investment cycle. $500 million of revenue last year that's growing to $3 billion of revenue between now and 2024. As we drive that volume ramp, this is a business that will go from unprofitable to profitable between now and 2024. Grid Solutions.
This is the business where we'll see the biggest earnings improvement 2021 to 2022, as we've already taken a substantial amount of structural costs out of this business, over 3,000 heads, with a much better backlog that's starting to liquidate to income with a clear pathway to break even to profitable in 2023. You put these businesses together, and you have low single-digit revenue growth in 2022 to mid-single-digit growth in 2023. Earnings and cash flow that will improve modestly in 2022, more meaningfully in 2023 on the pathway back to profitability in 2024. We have substantial work ahead of us in these businesses, but this is work worth doing in markets with technology that the world needs to succeed, with a team, with a conviction that we know we can do this.
If we shift to offshore wind, I've got to tell you, it is impossible to climb to the top of our Haliade-X prototype in Rotterdam and not have an incredible appreciation for the scale of this technology and the impact it's gonna have in the world. This is in a market that you can see on the page that's growing substantially. 50 GW out there today that's gonna grow to north of 150 GW between now and the middle of the second half of the decade, that we're well-positioned to capture our fair share. With key areas of focus, it starts with certification of the Haliade-X wind turbine this year, a clear focus on product cost. We're gonna continue to invest in technology.
A perfect example of that is with the superconducting generator that we're working on in partnership with the Department of Energy that's gonna lead to the elimination of rare earths in the generator, 2 MW-3 MW of more output, a lighter generator with lower cost. We're gonna do all of this while navigating a huge commercial pipeline. We have north of $100 billion of pipeline today, north of 100 GW of opportunity that we're gonna navigate for our customers and shareholders. With that, I'd like to introduce Pat Byrne, our head of onshore wind, and then Philippe Piron, our leader of power conversion and grid solutions. As we bridge there, we're gonna show our next video.
The site is a little complex. It has very high wind speeds that get up to 45%-50% capacity factor. That was very important that we got the right turbine for that type of location. GE wasn't just a partner in it. They went beyond that and joined the community. It was always the project that was put first, not GE and their self-needs that was more important than the overall project. A project of this scale, you can imagine, logistics become really important, and there are aspects of the GE supply chain that allowed us to have more confidence in the logistics of the timing and the quality and all that.
I think that the common theme in the industry is the right product for the U.S. and at a price point that works for the offtakers, because ultimately, we got to balance the people buying power, the price they pay to the cost, the cost to build for our projects. Our next big project, which is about a 3,000-MW project , has similar types of wind speeds as the Western Spirit project does. It's very important that we have good companies like GE manufacturing high-quality products to keep this whole marketplace alive and well. GE was really the right place at the right time for us.
We are super proud of the work done at Western Spirit and really excited about the future with Mike and his team. I'm gonna focus on the improving the profitability of the onshore wind business, but just a moment on the wind industry, the onshore wind marketplace. We believe this will continue to be a very important part of the renewable energy generation. We believe there's a mid-decade 50 GW market opportunity outside of China. About 75% of that 50 GW is international, about 25% is in North America, and we believe both of those markets are growth opportunities for us and we're committed to winning. The starting point of those two businesses, those two markets, are very different for our business. Our North America business, we are the clear market leader in North America.
It's been a profitable business, is profitable, has been profitable. We have a clear view of the recovery of the demand in the marketplace. Between the utility RFPs and some of the carbon-free PPAs that Scott just mentioned in some mega projects, we see a clear pathway to a 12-GW market. That pipeline. Then pricing. We've been able to achieve higher prices in the last three to six months. Pricing, pipeline, and then product. This is one of the things I'm most excited about in North America, and Mike alluded to it here, which is the pipeline of new products we have underway to have the winning product for this marketplace.
This engineering team has just done an incredibly good job of preparing that for the ramp, for the rapid ramp we anticipate in the next couple of years, and the level of qualification and engineering quality that's been put into this new product. North America, the cornerstone of our equipment business, is in really good condition. The international business is a profit turnaround story. Really, as Scott indicated, there's a playbook here that gas power utilized that is very much in play here. The first part is building better backlog. One of the core things we're doing here is we're looking at all the countries we could compete in with wind, and we've down selected and focused into a strike zone.
The strike zone are countries where we believe we have a product fit, we have the right service team, project execution, logistics, manufacturing, and supply chain to be able to build and sustain a competitive advantage and command price. We've been doing that, building a better backlog recently. Part of that, as well as the ability to get price, and again, a place we've been able to get double-digit price over the last three to six months. As Scott indicated, this is worth $200 million in sequential improvement just by building a better backlog. The second one is executing better. We have a term called the factory in the field, and this is really looking at the deployment of these assets.
We ship hundreds of these turbines every quarter into the international marketplaces, and thinking about it, that's like a factory. The logistics, the delivery, the kitting, the standard work, the labor preparation, the site preparation, the simplifying and streamlining. This is the heart of Lean applied to the factory in the field. Executing better will also be a substantial improvement to our sequential profitability. Then the third aspect here is really lowering the fixed cost structure. There's a residual cost structure associated with our prior footprint, and what we're doing is we're lowering that cost structure as we've gone to a tighter focus on these strike zones. This is really what we're in the middle of executing in the international turnaround, and I just could not be more proud of that team working on this together.
A very important part of our onshore wind strategy. The other business we've got is the service business, a great business, a business that grows double-digit. It's profitable. It has a contractual book, a transactional book, and a repower book. Repower is where we go into turbines that are 10 years old, and we basically rebuild the turbine. We replace the parts, improve power output. If you go back 10 years, there's a significant portion of turbines ready for repower. Again, a profitable business, a business we really like, and an important part of our growth strategy going forward. When you put these together, that's why we have confidence in low single-digit operating income growing to mid single-digit after that because of what we're doing to execute these three business models.
Moving to the next slide, I just wanted to do just a run through of one lean example. The lean transformation of the onshore wind business is a very large industrialization at global scale of a business that's both a project business and a product business. The highlight here is really the Cypress delivery. Cypress is our large wind turbine, and we've been able to reduce the cycle time of implementing that by 40%. Excuse me. By 40%. This is really a result of being able to reduce the labor, focus on the execution, and if you scale that then across the whole operation. Again, it's worth tens of millions of dollars of profit improvement year-over-year. Before I completely lose my voice, I'm gonna turn it over to Philippe now so he can take it from here on electrification.
Excuse me.
Thanks, Pat. What is electrification? We refer to electrification as an overall process which substitutes technologies using fossil energy with technology that powered by electricity. As Scott said, all businesses play in a growing electrification paradigm, despite their financial performance was not acceptable up to now. I joined recently GE through Power Conversion, but my past experience in submarine, optical, and hybrid power networks makes me confident and committed to recover much more acceptable performance for this segment, all of them benefiting from mid-single-digit to high-single-digit market growth. From medium voltage to high voltage, from industrial application to power utilities, these businesses serve the energy transition by providing the critical element of power networks through power conversion, transmission, protection, and administration. The grid is the core infrastructure to ensure a resilient and sustainable energy transition.
By the quality of its nodes, by the flexibility and the density of its machine, the grid makes viable a poor infrastructure at any level, whether it is a national utility, an offshore platform, a steel plant, or even a ship. Let's have a look to the first three segment on the left side of this page. Power conversion. Medium voltage decarb solution to energy efficiency, electrification, microgrids, like the full electric energy management system we delivered to the U.K. Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier, or to some energy plants like Black Meath. Grid integrated solutions based on HVDC for long distance transmission like Sofia, connecting the world's largest wind farm in North Sea, as well as AC local around networks like the Empire Wind offshore substation North Sea. Power transmission. High voltage switchgear, breaker, transformer.
All of them are key to replace, to reinforce, to enlarge existing grid and future microgrids. On the right, we find our high growth grid automation and grid software businesses which provide digital solutions to help operators to better monitor, control, protect, and supervise their grid assets, supplying relays, gateways, optical communication systems, grid orchestration software, different elements which are totally key to this activity. We are playing within all these five segments with a material market presence to address the growing worldwide need for electrification. What can we do to be more successful in this enterprise? We need to continue running a two-faceted approach across our portfolio. One, driving profitable growth with a particular focus on power conversion, grid automation, and software. Two, while fixing our legacy projects and completing our turnaround, like in power transmission with our transformer product line.
As you can see on the left, in Power Conversion, we reached an inflection point in 2021. We refocused our core activities on mission-critical application for marine, oil and gas, and industry. We right size our industrial footprint and streamline our production fixed cost and SG&A. We introduce lean management practices at all level of the company. These turnaround actions have helped Power Conversion its journey to profitable growth, developing NPI in high power density propulsion, decarbonize high-speed compression system, and future breakthrough investment in microgrids. This experience should apply to Grid Integrated Solutions and Power Transmission, which are still in the course of their recovery trajectory. Of course, we improve somewhat our operational performance there, but it is still not enough, and we need to go faster.
Therefore, we run the same play as we did in Power Conversion, refocusing on most attractive and accessible market segments, applying a decentralized organizational model closer to the customer and to the field, pursuing lean management effort all across the company. We'll continue to reduce our capacity and structural costs on some specific product lines and regions. More to go after to reach this acceptable profitability over time. Finally, if we look to our grid automation and software businesses, they are very exciting high growth and solid profitability businesses for the future. With some tangible progress in 2021, we are positioned here to grow faster than the market, enlarging our customer base, leveraging our more baseload businesses, and with opportunities for inorganic investment like Opus One. Our ambition, my ambition, is definitely to develop our electrification asset for more and faster profitable growth. Thank you. Thank you. Scott?
Bangladesh is a teeming 170 million people striving and working hard to become a middle-income and then a developed nation. They need energy. For that energy, and keeping in view the vulnerability of the climate, they have decided not to use coal, which has been a very bold move for Bangladesh. To enhance and continue to progress at about 6%-7% GDP growth, they require a lot of energy, and they have chosen natural gas as a replacement for coal, which is a huge upside for carbon emission, less carbon emission. We would be requiring another 20,000 megawatts of electricity by 2040, and we believe that if we can provide this electricity at a reasonable price, at a uninterrupted way, at a low cost to the people of Bangladesh, it would greatly enhance their ability.
Gas engines of GE H-class using hydrogen, perhaps in the future, so that we really achieve net-zero emission.
Okay. I'd like to introduce Ramesh Thangaram, our GE Asia leader and also Gas Power Asia leader, Heather Chalmers, our GE Canada leader, and I appreciate you both being up with me for a few minutes. We wanted to bring together the discussion today on two very different markets. Our Asia market, in which we have substantial electricity growth that's gonna happen over the next few decades, frankly, and the technologies that play in there, and compare it to a market with more humble growth in Canada that's much further along in its decarbonization journey, almost 80% zero carbon today power generation, but another market in which we have incredible opportunities to lead and have an impact. With that, Ramesh, I'm gonna hand it off to you to give a little bit of perspective on what's happening in Asia today.
Scott, first of all, thank you for the opportunity and the spotlight on Asia. You know, two-thirds of the population lives here, and when you look at the growth of energy demand, it's expected to double by 2050, and that's important to me. Part of that is because it helps industrialize the economies, grow the middle income that creates new opportunities in each of these countries, and simultaneously also decarbonize for a better quality of life in places that matter. In that sense, you know, gas has a very prominent role for us in the region as well. I wanted to connect back to what Martin said, gas being a destination technology. We see this materializing here in the region with 20 LNG facilities that's coming online by 2025. From that perspective, gas has a big role for us.
Ramesh, you spent a couple weeks in quarantine to be able to serve our Taiwanese customers late in the fall. Can you give a little bit of context on Taiwan?
You know, I'm gonna do that back again in April, right? Part of that is this is what we do. We have to stay close to the customers, stay close to the markets and our teams, because we wanna get a feel of what they see. Taiwan is important for us from that perspective. We are currently building out 14 HA gas turbines that will add 10 GW of capacity by 2025. Taiwan also has about 11 more GW of capacity they'll be adding at the latter half of this decade as well, so extremely important. In addition to that, Taiwan is also going to be adding 15 GW of offshore wind over the next 10 years.
From a perspective of that sense point, you know, the role of gas is actually replacing nuclear to be more base-loaded machines, and at the same time, also positioning us to support the growth of renewables. Very exciting.
Taiwan, huge opportunity, nuclear to gas transition. Very different dynamic for you in South Asia, Southeast Asia.
You know, Mr. Aziz just brought a perspective around what's driving the growth. Middle-class growth is driving 6%-8% of electricity growth in the region as well, and we see Bangladesh, we see Malaysia, we see Thailand, we see Indonesia as well. There, we're actually in the next 12 months to 24 months, we're actually commissioning and putting back about 8 HA gas turbines. These HA gas turbines in the 50 Hz cycle provide 600-MW to 800-MW block size, high-density power, which is a lot of the region needs in this perspective. I also have to point out, signal out Vietnam. Vietnam is very exciting. We just got our first tech select for HA gas turbines in Vietnam.
I wanted to point out a perspective that Vietnam, three years, four years ago, for a country that had planned 25 GW on coal, that all is going to move to gas. From a perspective, different roles gas is playing, but a very important one.
Appreciate the perspective, Ramesh, and the leadership. Heather, Canada's in a very different place, but also a very strategic and important place for us. Can you give a little bit of context for Canada?
Sure. Happy to. As you mentioned, we're facing very different dynamics. Over 80% of our power generation today is from carbon-free sources, the majority of which is hydroelectricity. We're also a major exporter of oil and gas and electricity. Our challenge is solving for that last mile of decarbonization while also remaining globally competitive. In that regard, we see Canada has an opportunity to be a first leader in a couple of technologies, one of which you mentioned earlier, small modular reactors, and happy that you said it, that Ontario Power Generation has chosen the BWRX-300 as their technology of choice. And we see a path to over 2 GW in the short term. The second technology is carbon capture and building on Martin's comments.
The federal government has put in place things like the carbon tax going to $170 a ton by 2030. We've got five-year emission reductions targets as well as favorable geology, all of which, you know, set the stage for growth in that sector. I think I shared last week I had the opportunity to do a roadshow across Western Canada and visit a number of carbon capture plants. If I wasn't excited before, I certainly am right now. A lot of potential in Canada.
No question. We're just as excited about nuclear and small modular reactor. I'd love for you to just take a second and give context on the OPG selection and the drivers there.
Happy to. I would be remiss if I didn't just mention Canada's strong legacy in nuclear. In fact, you know, I'm from Pickering, which is right near one of Ontario Power Generation's nuclear plants. In fact, it was my first university job. I share that because Canadians are comfortable with it, and we're good at it, and we wanna build on that history. In terms of why OPG chose the SMR, we talk about small, we talk about size, and we talk about simple. The reality is a lot of legacy nuclear projects have been one of a kind, have been complex, and that's led to cost and project overruns. The small modular reactor is modular, and it allows us to standardize and replicate and over time drive down cost productivity. The other aspect is its size.
It's a terrific complement to nuclear blocks. The third comment I would make is around the nuclear fuel supply chain. It's the only one that builds on an existing supply chain and stating the obvious that's become incredibly important of late. Into Canada's opportunity, you talked about OPG. We're also anxiously awaiting Saskatchewan SaskPower's technical choice. Then we have Tech Select in the US as well as Europe that we're focused on. Just a really great opportunity.
No question. The OPG selections, the first 300 MW block, Heather mentioned it. We see 2.4 GW, if not more, in Canada and in many other markets to follow. Ramesh, if we go back to you, what would inhibit the growth from taking place as it should here?
I think the biggest open switch for us, Scott, is the shift away from coal and the target that's been designated to us to achieve climate change. You know, despite all the actions taking place with the retirement of coal, the piece on renewable growth and also the strategic deployment of post-combustion, the countries are not moving fast enough. In my mind, what lingers is that, you know, how do we solve for an ecosystem that mandates the balance to achieve the energy trilemma, right? That's really the key piece.
I take a lot of comfort from the fact that what's happening in Canada being an incubation of new technologies and how the power businesses are coming together to support Canada and hoping that a lot of the references that we can build from here can be applied back in the region as well. I'm pretty optimistic in that sense, so pretty excited as well.
As am I, Ramesh. Heather, same question. What would really hold Canada back?
Yeah. My answer to that would be grid modernization. As a country, we spend a lot of time on zero carbon technologies, but in the absence of a connected and modernized grid, it's gonna challenge our energy transition acceleration. The other thing I do wanna build on Ramesh's comments, you know, there is no other company in country that can take a system-level view and offer the portfolio of technologies to governments, to utilities, to customers like we can. The reality is that path to net zero is gonna look very different whether you're in Ontario, whether you're in Quebec or Alberta, not unlike a number of countries around the world. It really is an honor and a privilege to be able to work with those key customers as they navigate their path to net zero.
Thank you for letting me tell the Canadian story.
I appreciate you both joining me.
Thanks.
Thanks for your leadership. Okay.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you both. As we, I'm gonna go to a wrap here quickly and just reinforce a couple key messages. One, macro themes. The world is going to electrify with a need to simultaneously decarbonize. Those two macro themes are ones that position this company to lead for a very long time. Our power businesses are in very good shape to generate a substantial amount of cash flow for a long time. We've got a self-help story in front of us with renewals, but it's one that we know how to execute. And as we do, this is a company that's gonna have substantial capacity and conviction to lead in the energy transition going forward. With that, Steve, it'd be great if you come up and join me.
Thanks. Thanks, Scott. Everybody who's done an EPG thing remembers the sitting in the corner and the this and that as we go. If you see me standing, that's why, right? Let's start. Steve Tusa.
Thanks for all the info, and Steve, appreciate the Q&A by segment. That's very helpful.
Yeah.
Appreciate it. Scott, Siemens has talked about guarantees in their business. These are, you know, operating guarantees. Can you talk about what you guys have and maybe the magnitude of those? Should we assume that given your installed base there, you know, comparable or maybe even, you know, bigger than what Siemens talks about?
Yeah, I don't know if the right proxy is the existing install base for the guarantees, Steve, to be honest. I think it's more in relation to the guarantees attached with new build more frequently than the actual install base, in which different subsegments of our business require different level of commitment to get the jobs done. Certainly, historically, in our gas business, as you look at a backlog 3.5 years ago, when I took on the gas business, that was two-thirds complex projects, one-third equipment only. The amount of guarantees we had in the backlog were larger because you needed to provide more balance sheet support for more complex projects. As it shifted to more of an equipment-only model, you need substantially less.
When you look at our renewables business today, offshore wind, grid solutions, HVDC lines, these are billion-dollar projects that can take three to five years in which they often require some level of financial support. That's a big contributor to how we think about the underwriting of the deals and which ones are gonna make sense and which ones justify that balance sheet capacity over time based on both the economics of the equipment deal on day one, but also the aftermarket economics that can make sense that we'll think through. That's something that we will continue to look at at a portfolio level as we look at power generation and the renewables businesses, but it's much more aligned with a new build dynamic that is a big part of our underwriting of every individual deal.
John Walsh.
Hi, thank you. Questions around battery storage technology. You talked about aero derivatives to kinda help stabilize the grid. Just curious where you see battery playing, and if that's something you need the technology or you can partner with someone.
I think we clearly wanna be a system integrator where it makes sense. To the extent batteries and storage play a role in that, we talk a little bit about hybrid solutions, and that's something that we're looking at. Where that makes sense, especially wanting to be a leader in this space, we will integrate more pieces of the technology. I don't see batteries being something that we will be an OEM of, per se, or a manufacturer of in anything we contemplate, but a partnership model there could make a lot of sense. Again, the solution sets are very different. Those batteries are four to eight hours, right, as you think about the duration. A lot of the aero derivative applications where we're seeing a lot of that growth is longer duration needs, longer peaks, days versus hours, seasonal versus hours.
Where in places like Germany, places like Ireland, as the renewable integration or realization rate is getting to 20%, 30%, 40% of the power generation mix is needed for those periods of the year where they're talking about days of ramping versus hours of ramping.
Markus Mittermaier.
Markus Mittermaier, UBS. Scott, one question. You said execute right the first time in the field is critical. In the context of the Haliade, what processes do you have in place that ensures that? More broadly, maybe bringing it back to the margin, how should we then think about this? Because if you have the gas power playbook, right, where obviously tremendously successful now talking about double-digit margins in 2024, few people would have thought that. How do I think about that in the context of offshore, given that, you know, in the power side, you have 70% services, and I think if I'm right on the renewable side, you have currently 15% services. How does that interplay work between selecting the right projects and then making actually money off the equipment at the beginning, I suspect?
No question, Markus. I appreciate the question, and I think even the link between offshore and gas and making that analogy is most tight when I look at the offshore wind business in renewables and gas, where the similarities, the potential similarities over time with those business models and a healthier aftermarket on the backside with offshore. What I would tell you on the testing and the preparation, having just been at the prototype, we've got 28 months of operating the Haliade-X today. The team did a substantial, what I'd call red team, blue team exercise with our global research center in Niskayuna to really challenge the art of the possible with this machine. This is not a product that we've rushed to the market.
This is a product that when I look at our $7 billion backlog today, with most projects, we have healthy flow today, and we're underwritten with that. With the significance of what we were doing, I look at this backlog and feel like we're well-positioned to execute on what we have. It margins in an OEM landscape that gives a lot more confidence based on the technology moat of offshore wind and the competitive landscape that this is a business in the context of renewables that can definitely justify higher margins, and ultimately has an even higher realization rate or higher capacity factor that ultimately will generate higher services margins over time too.
It's one of the things I'd love for the room to take away from today's discussion, which is I have a lot of enthusiasm and conviction for what the offshore wind business can be for us. I think we have time for maybe one more live question, and then I've got an email from Scott Davis. Let's start. Nigel, why don't you take the last live one?
Yeah. Just a follow-on with the offshore. I mean, this is a very long duration backlog. You know, the supply chain conditions have changed radically in the last couple of years. So what actions can you take to protect the profitability of that backlog? And then maybe just address the changes to the underwriting process for international onshore and also grid, 'cause the backlog there seems to be low quality.
You bet. I'd start with offshore, the $6 billion-$7 billion backlog today to, just for context, liquidates to a large extent between now and let's say the beginning of 2026, okay, on what we've got on book today. I've got two and a half months of looking at deals with the team, on a go-forward basis. All of these deals we're looking at today have very healthy escalation protection on a go-forward basis to protect for the inflation risk. We've got an evolving, growing, maturing supply chain strategy on how we manage the buy. I would tell you generally my experience in renewables relative to gas power is there's maturation for the whole industry, frankly, there, on how we think about the buy and hedging and protection.
It's an opportunity over the medium term, but is earlier in its maturation process. I mean, one of the more motivating days I've had in the year was when we had 17 of our largest wind suppliers join me for two days at our global research center and just collectively talk about how we improve the profitability of the industry. Each CEO came in with their recommendations for us and them to lift all boats in an industry that frankly has to ultimately become more profitable. There's a lot of plays and a lot of opportunities out there for wind that give me confidence there's a better day coming. Now, very quickly on the international onshore wind. Pat hit on this, but I would just emphasize it.
We need to have conviction on what markets we can make money in, both in equipment in day one, but also where there can be scale on day two to have services scale. Ramesh mentioned Taiwan. We have 17 H's in gas in Taiwan. Every incremental H in Taiwan is worth a lot more to me than an H in a country where I have no flags planted, because I already have the infrastructure. So the profitability on the back end of those incremental H's is exponentially more than the new H in a new country.
I'm not sure the international onshore wind team has had conviction on that scale concept and has been very focused on growth and planting flags, but we're focused going forward on profitable flags where we can have scale and execute on day one and do the same on day two in the services market. Similar things with grid, okay?
Scott, thanks. Sorry, I'm gonna say the other Scott Davis, couldn't get to your question now. Send me one for aviation. We'll get to this one later. We're out of time. Larry, any comments before we go to a very short break for everybody?
I'm sure Scott Davis appreciates being referred to as the other Scott. I mean that in the best way possible. Scott, team, thank you. I hope you come away with a strong view that this team is fundamentally committed to both missions, the energy transition, solving for the so-called trilemma, which is very real, and delivering better financial performance going forward. We're gonna take a break here. We're gonna take 10, and we'll come back and kick it off with aviation. Thank you.
Please take your seats as we are about to continue our event.
Hey, everybody, just wanna make sure everybody comes and takes their seats. We have a lot to get through, and the longer you take, the shorter the next break time is going to be. This is aviation, so please come down, take your seats, and we will get going with John Slattery as soon as you sit down.
It was really good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pete showed well, too.
Good morning, everybody. My colleagues and I are more than delighted to be with you, particularly in person. We've got a great story to tell you, so for those of you that are joining us online and virtually, thank you for sticking with us. I'm gonna bring you through some of the opportunities over the course of the next 50 minutes, both as we ramp up on our original equipment side, and Kathy's gonna give you a lot more details on that. In parallel, as we ramp up on our services side, and Russell will talk about that. We're gonna talk about the amazing work we're doing on inventing the future of flight. Very much at Aviation, we're here to serve our customers.
I thought it would be a lovely way for us to start today by listening to two of our very important partners around the world. Roll the videos, please.
Hello, everyone. I am delighted to be able to make a contribution to GE Aviation's Investor Outlook. Today is an auspicious day for AerCap, as it marks the one-year anniversary of the announcement of our transaction to acquire GECAS, and for GE to become our major shareholder. One of the critical parts of that transaction was the relationship with GE Aviation and how it would evolve. I am pleased to say that our relationship has gone from strength to strength under the leadership of John and his team. We have tremendous confidence in the leadership of GE, the technology that GE is producing, the reliability of the engines. Let me tell you that as an airline, you can cope with lots of different events. Unexpected events can be managed.
However, one of the crucial things in an airline's operation is the reliability of the aircraft, and the most important part of an aircraft is the engine. GE's quality of production, quality of their product is unsurpassed in the industry. Also, over the course of the last 12 months, we have seen a tremendous increase in global air travel. We fully expect that trend to continue in the coming years. What we have seen on a global basis is that once people are free to travel, they do so in large numbers. I'm very confident about the future of air travel, and I'm very confident about the ability of GE Aviation to continue to be a leader in the production and supply of engine technology to the world.
You know, in a globally connected world, FedEx's customers count on the diverse portfolio of transportation, e-commerce, logistics, and business solutions that we've created. We try to actively partner with key suppliers who share an exceptional focus on quality, service, and customer value. GE Aviation is one of those. The GE/FedEx relationship, I believe, has certainly stood the test of time, dating back to our very first days nearly 50 years ago with our CF700-powered Falcon aircraft. GE Aviation continues to play an integral role in FedEx's aircraft fleet strategy, which GE engines have done for decades, from powering our first wide-body DC-10 jets to later expansion with our A300s and MD-11s. GE engines are continuing today with new factory freighters on our 767 and 777 freighters. We have hundreds of GE engines in our fleet.
We've had, as I mentioned, a very long history with great leaders like Gerhard Neumann, Brian Rowe, Dave Calhoun, and more recently, David Joyce and Bill Fitzgerald. That continues with the GE leadership of today. I'm confident that John Slattery and his leadership team, along with their great people and their advanced and reliable technologies, as well as a clear vision, will continue to help FedEx move the world forward. In closing, let me add that all of us at FedEx very much appreciate the trust and confidence that GE has placed in FedEx to support your global supply chain. Thank you very much.
Partnerships are very important in our business. Partnering with companies and people like FedEx and AerCap, Aengus Kelly, Fred Smith, is integral to our success. It's our honor to serve them. Okay. There are basically three key themes that are going through the fabric of the course of the next 45 minutes or so. Firstly, we have a robust portfolio. Three very distinct businesses, on our commercial business, our military business, and our systems business. But right across the three businesses, growth is robust. Little later, I'll bring you through the fundamentals of what's driving that growth. Secondly, as you've heard, one of the common themes across all of the presentations today is our commitment across the company and absolutely in aviation to lean.
Dedicating ourselves to that pursuit of continuous improvement is embedded now today in everything that we do and in how we execute our business. Larry mentioned it, Scott mentioned it, Pete mentioned it. Safety, quality, delivery, and cost. In that order, in that hierarchy, that's how we run our business today. You know, for me, lean is not just about improving our productivity and our financial results, which of course it will do, and it does do. Lean is also about transforming the working environment for our colleagues and making it more fulfilling for our colleagues every single day. This morning, and later on for those of you that are gonna go on the tour, you're gonna see plenty of opportunities of where lean is actually making an impact.
It's ringing the cash register, make us more productive, but you'll also see it's making the environment more respectful to each of our employees. Finally, we're committed to inventing the future of flight. We believe with the incumbency that we have in the marketplace, that responsibility sits heavy on our shoulders. We're gonna spend a lot of time bringing you through, and Mohamed will shortly telling you around how we're addressing the dominant theme over the course of the next number of decades in our business, which is decarbonization. There's a wall of numbers here, and I'm not gonna bring you through each one of them, although pretty much through the whole presentation, we will touch on pretty much every one of the numbers here.
The one that really catches my breath, if you look on the left-hand side of the screen, every two seconds an aircraft powered by GE or CFM takes off somewhere in the world. Three out of four aircraft powered by GE or CFM. That's just an amazing franchise that we have today. A franchise we're looking to continue to grow as we go forward. Those 66,000 engines that represent those every two-second departures, that's what feeds our services business that Russell will talk about a little bit later. If you look on the right-hand side of the slide, the financial robustness of this franchise, even in the year that we exited COVID, quite significant financial results for the company.
I wanna tell you, we'll give you more details shortly, but I do believe that our margins and cash will continue to grow now as we exit out of the recovery phase of this pandemic. Since I was with everybody, virtually last year, we haven't been sitting on our heels. We've been working hard in the marketplace and supporting our airframer partners, winning deals. We partnered, of course, with Boeing on the launch of the 777X freighter with Qatar Airways. Very excited about that. We've worked with Airbus and with Boeing in winning multiple marquee deals right around the world for the LEAP-1A and the LEAP-1B. Today, in fact, the backlog on the LEAP is over 9,700 units.
Tony's gonna talk a little bit about our military business in a while, but one of the marquee moments for the military team throughout the course of the last year was that win with Boeing on the F-15EX, $1.6 billion. It really was a highlight for the military team last year. In the aggregate, when we look at the backlog of GE Aviation today, for the first time in the company's history, it now exceeds $300 billion and growing. I won't steal Mohamed's thunder as he comes up a little later and talks about the future of flight. The only thing I'll say here is, from my seat, I'm very excited about the opportunity to partner with some of the finest industrial airframers and other engine manufacturers in the world.
Our partner at Safran, of course, with RISE, Airbus, Boeing, NASA, the FAA, and indeed others. I expect GE Aviation to play a leading role in our mission to decarbonize the future of flight. Indeed, our partners and our customers expect us to do that. From my seat, I will be very focused on the R&D that we're doing and the capital allocation that we're doing to ensure that it's bringing value to the shareholders. Let's talk about the wallet of opportunity that sits in front of each of the P&Ls. We hunt in a market or a series of markets that aggregates to $70 billion a year, and that number is growing on an annual basis. Look at the commercial propulsion side of the business there on the left.
Look at the win rates, 14.4% out of a $40 billion annual hunt, but also look at the percentage of that business that's deriving our services revenue. Look at the growth rate. Our win rates really are world-class. I believe that's a direct reflection of customers' belief in our technologies as we deliver them, but also our ability to service our engines after entry into service. I can attest to that firsthand. My former life as an airframer, and indeed before that, as an engine and aircraft lessor. I think that services issue right across each of our verticals proves to be a very useful balancer across our portfolio and allows us to not have the vagaries of just the OE business, cyclically.
The fundamentals, though, that drive our business, if you think about the commercial aviation business, that relationship between passenger demand or indeed freight, which is just a significant part of our business, and GDP has been proven over the course of the last 30, 40 years. Right now, it's anywhere between a factor of 1.5x and 2x. So as you think about where GDP is going to be over the balance of the decade, that's why you can see our confidence on those at least mid-single-digit growth rates are going to be, and high single-digit perhaps. Our military customers, perhaps today more than ever, they want to modernize their fleets, and they want to do it at pace, not just here in the United States, but with our allies around the world.
On our third business, and I'll talk more about systems in a moment. When we think about electrification, when you think about advanced avionics, autonomous travel that you're hearing so much about, I think we've plenty of opportunities, uniquely placed, to grow in our systems business over the course of the balance of this decade. That all being said, my priority and the priority of my team is to deliver on the ramp. The ramp, not only on the original equipment side to support Boeing and Airbus, and indeed our airline customers around the world, but also the ramp on the services side of the business. I'm confident we can execute that ramp principally by deploying Lean right across the organization. Our Lean journey now is really starting to accelerate. We're seeing lasting improvements on yield, lead time, inventory, and on-time delivery to customers.
We still have work to do, of course. You're gonna hear a lot more examples of Lean and the transformation from my team as they come up and they present throughout the course of the next 40 minutes or so. For those of you that are here, I hope you can visit the aviation airfoils facility. Tim McQueen will show you the amazing ringing of the cash register that he's achieving today. One example, reducing lead times from 35 days down to 10 days on the CFM HPT blades, the largest part of our business. Separately, we're embracing Lean not just on the shop floor. We talked a lot about that over the course of the morning already.
We're embracing Lean functionally in everything that we do, whether it's the CFO's office improving the on-time delivery of the financials and leaning those out, making them more efficient, or whether it's in our services business, just improving the forecasting that Russell can talk about later on. Lean is in every part of our business, not just on the shop floor. As I think about the three verticals that we're going to talk about on our commercial business, narrow body, wide body, and regional jets. We're actually the only engine manufacturer that's in each one of these three verticals today providing dedicated engines. We have a dedicated resource base of engines of over 44,000 engines just in our commercial business. It's those engines, again, that are feeding Russell's business.
We've had a track record of backing the winning airframe platforms over the years, and the testament to that, the materialization of that is we're winning more than the competition in the marketplace. Look at the growth line that's projected across each of the businesses. By far, of course, the narrow bodies and wide bodies, the largest. Mid-single digits% growth over the course of the balance of the decade. Great top-line momentum for our business. Now let's move to talk about the forecast and where we see the business going forward. Before I talk about forecasts, I'm mindful of the geopolitical tensions that are in the world today. Particularly, of course, as Larry mentioned at the outset of the presentation, the terrible situation in Ukraine. We are seeing fallout in oil prices. We're seeing some fallout on commodity prices over the course of the last week.
Then separately from that, as I think about our forecasting, China continues to have a zero-COVID policy, so we're probably gonna see a lot of peaks and troughs just over the course of the next six months in China as things stabilize there. Notwithstanding that, as I talk to the airline customers around the world, we're seeing continued improvement from those 2019 levels and a recovery to flight on the departure levels. Today already, we're almost at 80% of those pre-COVID levels. We continue with conviction, and a lot of proof points to support it, that the narrow body departure levels will get back to those 2019 levels first quarter of 2023. The wide bodies that are servicing that long-haul international travel, just one year later, first quarter of 2024. No change on our forecast.
Now, of course, those departures, they're leading indicators of the shop visit demand. Today I can tell you, and Russell will give you a little more detail on this, but we expect our shop visit revenue growth this year to grow by 25%. That's five points up from the direction we gave at the start of the year. Again, Russell will give you a little more detail on that when he comes on stage. Now, one of the jewels in the crown, our systems business. This is super attractive business, and it complements the core of GE Aviation. You can see four diversified, specialized, and in each case, profitable businesses. Somewhat equally balanced between our military and our civil platforms. At $1.6 billion revenue, of course, it's smaller than the other two verticals that we have in aviation.
It's also a business that's going to experience high single digit CAGR over the course of the next number of years. Again, that common theme of look at the percentage of its revenue that's coming from services. As you think about power management, electrification, advanced avionics around automated travel, these are all themes that are embedded right across those four verticals in our systems business. I believe it's a real jewel in the crown of GE Aviation. Perhaps one we haven't spoken about enough over the years, but I'm sure that'll change in the years ahead. I'd now like to invite the CEO of Edison Works, Tony Mathis, up to the stage who'll talk about our military business. Tony?
Great. Thanks, John. Good morning. Now let's talk about our exciting military business. Look, you know, given that defense budgets continue to grow around the world, and given our position both within the U.S. and with our international partners, we really do believe that we're gonna have to play a critical role, given that we power so many important platforms around the world. As a result, we continue to see strong demand both in our core products, and we see tremendous opportunity as it relates to our advanced technology, especially for advanced fighters and helicopters, and I'll try to take you through that over the next few minutes. Relative to the core business, as John mentioned earlier, we recently won the $1.6 billion sole source selection to power F-15s in the United States Air Force.
This is the first time we ever powered F-15s in the United States Air Force, a big deal for this business. Even prior to that, the Air Force has already selected us to power their next generation advanced trainer, the T-7A, and that builds on seven decades of powering trainers in the Air Force. Two tremendous opportunities for the business. Now, internationally, we continue to be the engine of choice as it relates to indigenous trainers and fighters around the world. You can see this continue with our selection here in both Korea and India, a big deal for this business. That's the core business. Now, as we look forward, in terms of next generation, for helicopters, our T901 next-generation helicopter engine has already been selected to re-engine all 3,000 Apache and Black Hawk helicopters in the United States Army.
The first development engine will run before the end of this month. That's a big deal for this business. Now, when we think about combat, this is the biggest opportunity ahead of us in this business, and that is that we are so encouraged by the performance of the most advanced jet engine we've ever developed in the military business, and that's the XA100. Let me tell you a little bit about the engine. The engine is sized to as a direct drop-in replacement for the current engine on the F-35. But it brings 25% better fuel burn, 10%-20% more thrust, and twice the cooling capacity of the current engine. All huge incremental capabilities for the airplane. Our engine is not a paper engine.
We've run two prototype engines at our facility in Evendale, and we're currently getting ready to run the engine at the Air Force's facility here shortly. Now, we continue to get strong support and interest from both the Pentagon and from Capitol Hill given the tremendous incremental capability that that engine brings to the F-35. Now, having said that, just like I started, we continue to see very strong demand in the military business. The path to deliver on these opportunities, though, is all about execution, and our entire team is focused on improving delivery through lean, and we are seeing real sustainable results. There's nowhere that this is more important than our facility in Lynn. For those of you who do not know, Lynn is where our military manufacturing is centered.
There we are systematically working through all the top parts that are driving 75% of the delinquency. I'll give you a great example, the T-700 mid-frame. The T-700 mid-frame is the pacing part for T-700 deliveries. We did a Kaizen event last month, and we realized a 40% improvement in first time yield on the mid-frame. Now, look, I spend a lot of time in Lynn, and I am confident in our commitment to accelerate our delivery throughout the remainder of the year. All this work, we believe, positions us well to deliver on the high single digit growth that we're projecting out through 2025. With that, let me turn it back over to John.
Thanks, Tony. Let's take a look at the financials. Start with revenue. Top line, we expect to see significant growth this year and next. In fact, we expect revenue to grow by more than 20% this year and again next year. This growth is driven by our services recovery, plus of course, the LEAP ramp recovery. Remember, we delivered 845 LEAPs last year. We expect to deliver and target to deliver 2,000 LEAPs next year. Also recovery in Tony's business on the deliveries. All of those give us a significant lift this year and next year.
That growth we expect to get back to 2019 revenue levels by 2023 or very quickly thereafter. If I think about profit, well, this year is a significant stepping stone to that $6 billion target number with the high-teens margins that my team and I expect to achieve next year. We've clear and clean lines of sight with action plans associated with it to that $6 billion next year, again, driven by growth, but also in parallel cost productivity. This year, margins mid-teens. Next year, margins into the high teens. As we think about cash, key focus for the organization is improving those inventory turns right across the business, not only this year, but next year, and I believe there's a lot more we can do on that front.
Cash this year will be slightly down relative to last year, but that's principally driven by $1 billion of headwind on the AD&A, those allowance payments that we pay out to customers. If it wasn't for that, we would've been positive sequentially this year over last year. I expect cash next year to be ahead of the 2019 levels, and we remain confident of those conversion rates of at least 90% in the years ahead. In summary, as I look through the financial lens of the business, I would say the franchise is very strong. We continue to be on track to get back to those pre-COVID margin levels and then to grow from there.
Let me go on the record by saying that 20% that's discussed regularly in the market, that's not a cap for us or a target. We have plans to get there, and now I'd like to grow thereafter. But first and foremost, the objective of GE Aviation is to transition ourselves to get back to that 20% target level. I'd now like to invite on stage a real superstar in our team, the CEO of our engine programs, Kathy MacKenzie. Kathy?
Thank you. John, thank you. Coming out of COVID, our growth is exciting. An integral part of our growth is our 50-year partnership with Safran on the CFM program. Please join me. We have invited Olivier Andriès, the CEO of Safran, to share a few words.
CFM International is a unique partnership that has been created nearly 50 years ago between GE and Safran. Together, we brought to the market at the time a disruptive engine, the CFM56, that has become the most popular commercial engine in the world. We have repeated history more recently with the LEAP engine that has been the fastest-selling engine ever. One of my first action as, well, newly appointed CEO of Safran was to announce together with my partner, John Slattery, the extension of our partnership up to 2050. In the short term, we are focusing on executing the new ramp up of the LEAP on a trajectory to deliver more than 2,000 engines by 2023.
On the long-term future, we have decided to launch a revolutionary engine technology program, RISE, with the aim to bring to market a disruptive engine by 2035, which would bring 20% fuel burn efficiency versus the latest generation engine and compatible with 100% sustainable fuel. We have achieved a formidable journey together with CFM in the last 50 years, and our common vision for the future to pioneer sustainable aviation demonstrates the great strength of our partnership. Thank you.
We are so proud of the partnership we have had with Safran. The history on the CFM, the current product with LEAP, and then our future and our focus on sustainable flight, we couldn't be more aligned. We have a robust installed base across all segments. Together, GE and our joint venture partners, we power 3/4 of every departure. In the last decade, we have made significant investments in our technology and product introductions to renew this fleet. This will ensure we sustain this position for decades to come. Our technology and product introduction builds upon each other. This creates confidence in our customers that as the products come into service, they have the durability and the reliability that they expect. We are the only company that at scale has introduced this degree of fuel burn reduction across the industry.
This creates significant value and operational efficiency for our customers, and it gets them closer to sustainable flight. Not only are we proud of the fuel burn improvement and the reliability that we've brought to the industry, but the incremental revenue-generating capability is significant. 48 out of 50 of the 787 longest flights are powered by GEnx. Azores Airlines flies a LEAP-powered A320neo on a 10-hour flight from Lisbon to Bogotá. This is an incredible amount of value that we've created for our customers. Their words and their actions are reflected across the industry. When I visit customers, they refer to the LEAP as the workhorse of their operation. You may not know this, but the GEnx utilization is higher today than it was pre-COVID. We are honored in the win rates that our customers reward us with.
We have nearly a 60% win rate on the neo and nearly a 70% win rate on the 787. We're not standing still. With this fleet renewal, we're still looking to the future. We are excited about the technologies that we're working on. Mohamed is gonna talk about them in a few minutes, but we will deliver another significant reduction in fuel burn with our next programs, and we're gonna focus in three areas, with our CFM partner on the RISE Program, with our partnership with Airbus on the hydrogen program, and on hybrid electric. We are again experiencing an unprecedented ramp in LEAP production. We're here ready to support. We're aligned with the airframers on what we need to produce through 2023, and we're solidifying what we need to do for 2024. The hard capacity, it's in place.
It was there before COVID and the MAX grounding, and now what we're really focused on is yield producibility, bringing back our skilled labor post-COVID, and solidifying our supply base. We're working with our suppliers in three areas. ERP connectivity for more visibility into WIP and their commitments. Which leads us to better problem-solving at the right parts, at the right suppliers, with Kaizen events, with our suppliers, and we're also focusing on investing in future capacity planning. We are confident that with these actions and our renewed focus on Lean, that we will meet our commitments to the customers, and we will generate the 20% OE growth this year. We're also preparing for the GE9X ramp. The GE9X won't have a significant impact on our financial performance until that program goes into service.
We are making progress on the LEAP break even by 2025. This year, we expect to have about a three-point margin pressure due to the LEAP program. As we approach break even, that will improve. The LEAP has been in service for 6 years now, and COVID aside, we were beating our learning curve. During the production slowdown of the last 20 months, we focused on yield and losses of key parts. You'll see some of those here in Greenville. We have taken 40% of the cost of the LEAP out of the LEAP engine since 2016. With ongoing actions, we will break even by 2025. We're here to execute. We will deliver our revenue growth, and this is a great time to be part of this industry.
Now I'd like it to hand it over to my partner, Russell Stokes, who leads commercial services.
Thank you, Kathy. Kathy's team gives birth to these wonderful assets, and we get to take care of them over their entire life cycle. Let's jump right into services. For aviation services, we see 2022 shop visits up 25%. That's really tied to the ongoing recovery of the market and the continued confidence we're hearing from our customers on wanting to ready their fleets to be able to capture the growth going forward through the decade. It is a large, young fleet, a very, very impressive fleet, with assets like CFM56 and GE90, as well as more mature assets like our CF6 and CF34, which continue to see real activity. As you can see from the screen, narrow-body is the largest segment. CFM56 will continue to grow through the end of the decade.
We will see LEAP contribute more growth as we bring LEAP forward based on everything you heard Kathy talk about and what John talked about on those great run rates, win rates, and we'll see that continue and contribute more growth to services by the middle of the decade. We participate in a unique open network with GE and other providers. This means that we all compete and invest to be able to win shop visits and the right to be able to support GE MRO, GE and CFM customers. That's good because it means that we are innovating and coming up with new ways of creating solutions for those customers, giving them greater flexibility and greater choice of where they want their assets served. Now, you heard a reference earlier to, during the downturn, we wanted to make sure that we made the most of the opportunity.
We wanted to control the things within our control, and we did that by embracing Lean. We focused each and every day on how to drive greater capacity and capability and make sure that we had better performance on the other side of the pandemic, stronger coming out the other side than we went in. As an example, we transitioned 550 repairs from dedicated component repair sites, sometimes completely across the globe from the overall centers that need those components, in order to be able to reduce overall turnaround time and be able to reduce logistic time and logistics costs. One of the sites that was most impressive over the course of the last couple years has been our site in Celma, Brazil. A team that has been through a great deal, given COVID and most recently, the floods of Petrópolis.
I can really think of no better way to explain to you what our teams are trying to accomplish in our MRO shops across the globe than to let you hear from our teams in Celma. Can you please roll the video?
Hi, I'm at Celma, a GE Aviation MRO shop where we do hundreds of engine overhauls every year. Today, I'm gonna highlight the lean journey on our CFM56 assembly line from the beginning till it became a lean model line. Back in 2019, we were working extremely hard trying to fulfill our customer expectation on turnaround time. No matter how hard we tried, our on-time delivery was below 20%. We decided to take a step back and reassess our processes using a different lens, a different perspective. We gave lean training to all our leaders and our cell members. Soon after, we started the cell lean transformation by using the tools that made sense for our case. We connected engineers and operators to define the standard work across the assembly line.
We did multiple value stream maps with action plans in between. We did 5S to organize the shop, and we did kanban to reduce the WIP in the shop floor. When we needed extra energy, we held Kaizen events to help accelerate change. All this with one thing in mind, reduce waste. In 2020, this assembly line was certified model line, and we continued with a problem-solving approach, and our on-time delivery went from 10% to 78% one year later. Last year, here at Celma, we did more than 40 week-long Kaizen events and more than 2,000 "just do it" improvement projects. In the end, we do all this to keep our customers flying.
I love that video for a number of reasons. It speaks to why this is so important to us, ways of driving real opportunity to create new sources of productivity, but more importantly, as you heard, an opportunity to look at how we can better service and take care of our customers. It's a demonstration of how the teams are absolutely embracing the concept of continuous improvement, and it also demonstrates, especially when you hear someone say, "When I need energy, I go to Kaizen," it demonstrates just how much these teams are thinking about lean, not as an initiative, but as a movement. Now, why is that important? Because we have a lot of opportunity in front of us. When you think about CFM56, 19,000 engines in our installed fleet, 50% of them have not even seen shop visit one.
Another quarter, we've only seen its first shop visit. Now, when you think about that, shop visit one, we talk about because that is where we go into the hot section of the engine. You tend to see greater content in shop visit one than you might see in subsequent engines. We do work with our customers, however, based on their operating parameters, their fleet strategies, to understand how best to give them the work scope flexibility that they may need and want, and I'll talk about that more in a moment. In the center of the screen is GE90. GE90 is 40% of Services revenues and is a very important part of our overall widebody. In total, GE90 is a portion of that 40% of our revenues and a very key part of our overall franchise.
You can see from the bars down below, given the size of the engine, you tend to have higher content dollar per shop visit type work scopes. Given its design, we tend to go into the hot section at every shop visit. In shop visit two, we could see additional module work which can increase some of the scope as you're seeing there in some of the bars. I mentioned work scope flexibility. What that comes down to is trying to make sure that we have the right material strategies to meet the performance criteria our customers are looking for and deliver it at the right cost of ownership as well. We've played in the used serviceable material market for over 20 years. We're actually the largest used serviceable material provider. We also do a great deal of industrializing repairs.
We have 13,000 repairs in our catalog today, and we add an additional 500 new repairs each and every year. As I said, it's all about making sure that we're creating the flexibility that our customers need in order to make sure that we keep those assets flying and also making sure that they make money. Now, this is where this gets, for me, really exciting. Because as you think about the video you saw at Celma and this discussion around lean, you heard the reference to when you're trying to understand the process, we go out to the value stream. All right. Once I have a value stream, I make those improvements, you heard him talk about that, through Kaizen, iterative Kaizens over and over and over again, looking at just how much better can I make the process tomorrow than it was the day before.
Once I do that, then I, along the way, I'm creating what you might, for some of you that are real lean practitioners in the room, we start to talk about standard work. What are the things I wanna do consistently to make sure that I can continue to see that process perform as much as possible at its optimal? Well, once I have standards, I basically have created a set of rules around how I want that process to work. What we're realizing is once I have those rules, I can actually begin to teach a machine how to be able to process those rules on their own. Accept criteria, reject criteria, how to be able to process parts in different ways. We unlock the power and potential of AI and automation in the aviation services space.
You can see that on the first example, where we're doing AI white light-based inspections on CFM56 blades, 80% reduction in turnaround time, 90% reduction in human intervention. Or in the center, where we're looking at getting away from our existing weld procedures to be able to go to additive for blade tip repairs, seeing a 50% reduction in cycle time. Now, while both of these are exciting, it will increase the velocity of the engine through the shop and get it back on the wing faster. We also are focusing on working with customers on keeping the wing on the engine in the first place. We're doing more on-wing interventions, like this 360 foam wash. 10,000 applications will be done by 2025.
Once again, all about faster cycle time, making sure that asset stays with our customers as much as possible so they're making money. In closing, we see for services, revenues up 25%, greater than 25%, in 2022 with continued growth into 2023. That'll be tied to volume as the key driver. We'll continue to see price consistent with our previous practices. We'll also see continued content growth as you see those engines move through their life cycle, and we see the recovery of that wide body fleet. Lastly, I continue to be excited about the improvements we're making in order to help our customers, and thus creating and being able to support the demand for the maintenance of these wonderful assets that you heard me reference, Kathy getting the opportunity to develop.
With that, you're also getting a chance to see and hopefully take away the power and the potential of the combination of lean and technology. Speaking of technology, I can't think of any other better person to bring up right now than our technology leader, our VP of Engineering, Mohamed Ali.
Thank you, Russell. Good morning. It's humbling that my name was mentioned multiple times. I'm proud here to stand in front of you to talk and represent the GE Aviation engineering team and the technologies for which we stand at GE Aviation. There is not a single story that talks about our soul and our DNA at GE Aviation than the one I'm gonna tell you, and I'm about to tell you right now. Not a single one. That story is the one that actually sold me to join GE Aviation to begin with. It is the story that we tell whenever anybody is actually on the fence about joining GE Aviation. After we tell it, they join, and they are excited about that. Back in the 1990s, GE Aviation engineers thought about making composite fan blades to replace metallic ones. Makes a ton of sense.
Composites density is half to a third the metallic ones. Also, the fan module is actually the heaviest module in the entire engine. Makes a ton of sense. Many in the industry said there is no way GE Aviation will certify a plastic fan blade. We failed twice, but we got it done, 'cause we have the conviction and the grit, and because the laws of physics says it can be done. Today, we have more than 100 million flight hours with composite fan blades. Chances are you flew on them with zero failures. That invention that happened on GE90 is now the father of all of our modern platforms on GEnx and on our CFM LEAP, and it saves hundreds and thousands of pounds.
You can easily do the math for what that means for an operator for fuel burn and for their economics. The story doesn't end there. The one I lived personally through is ceramics. Engines love to like, run hotter, at a higher temperature, sort of like your high-performance cars that I'm sure many of you have those cars. They run more efficiently when that happens. Metals, they have a limit because they melt. The idea that we came up with is we are gonna use ceramics because they have a higher durability for high temperature, and they are lighter weights. Again, many have said this cannot happen. We mastered that technology on CFM LEAP.
Today, it's flying with a ceramic part, and then we evolved that into GE9X, that most of its hot section is made out of ceramic components, and it gives a 10-point advantage in fuel burn. Third, when I go to the right-hand side, and I'm gonna talk about that picture for a second. Many times as an engineer, we come up with a design that's very fuel efficient, very lightweight, but cannot be manufactured. You leave money on the table that way. We invented additive manufacturing technology in the aviation sector. This part that you're looking at is actually a collection of 40 parts, all made together with no welding and in one manufacturing step. You can think how that simplifies the supply chain. This is our DNA. This is our soul.
This is why we are today, the only company, together with our partner in CFM, with a composite fan blade, with ceramic parts flying, and with additive parts that you are flying on. We take that now to the next chapter in our technologies. We are excited about building our arsenal of technologies for the future, with sustainability as our North Star. We are a big player in the industry, and we take that responsibility very seriously. We are building an arsenal of technologies that will enable us to reduce fuel burn by more than 20%. Fuel burn of any fuels, and also reduce emissions all the way up to eliminating CO2 emissions. First, hybrid electric. Let me start with this one. Anybody can do a motor, a hybrid electric motor or an electric motor, and test it on the ground.
Anybody can fly perhaps even up to 10,000 feet. Above 10,000 feet, high voltage electric machines behave very differently. Right now, as I speak, standing in front of you, we are testing in collaboration with NASA at the NASA facility, a megawatt electric motor in a 40,000-foot environment. We believe we have the technology to enable that, and we're excited about the partnership that we announced earlier this year with NASA and with Boeing to fly a demo, a full hybrid electric airplane by the middle of this decade. Second, hydrogen. Two weeks ago, we announced our partnership with Airbus to collaborate on a hydrogen aircraft and an engine that's also going to have a flight demo by the middle of this decade, which will enable complete elimination of CO2 emissions. Third, adaptive cycles.
We are collaborating with the U.S. Air Force, and we have successfully tested an engine that has what we call an adaptive cycle. An adaptive cycle means the engine actually changes its geometry, depending on which part of the mission it is in, to maximize the fuel burn advantage for that mission. We are gonna be taking all of these technologies and putting them in what we call the RISE Demo, where RISE stands for Revolutionary Innovations for Sustainable Engines. That demo is gonna happen by the middle of this decade. It's integrated into a modern open fan architecture that together will be sustainable aviation fuel ready, it will be hydrogen-capable, and it will give more than 20% fuel burn advantage over today's engine with all of these technologies together.
We'll test that and do a flight demo on that also by the middle of this decade. This is us. This is what we stand for. We do this with scale and with the state-of-the-art capability. That fan that you see in the bottom right, today we are designing that using supercomputing capabilities, and we are one of the top users of supercomputing power in this nation, and perhaps in the world. This is our DNA, and that's how we are inventing the future of sustainable flight. With that, I hand it to John.
I think that deserves a round of applause, actually. Wow. It's you draw the short straw when you come up after Mohamed, let me tell you. Let me say in closing, I hope you can see from what we presented to you over the course of the last 55 minutes, we have a unique franchise here at GE Aviation, and I think we're very well placed to address the cycle of opportunities that's immediately ahead of us. Our talent is world-class. They're equally inspired to serve our customers every day in their operations as they are, and I hope you just saw it, to invent the future of flight. I think our platforms and our penetration with the airframers around the world and picking the very best platforms is unique.
We sit today with a roster of the finest operators around the world, and that's been built up over many, many decades. Secondly, I hope you can see our commitment to lean is uniform and deeply embedded across the organization. It's in our DNA. You know, honestly, given the size of our organization and the complexity of what we do, there simply isn't another way to run a business of our size. I'm excited about lean for two principal reasons. Number one, of course, it will improve our operation, and therefore bring incremental value to the shareholders. In addition to that, and in equal measure, it will help us create an organization where the very best talent in the world will want to work at. Finally, let me say in closing. Our franchise really has benefited enormously from those that have gone before us.
The decisions that they made on partnerships, the decisions they made on technologies. My commitment to my team and to our shareholders is that robust rigor of strategic planning, decision-making, and capital allocation will remain embedded in our organization. It's our commitment as we go to the market every day to win. To win for the benefit of our employees, the benefit of our customers, and the benefit of our shareholders. Thank you very much. Steve?
Great. Thanks, John. Thanks, team. To go to Q&A, why don't we start with Andy Kaplowitz?
Thanks, John. You mentioned at the beginning of your presentation to think about R&D and CapEx, and so, you know, Mohamed just talked about breakthrough technology. Maybe give us more color into the shapes of those curves as you go forward. Then over the shorter term, you know, you talked about sort of your margin targets. Obviously, supply chain is a concern. When you think about sort of making your margin targets over the next couple of years, how much does that have to settle down in areas like forgings, castings, and such like that?
Okay, there's a few verticals to the question. As I think about R&D first. We're committed. In fact, when I joined General Electric, Larry was the first guy to say to me, "We're committed to investing in the best technologies for the long term of this franchise." Last year, $1.8 billion. Previous year, a not dissimilar number. If you think about the guardrails, our R&D budget, not only today, but through the balance of the decade, it's sort of between that 6%-8% of revenue. You can think about it that way. Somewhat of an equal split between company-funded and customer-funded. There's some oscillations in that as we go through the decade.
That level of funding is sort of the guardrails that we think about when we think about the scope of opportunities that Mohamed and Kathy are bringing to the market. As we think about the supply chain, you know, there are longer lead times on the forgings and castings, as you mentioned. That's fully baked into that ramp as we spoke about. Kathy mentioned, you know, that 845 units last year to 2,000 units just on the LEAP alone next year. We baked in and we reverse engineered those longer lead times. We're also working with. I didn't mention it in my presentation, but we're deploying Lean very much into our HR organization to improve hiring and onboarding, getting better talent, getting them on board quicker.
As we look through the supply chain, we're sharing those benefits with our suppliers. I think we're in good shape on the supply chain. Certainly, there are issues. There's always going to be issues. In the main, we're confident we're there to support the airframers on the ramp-up and Russell's customers on the services side.
Great. Let's go to Nicole and then Cliff.
Thanks. Maybe just a shorter-term question. How do you guys think about any risk to what you set forth for 2022 based on what's going on with airline freight prices as well as titanium supply? What have you baked in for military in 2022? I didn't see that in the slides.
As I think about titanium specifically, we source about 1% of our titanium from Russia. We made that decision many years ago. I think we're good on that front. I think we only have actually two parts that we source that have titanium from Russia, and for those two parts, we have over a year's supply on the shelf. I think we're good on that front. I think the guidance that Tony gave on the growth certainly over the next number of years from his business is high single digits%. Of course, we're expecting to get a lift this year. Very focused on, Tony, on that output from Lynn in particular. Second half of this year, we're hoping to get back onto purchase orders. It's now more important than ever to deliver for our military customers.
Certainly over the next few years, we're looking at a high single-digit top-line growth on the military side.
Cliff?
Thank you. Cliff Ransom Research.
Thank you.
John, you had an unusual condition in the Lean conversion transformation of GE. We talked to Power earlier this morning, where they had to learn it. In many cases, my sense is, having looked at, I don't know, 1,000 Lean conversions, it gets complicated when you have to convert from a base of fake Lean. To what extent was the belief that aviation was doing Lean when it really was, I will call it an inadequate Lean? Was that a special case? Did you have to come at it a different way? Or perhaps it probably was a transition they had to make before you arrived, but what did you. Am I, how far off base am I, or is this a real thing?
I'm looking directly at Larry. You weren't far off base. You know, humbly, we're still in the early innings of Lean. You're gonna see here at Greenville, if you get the opportunity to visit with Tim, we have opportunities around our footprint where we're getting good. Very few places where we're great. I think the first step in Lean is the humility to recognize that. We've a lot of work to do, but I tried to embed it throughout the presentation. It's in absolutely everything we do today. With that, the flywheel gets better. We visit the sites. Every one of my leadership team goes to Kaizens every year. In fact, just a number of months ago, I was with Tony and indeed Larry, doing separate Kaizens at our Lynn facility for a full week.
It's only by going to Gemba, going where the work is done, doing the Kaizen for the full week, not an in and out, but doing it for the full week, that magic, that alchemy starts to happen. You recognize this rings the cash register. As our head of Lean, Betsy Bingham would say, "We wanna make impact. You're not here for anything other than to make impact and improve the working lives of our employees." That cultural shift is running in parallel with getting better productivity for the shareholders. I would say we're still early innings, but we're profoundly committed to it. There is no other way to run a company of our size and complexity than the principles of Lean.
Hey, John, we have a number of emails as well. I'm gonna just take one, and then we'll go back to the audience. We'll go to Brendan to you after this question, which is about retirements. This one is from the buy side, and basically just asking if you can give your view of retirements, any change in the current environment, and how to think about that for your business.
It's a short answer. We really haven't seen retirements pick up this year, last year, or indeed the previous year. By the way, you separate retirements from teardowns. We're really not seeing a lot of aircraft being torn down. Aircraft being parked in Marana for a period of time, you'll see that in every cycle, but an aircraft getting torn down, which is really where I think the questioner is going, we really haven't seen it. The option value goes away once you take an aircraft apart.
As we think about that compound annual growth rate, you know, that relationship between GDP and the demand for passenger travel being 1.5x-2x, airlines are gonna be very, very slow to tear down those aircraft, and that's why Russell's not seeing a real wave of used serviceable material coming to the market. The demand continues to be robust.
That's helpful. Brendan.
A quick follow-up on the Russia situation. As you look, say, upstream to the airframers or military customers, do you see any revenue risk as they may struggle to secure inputs and, again, this will come back to titanium?
Look, I won't speak for the airframers. I'll let them speak for themselves. I think Larry gave some guidance at the top of the house. Our revenue is about 1% from Russia. We've, you know, derisory exposure, if you think about it that way, to titanium. It's 1% or a little less, and even with that, I have a full year of that inventory on the shelves. But I'll let the airframers talk about it. It's about 2.5% of the install base if I add Russia and Ukraine.
Okay, we are out of time, unfortunately. We'll get to another set after Larry and Carolina. Larry, any comments you wanna make?
Sure. John, thank you. Well done. Well done. Team, thank you. I don't think anybody came here unaware that this business is poised, right? Both with respect to the post-COVID recovery in terms of departures and flight hours and in turn impact on the service business. Hopefully, you caught Russell's increase in his outlook for 2022. By the same token, we know our major airframer customers are also poised to continue over the next several years to ramp production. What I hope you come away with, and again, anxious for you to visit with Tim McQueen later, is the breadth and the depth of the strength of this business, particularly in the underlying capabilities that are critical for what lies ahead, right? Whether it was Rafael's Kaizen experience in Celma or everything that you heard from Mohamed there at the end.
I mean, that is a broad array of capability for this business, and this business uniquely has. I think we're well-positioned to serve and to deliver in the years ahead. With that, we're going to put a bow on the presentations with our financials, and Carolina Dybeck Happe, our CFO, is gonna come up and take you through that. Carolina?
Thank you, Larry. Usually when you have this slot, you have to say, "I'm the last thing that stands between you and lunch." It's actually even worse, 'cause I'm the last thing that stands between you and really going to Gemba, and I know that's why you're really here. With that, let me talk to the financials. You've heard through the whole morning about our leaders talking to GE and the GE transformation. It is an ambitious journey we're on, both operationally and financially, and we're really positioned to create value. I also wanted to add what we are doing in finance to enable this transformation, and there are a couple of sort of foundational improvements needed to do what we want to do.
The first one really has to do with structural improvements, and it's about providing the right detailed set of financials, but also at the right level. We're talking about 30 P&Ls. Also with the right frequency, not quarterly, not even monthly, but sometimes even weekly. Of course, that helps the business to take decisions, the right decisions with speed. The other part is on the balance sheet and significantly strengthening our balance sheet. We've talked about the significant debt reduction, but also improving linearity and of course, generating much higher levels of free cash flow. With that as a base, we're now focused going forward on the following, as you can see on the slide, starting obviously with revenue growth. It's about services, it's about new products, but it's also about commercial underwriting and having the discipline there.
That top-line growth is really what fuels our next priority, and that's profitability. You add that top-line growth, that profitable growth, you add to that what the work we're doing on productivity, selectivity, as well as restructuring, and you take all of that profit and you get to our next priority, which is growing free cash flow. The profit and on top of that, the working capital management that you've heard me talk about before and I will talk about today as well, really drives the growth in cash flow. Finally, what are we gonna do with the money? How are we gonna strategically be deploying capital both organically and inorganically? All together, we're a stronger company, and we are enabling all the businesses to drive growth strategies. The next slide, speaking of progress.
Here you see our path to profit improvement in 2022, and it's an improvement of $2 billion. We have a clear path, primarily with things under our control. It start with that high single-digit growth. Remember, two-thirds of that is already in our backlog. You add to that the productivity and the restructuring we do, and you get to that number. Aviation recovery is a key driver here, but we know and expect the shop visits to grow. We talked about more than 25% of growth there, and therefore the services, and that's supported by the departure trends. On top of that, we expect all the businesses to grow. This is, of course, really important if we look at the environment that we are in now. It is an inflationary environment.
We see that on the direct material, on labor, logistics, inflation everywhere, and that's why the next part is so important, the work we do to keep price costs to only a slight negative in the year. It really starts with pricing discipline across the portfolio, as well as working with our suppliers to rightsize our costs. You've heard a lot of examples of that today. Pat, before he lost his voice, he was talking about how he's implementing pricing in onshore wind and how we expect to see that improve through the year, but also how they're working on cost actions to improve. We talk about growth. One of the best way to grow is, of course, innovation. We're not taking the pedal off the gas when it comes to investing in R&D, and you'll see that here as well. How do we fund that?
Well, we are looking at taking out 3% of gross cost out benefits, and that really helps us to fund the investments. All together, the work we're doing across the company to improve volume and productivity more than offsets the headwinds that you see from mix, from inflation, and that investment in growth. Speaking of growth, next slide is really a deep dive into our top line and our top-line growth. That top line really starts with the strong orders growth that we saw in 2021, and all the businesses have solid plans to grow in 2022. What's important from this slide is we've separated services from equipment, and you can see that we expect services to grow even faster than equipment. Of course, as we grow our installed base, we're also growing the penetration with services. With services comes obviously margins.
You heard the businesses talk during the day today about the growth drivers, and they talked a lot in detail about that. I'll just mention the big pieces. Aviation, we're talking about market recovery and ramps both in commercial and in military. Healthcare, we talked about strong backlog, global market, strong demand, and the supply chain countermeasures the teams are doing to get more products out. Renewables, offshore ramp, and in power, really transactional services growth. Overall, despite the supply chain constraints we see, we're confident in our ability to deliver our top-line high single-digit growth. Two-thirds of that is already in the backlog, and we have better manufacturing capabilities through our lean efforts, and we have improving market fundamentals. From top line to bottom line, and really the cost out work we're doing to expand our margins, obviously.
Think about this as we're managing a total cost pool of about $67 billion, as you can see on the slide. About 40% of that is direct material, a little less than 40% is labor and overhead, and the last 20% is SG&A and R&D. We are focused on, in total, driving about 3% gross cost out annually. That is the equivalent of $2 billion. We expect to do that through productivity via lean, but also restructuring and the sourcing actions that we've talked about. If we do them piece by piece, starting with direct material, so clearly a lot going on here. Dual sourcing, we talked about purchase orders with daily management, best cost country, and a lot of other actions. We're also, I would say, renewing our focus on value analysis and value engineering. Think about that. That's really a win-win.
It's a better product for the customer at a lower cost for us. Productivity then. On productivity, you really have to use Lean to get to productivity, and I think all of the businesses gave you different examples here. It's really about applying the standard work, doing the kaizens, and we've talked about how we reduce both manufacturing, but also outage cycle times. You heard about gas outages, and you also heard about aviation repair examples. It was actually here in an ops review for, well, not that long ago when the gas team took us through how they got to those really strong results. They talked about how they standardized crews, optimized material flow, and also digitizing part of the front end of that.
They reduced the cycle time with 30%, as Scott talked about how that's now expanding not only through North America, but also to other regions. Another exciting example that you will see also here in Greenville is how the team has applied lean to rationalize the factory space and improving output. Improving quality and reliability is also a key priority for us, and it's really about the systemic root cause analysis and problem solving. Here, again, we're improving the customer experience as well as reducing our costs. We continue to operate our functions and processes with discipline and see the benefits from restructuring investments. I would say that this framework is what gives us the confidence in achieving the 2022 and 2023 margin expansions. How do we turn the profit into cash? This is the 2022 walk.
The key point is the strong 2021 results really sets us up well to deliver the 2022 numbers of between $5.5 billion and $6.5 billion. What's important though is that this is mainly driven by improvements in earnings, and then we have working capital improvements on top of that. On top of that, we also prioritize investments, as you can see CapEx growing. You heard from the CEOs today, three out of the four businesses expect to deliver higher free cash flow in 2022, and the fourth one, aviation, is only due to a timing of AD&A that isn't growing. If you exclude that, everybody is growing. Bigger picture, expect free cash flow to grow year-over-year in 2022, but with the makeup increasingly looking towards earnings.
That's also what supports our confidence in getting to the $7 billion or more, well, more than $7 billion in 2023 of free cash flow. I talked about profit and cash. I have to talk about working capital as well, because working capital is still a focus area for us. You have seen overall that we have made progress in the last couple of years, but you can also see that there's a lot more that we can do. I'm really going to focus on two areas only, on receivables and on inventory. They are really two areas where if you look at the opportunities that we have and what we can do by scaling lean here, we expect to see really good results in over the next couple of years.
If we take receivables to start with, in 2022, we do expect it to be a use because of the high single-digit growth, but less so because of the work we're doing to improve the DSO. One day of DSO equals $300 million, and last year we took out 12 days. Certainly worth it. One of the teams helping us get there was the HealthCare team that presented earlier today. Not only did they work on standardizing their terms, improving billing and collections, they also aligned compensation to collections. That worked wonders. Inventory, the big one. Here we expect it to be a source in 2022, and we are deploying Lean to improve turns here.
Just as a reminder, each turn is worth about $4 billion of cash flow, and with what we see and what we believe we can do over the next couple of years, we have an opportunity to improve one to two turns. It really sort of starts with what you heard today about lead times, looking at lead times end to end, and as we continue to mature, I would say drive more and more pull system to really optimize the inventory levels. On the other accounts, progress in contract assets, we expect it to be a source because utilization is growing faster than servicing. Stepping back, we have many levers to pull here. We'll continue to work to reduce working capital at the same time as we continue to grow. The next slide takes us further out into the future, 2023.
This slide really starts with a clear and achievable path that we have to deliver meaningful profit improvement in 2022. I really think that you have that, and you anchor there, and you heard all of the businesses go through all the action that they have, and it's sort of more of that that gets us then to the $10 billion in 2023. It builds on the progress and the levers and the visibility that we have across the businesses. You've heard, I can see where you are, Pete, Scott, and John, talk about their clear growth strategies and their conviction in how they execute against those plans. A lot of that it's because a lot of those actions are within their control.
Largest driver also for 2023 is aviation, but we do expect services to continue to grow and therefore, well, the shop visits and therefore also the services, narrow body and wide body. On top of that, add the military growth and the work the team are doing to take cost out to optimize and grow the OM&X. I would say in the other businesses, it's also more of the same. Continue the journey that we talked about through 2022. Healthcare, we see growth supported by the new products and digital, as well as the strong market demand. Add on top of that the productivity to improve OM&X. Power, mainly a services story, but we'll have more HA turbines online, and we'll increase the, not only the installed base, but also the installed base service coverage.
We'll continue to take cost out, as Philippe talked about in gas and steam. Onshore wind and renewables, we expect onshore wind to be profitable in a smaller but profitable U.S. market, with services continuing to grow on a larger installed base. Add to that the selectivity in international, as well as grid focusing on automation and cost out. Offshore wind really ramping and maturing on the cost curve. In short, we saw meaningful progress in 2021, and that gives us confidence in 2022 and 2023. Some improvements are market related, but much more is in our control, and that's why we expect to deliver on our strong backlog, grow volumes, drive productivity and lean across the businesses, and improve profitability. On this slide, I think you recognize the $10 billion of profit that you saw from the last slide.
Now how do you get from profit to cash? Well, I'll start by saying, this work is pretty easy nowadays. You take out about $1 billion of interest, your tax effect at low- to mid-20s%, and that gets you to profit level. What is important on top of that is that we expect depreciation and amortization to continue to be larger than CapEx. There's a nuance within that because we continue to grow and invest in growth and CapEx. If you look at only CapEx and depreciation, we would expect them to probably be at par, but there's about $1 billion of amortization in the numbers as well, and that's a non-cash cost that we obviously have a long tail on. That's gonna help on the cash flow side.
For 2023, we expect to have negative trade working capital, but we will get help from progress and from collections in the rising market. AD&A for 2023, still expected to be an outflow, but in the end, that will of course depend on aircraft deliveries. Bottom line, earnings will drive an even greater portion of the free cash flow growth. Given the amortization dynamics and the working capital opportunities, we believe that cash conversion will be more than 100% for a number of years. What you should take away is we expect the cash flow to be more than $7 billion in 2023, and that is an achievable step up, and it's primarily driven by the work we're doing both operationally and structurally to improve the company. What are we gonna do with all that money?
Well, let's turn to capital allocation. As we have shown you, we've made substantial progress in strengthening our balance sheets and improving cash flow. This has really created significant opportunities for us. The optionality is there. We have significant sources available. We talk about growing our operating free cash flow, $6 billion this year, more than $7 billion next year. We had $16 billion of cash at hand at year-end. We have the AerCap and Baker Hughes stakes of about $12 billion. Going forward, we have the ability to get to less than 1x leverage. What we do will depend on the range of opportunities that we have. We're positioned really well to create three global investment-grade, industry-leading companies, and now we shift capital allocation towards growth. We talk about organic investments like in R&D and in CapEx.
We talk about operating model, I would say, optimization through restructuring, but also inorganic opportunities. You saw us acquire BK, you saw us sell a part of EDF, and we also acquired Opus One, which is almost more of a technology investment. Earlier this week, our board also authorized up to $3 billion share repurchase as a potential capital allocation alternative. I would say, importantly, as we play more offense in investing growth, this is really what positions us to best create three standalone businesses. In the meantime, we are focused on profitable growth and significant cash flow generation and to build optionality and create shareholder value over the long term. To close, we're focused on profitable growth, really all the way from underwriting discipline to execution.
We expect to deliver nearly $2 billion of profit this year with a credible path to $10 billion next year. We will continue to grow free cash flow, mainly through profit, but also managing working capital efficiently. We're gonna use that cash to drive disciplined capital allocation. All of this is supported by the culture of continuous improvement that we've built into our processes, but also into the DNA of these future standalone companies. With that, I'll give back to you, Larry.
Well, we're actually gonna go straight to Q&A.
Okay.
Right now, we'll go to Larry at the end. Let's get into it. There's no shortage of questions. Thanks, Carolina, for you and for Larry. I'm sure we do have a lot in the audience. Let me, 'cause I keep promising, let me actually take one of the emailed questions. This is from Andrew Obin, okay? He did try valiantly to make it here. Okay? I will give him that. On the buybacks, maybe starting with you, Carolina, and then Larry, and then actions ahead of the spins. On buybacks, with a $3 billion share repurchase authorization, what's the framework for balancing buybacks versus the commitments on debt reduction?
I would just start by saying, of course, job one is to create three leading companies, and all of them will be investment grade. As you can see from my presentation, there is a bit more room there, and that's what we're really talking about, how we optimize for all those three companies long term from a shareholder perspective. We talked about organic as well as inorganic investments. I would say with having everything on the table, of course, also shareholder returns are part of that.
Yeah, no, I think that's exactly right, Steve. You know, I think we shared with a number of you when we were in Miami a couple of weeks ago, the board is really just beginning to lay out the framework by which we're gonna allocate this capital. Whether it was AerCap, whether it was BK, we certainly got a few reps in last year. Again, as Carolina suggests, very focused on returns, but we're balancing not only that important financial metric, but the overarching priority of making sure we send all three of the businesses out with IG ratings. In doing so, we want to make sure that they're set up for success strategically.
There are a host of things that are on the table here, and we want to make sure we give the board all the ample support and space to work through those opportunities, those priorities to take the right decisions at the right time. The buyback that the board actioned on Sunday was really to set up with the authorization. To be clear, it was really to set up again that option amongst many. We didn't have the authorization in place, and we needed to do that.
Larry, his follow-up is really on that point. Should investors expect GE to be heads down in the spin-off planning work over the next 24 months, or is there still an active pipeline of acquisitions and divestitures that are actionable?
We really liked what we did last summer with BK. You heard us talk about Opus One. There are broad dimensions of this, but there are also management routines that are being developed, and we are just now sitting down, I think every Monday morning, Pete's nodding, or Monday afternoon, making sure we're going through with each of the businesses where those opportunities are. We're heads down running the businesses along the lines of what we just walked you through in the course of nearly four hours, but we are mindful that we have earned the right to redeploy capital again. IG, for all three, is the overarching priority, but we're gonna continue to look at opportunities.
I would love, a year from now, wherever we hopefully reconvene this session, to have a few more BK-like opportunities to talk about, not only in terms of their strategic fit, but the return profiles and what they're doing for us day in, day out for customers.
Great. Let's see some hands. You're right next to Nigel. We'll go there, and then Josh, Julian, Steve.
Yeah. I felt the shadow approach here. Larry, just wanna pick up on that last point. A little bit surprised that the board didn't prioritize dividends over the buyback, just given the importance of the dividend to a lot of GE shareholders. Maybe just talk about, you know, how you do the dividends going forward from here. Maybe, Carolina, just to clarify, that impact of the LEAP ramp, is that 300 basis points in both 2022 and 2023, or was that 300 basis points over that time period?
Nigel, I would not read into the authorization over the course of the weekend as a decision. I think of it, frankly, more as a little bit of housekeeping, a little bit of a technicality to make sure that we could be in the market with the authorization if and when we decide to do so. We don't really need an authorization to take the next step were we to move on the dividend. Buybacks, dividends, acquisitions, some of the legacy issues out there, they're all on the table with respect to how do we best deploy the capital we know is headed our way the next several years.
Yeah, it's over the time period.
I think I promised. Oh, looking at you in the back. Sorry. I gotta go to Joe. I don't think we've had a Joe Ritchie question yet. All the way in the back. Right there you go. Get him, John. Thanks.
Thank you. Yeah, I'm in the rafters here. Thanks, Steve. One of the things I did wanna try to bridge was the aviation margins, so going from mid-teens to high teens next year. You gave us some good color today on the LEAP, you know, back of the envelope math. Maybe it's costing you about $1 million a year or so. Your starting point this year should be about mid-teens, given all the CMR charges that you took last year. I'm trying to just understand, you know, is there just an air of conservatism in the numbers for this year? How do we expect to see that ramp into next year in that $2 billion EBIT bridge that you're trying to get to in aviation next year?
Conservatism. I would say balanced approach. Well, basically from 2022 to 2023 in aviation, we expect to continue to grow significantly. You saw John show more than 20% growth next year as well. Of course, you get just the sheer volume growth, and a big part of that is in services. Yes, you will have a part of that is also mixed from LEAP. But just the combination of the strong volume growth, there's actually a dynamic also within shop visits, sort of having more wide body shop visits, meaning you did say that on the slides before as well, so you have even more revenue per shop visit.
We do expect the combination of that, as well as the work we're doing on sourcing and on productivity, as a combination then to get to the higher margin.
Larry, with a lot of these kind of larger conglomerate breakups, the first thing that the new management team comes in and says, "You know, we were underinvested in and here are all the opportunities we have." But we heard a lot today about the investment taking place kind of in each line of business all for different reasons. Understanding that they'll be independent and can kind of say whatever they want here over the next couple of years, do you anticipate that they're at kind of the run rate levels of investment today? When they're liberated, you know, kind of stay at that level versus, you know, needing to come back and say, you know, "There's more to do.
I've never used the C word, and these businesses are already liberated. You take your own measure, Josh. I think all of these CEOs, myself included, and the teams would love to reinvest more, right? That's why we talk. One of the reasons we talk so much about lean, right? Being able day in, day out to bring down labor, material, overhead costs to make sure our G&A is being deployed smartly just gives us more opportunity, right? To make more bets in Mohamed's shop, to give Kathleen more opportunity to hire sellers in North America. I think I would never look at a business or any of these three businesses with a static model in mind. We wanna continue to drive the top line.
We wanna continue to grind cost out and make sure we're redeploying, right, in the right areas. We talked about selectivity, we've talked about returns in ways that continue to evolve the businesses to lead in the three spaces where we intend to lead for another century. I hope that helps.
Okay, let's take Julian, and I finally have that promised Scott Davis question, then we'll go to Steve Tusa.
Thanks a lot. Maybe a quick question just around, you know, the leverage specifically. You've talked about investment grade and the options on the balance sheet usage. Should we think that sort of 1.5x type leverage on net debt EBITDA is the rough ballpark, looking at other sort of industrial investment grade companies out there? Secondly, maybe more for Larry, just around, you know, renewables. There's been a lot of issues for many years.
Mm-hmm.
Maybe talk about the line of sight on that breakeven outlook in two years.
Mm-hmm.
In terms of how much is kind of better backlog and how much maybe fixed cost reduction you need in terms of the facility count, the head count.
Right.
How much work there is still needed.
Yeah.
Let me start with the leverage question then. With the decision that we made, and that you're all very, very aware of separating into three strong companies, you really have to look at it company by company. All of them will be investment grade. Just because of sort of the, I would say, the type of the business and the, system that it's working in, energy by definition will be the one carries the least. You have HealthCare, of course, has great opportunities in growing organically and inorganically, which can then take more, but we need to make sure that we set Pete and his friends up for a joyful journey over a long period of time.
Finally, just by math, aviation is our largest business and largest profit pool, and therefore can take the highest amount of debt in absolutes. We're gonna be solving for all three companies, and we're gonna do that before the first spin.
Julian, with respect to renewables, you know, I would argue that we've made a lot of progress the last few years, but you really need to look at each of the businesses in isolation to perhaps appreciate that. However, a couple of us were talking last night. The reality is the print is not pretty. Won't be again this year. It'll be better next year, but as Scott, I think suggested, it's not where we want it to be, largely on the back of the U.S. onshore market being depressed at the moment in anticipation of the renewal of the PTC in some form, right? If we didn't have that dynamic, we would not be talking, I think, as much as we have about the-
Mm-hmm.
The international onshore wind challenges that we do. Not that we've been hiding them, but they're not as relevant. They're not as material. Similarly, you look at what Philippe walked through with respect to Grid. That business has come a long way, mindful that they're working off some legacy obligations that were taken when I had a different job. They, you know, they go back, but I hope everybody not only saw the improvement in Grid to date, but really took to heart what Philippe shared with respect to power conversion. There's a reason we've got Philippe and Nate and company looking after both of those businesses. The read across from the skills and the progress they've made at PC are directly relevant to Grid.
We're gonna fix the international onshore wind business. I think Pat and Scott laid that out well. I think Scott and Philippe know exactly what we're gonna do to continue to drive the opportunity at Grid, both top and bottom line. I think we are optimistic that the U.S. market will come back with respect to onshore. While offshore is an investment over the next several years, I think Scott made a full-throated, and appropriately so, case for that business being a real contributor as we think about leading in the energy transition over time. We've got work to do, but, you know, there are things we didn't really talk about. Philippe touched on grid automation. We could have spent 10 minutes on that, right? That's a really hot area where it's a shorter cycle business.
We've got volume. Heather, I thought, commented well on the grid modernization need. We can not only get volume there, I think we're doing some good work with respect to visibility, win rate, and price. There's things that we can do beyond just working off some of the legacy projects and dealing with some of the structural costs that I think give us the confidence. All of that said, just to come back to what Scott framed, we need a little bit of time, right? We've made progress, a little tougher right now between the PTC challenge and some of the inflationary pressures there, but we'll get it done.
We have, the clock's running, so two... Steve Tusa, quick question.
Yeah, thanks. You had talked recently at a conference about kind of the seasonality of the earnings. Can you just maybe discuss a little bit around cash flow? Second quarter and third quarter are usually pretty even from a cash flow perspective, but with AD&A timing. Should we expect third quarter to be a little bit down from second quarter, just to kind of position the year? Then also on the balance sheet and kind of a question on derivatives. What are the $60 billion of remaining derivatives after you've taken down, you know, whatever you took down with the GECAS proceeds?
Seasonality.
I was gonna say.
That's you. That's right. We got it. Carolina.
Do you want me to start?
Go for it.
Okay. I'll start then with the seasonality. I think it's really important. I talked about what we expect to grow profit-wise this year at $2 billion. Why are we confident with that? With the seasonality that we are seeing and that we have shared. Basically, it's sort of business by business. In aviation, we expect sort of the return to flights to go through the year, so that's why you see that back and loaded. In healthcare, we've talked about how we expect the supply chain situation to ease in the second half, so that's why we would have more volume and therefore profit in the second half. When it comes to both renewables and power, a lot of that work is in the backlog.
Because of when our customers want that to be delivered, that's mainly in the second half of the year. That's also why that's gonna have the second half sort of heavy. This seasonality is something that is, I want to say, typical for us. We saw it in 2019, and we also saw it so pre-COVID as well as last year. When it comes to cash flow, yes, we also have a seasonality. We're sort of really weak starting point of the year, and that's why we also talked about that the second half of 2022 would have more than 100% of the cash that we expect to generate. Second and third quarter, I wouldn't say that they're that even. Third is better than the second usually for us.
The last one was on.
Derivatives.
Derivatives.
Yeah.
Yeah. With the closure of capital and the massive reduction of debt, of course, the derivative situation goes down to a much lower level. What we have now is much more in line with what an industrial company would have, basically to hedge FX mainly.
Okay. All right. I've got a question from Cliff. Sorry, not from Cliff, from Scott Davis, but I saw your hand up, Cliff. Hold on. Should we expect some actions with long-term care before the spins? I'd imagine the opportunity to exit is better today than it has been in a while.
I would agree with the premise on the back end of that, but we'll see with respect to the question itself.
Okay. Thank you, Cliff. Oh, we got a mic coming. Sorry, hold on.
There's only one Cliff.
That's right. Cliff Ransom Research, go ahead.
For better or for worse, probably the worse. Everybody in this room has been bored stiff with me talking about the progress of Lean at GE, that we haven't really seen it yet. You've disclosed detail today that we haven't been able to see to the extent we've been blinded by what's going on in the facilities and in the offices by COVID. I'm struck by two things. In the SQDC equation, in my book, there's another metric, and that's employee engagement. I really think that cost is about number seven, but I think we would all agree that S, Q, and D need to be up in the front. Why have we not heard about employee engagement? The perhaps a related issue is, when you've been talking today constantly about cost out.
Is that really the long-term metric? Are there other things that Lean can do for you, particularly in the transactional world, in marketing and R&D, et cetera?
Cliff, as you know well, Lean is everything properly deployed. We talk about cost because, you know, there's some folks that didn't think we made much money or could generate much cash. I think what we've been able to demonstrate, and will over time, is that we're gonna deploy Lean broadly and aggressively in order to do that, so that we can deliver for our customers and deliver for our investors. Cost is important from an operational perspective in my view, and you'll see this on the QDIP boards, on the visual management boards in the cells. An important part of the mindset here is every minute, every hour, every shift matters from a safety, from a quality, from a delivery, from a cost perspective.
If we build up from there, right, and move away from let's hustle, we got 72 hours before the quarter closes, we really, to use Josh's words, liberate, I think, this organization and realize its full potential. I hope you saw through the course of the day, Scott talking about Hoshin Kanri, our breakthrough management system, teeing up live outage, and then taking standard work, taking technology into a critical part of his service infrastructure. I wish we'd had Kevin O'Neill come up from our PDX business within healthcare. Kevin's got a lot of growth opportunities that he's implementing that really are a different manifestation of Lean, both commercially and product-wise. Forgive me for giving what may be an ambiguous answer, but it is fundamentally everything when you lead and when you manage in this fashion.
Now you'll get a little bit of taste again on the two tours. You make your own judgments, but it's everywhere.
Okay, I've been given the green light for one last question. Markus.
Maybe one last one on aviation. Thanks so much for quantifying the mix headwind from the LEAP. How should we think about that as that improves to 2025? The 9X obviously starts to ramp. Obviously smaller volume, but larger engine. If we think about that headwind coming up, is that similar magnitude, larger, smaller? How would you kind of gauge that?
What we talked about today was about LEAP, and Kathy talked about how we expect LEAP to improve on the cost curve and basically to be breakeven by 2025. To your point, we also have the GE9X that will ramp. I would say not, we don't expect it to have the same impact just because of the sheer volume if you compare narrow body with wide bodies. And on top of that, as we have services continuing to grow and on top of the work that Larry just mentioned on the lean and productivity, because that never ends by the way that continues year over year. That's how we expect to grow the margin and therefore also John talked about how we would expect it to go. We wouldn't stop at 20%.
Final comments?
Well, I know we're tight on time, so I will be brief. First of all, Steve and your team, thank you. A lot went into this. We won't be together as a group again, but thank you for making this happen. Now you got to feed everybody and get them on the bus. Just very briefly, I really hope that if anything, you walk away with three core ideas. One is Pete, I think, started out, these are outstanding businesses, all three of them, with leadership positions in markets that matter. Two, we're running these businesses better today, and we're not done. There's a lot more to come. There's a lot more that we can do, and we will do that. You'll see that play out in a host of ways. This is my final point.
You've seen us repair the balance sheet. You've seen us demonstrate better free cash generation. We're gonna pivot here to more profitable growth, which was always the aim. We'll do that first organically. We'll supplement that inorganically, all with a strong and disciplined returns mindset. We think that's gonna be a winner all the way around for you as investors, but also for our customers and for our team. We really do appreciate you coming. Be safe when you're in the facilities. SQDC does start with S. We really appreciate the investment of time that you've made today and for many of you, the investment of capital that you've entrusted in us. We won't let you down. Thank you.