All long haul commercial aircraft are twin engine now. The 747 is a relic and used almost exclusively for cargo now, and the A380 has ceased production. The game changer was new ultra high bypass engines like the GE90 that made the fuel savings of a twin engine configuration attainable by having sufficient thrust to replace four. Also with increased reliability, ETOPs regulations have allowed for twin engine jets to operate across practically any stretch of water. And with the decentralization of routes, the need for huge 400 passenger planes has gone as well. The future will be entirely twin jet.
Nothing so far electric has come anywhere close to the energy density of kerosene, and given how important it is for planes to be as lightweight as humanly possible, expect kerosene to remain in use for many decades to come.
Unless, of course, a revolution occurs in battery technology that makes them more energy dense than kerosene.
A tesla's battery pack is about 1000 pounds. The gasoline that would get a car to travel the same distance weighs about 100 pounds. For long haul, the fuel/battery weight would dominate engine weight, so unfortunately, I don't think planes will be using batteries for a while.
Electric will absolutely have a role in commercial air travel. It's going to revolutionize inter-city travel that is currently too far to drive comfortably, yet not quite far enough to warrant dealing with a flight by allowing people to hop on a tiny aircraft with minimal security flying out of small airfields. Think routes like SF-LA. But it's never going to replace jet fuel for long haul flights barring unimaginable breakthroughs in battery tech.
If commercial aircraft go electric (which as the other commenter pointed out, won’t be happening for a while), the number of engines would be 0. Electric motors are not the same as gas turbine engines.
I think you mean there would be no internal combustion engine. According to Oxford, an engine is "a machine with moving parts that converts power into motion". So an electric motor is still an engine.
Actually Qantas still uses QF74 (a 747B) doing non stop routes between SFO & SYD. LA to Sydney is done by A380. Other carriers use 2 engined dreamliners.
You might find this interesting - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ETOPS - That's part of what's changed the hub-and-spoke model of the past since twin-engine planes can now go much further from an emergency landing.
By playing around with the ETOPS options on Great Circle Mapper you can see the 787 can fly over any part of the Pacific. Aircraft with lower ETOPS ratings would have had to fly non-direct routes to ensure they didn't stray too far from a usable airport.
Twin-engine aircraft have only one working engine if one fails, and there are rules regarding how far they can be from the nearest suitable airport in that case.
In practice that means that each type of twin-engine aircraft has a limit: Can only be that far from shore. For aircraft with more reliable engines the limit is higher, so they don't have to pick island-hopping routes when crossing oceans.