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News
No Bounds on Industry
Crisis
Arab Carriers Urged to
Focus on Efficiency and Commercial Freedoms
Tunis - The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) urged Middle East and North Africa (MENA) airlines to focus on an
agenda of efficiency and expanding commercial freedoms.
“The oil price is falling, but what we save in fuel, we lose in revenue. This
industry will lose US$5.2 billion this year. Even the Middle East is not
immune. The region’s carriers posted 18.1% traffic growth in 2007. This year,
August growth plummeted to 4.3%,” said IATA Director General and CEO,
Giovanni Bisignani, in a speech at the Annual General Meeting of the Arab Air
Carriers Association (AACO).
“Profits of Middle East carriers will fall from US$300 million in 2007 to
US$200 million this year. Only a handful of carriers will be profitable,
while the majority bleed red ink. The region’s fleet is set to double to
1,300 aircraft over the next decade as we enter a period of global economic
uncertainty. The challenge of matching capacity to demand will be difficult,”
said Bisignani.
Bisignani urged the region to adopt an agenda focused on efficiency -
Simplifying the Business, fuel and infrastructure - and expanding commercial
freedoms.
- Infrastructure: MENA is
beginning to experiment with airport privatisation. Jordan, Saudi Arabia
and Egypt have given concessions to run their airports to management
consortiums. Bisignani issued a stern warning to avoid the monopoly
abuse that occurred in other regions when similar moves were made. “Just
look at what happened in Quito. The concessionaire ignored ICAO
principles and raised rates by 128% to pre-finance airport construction.
You don’t want this type of monopoly abuse here. As you privatise,
strong independent regulators to enforce ICAO principles and deliver
cost-efficiency are a must,” said Bisignani.
- Simplifying the Business: “MENA carriers
met the e-ticketing deadline with a jump from 16% e-ticketing to 100% in
just 18 months. This great effort shows what the region can achieve,”
said Bisignani. Bisignani warned that the region must speed up in order
to enjoy the cost-efficiencies of e-freight. Only 10 out of 22 states in
MENA have ratified the international conventions needed to recognise
electronic invoicing - the starting point for e-freight. Bisignani
called on MENA to be a leader in IATA’s Fast Travel and Baggage
Improvement programmes. “The region is investing US$46 billion in
infrastructure. This is a golden opportunity to build in leading edge
processes and technology,” said Bisignani.
- Fuel: “Fuel
efficiency reduces costs and improves environmental performance,” said
Bisignani. Already this year, IATA’s fuel campaign had identified and
saved US$4.6 billion, equal to 13.5 million tonnes of CO2. IATA’s
Four-Pillar Climate Change Strategy is focused on CO2 reductions with
(1) investment in technology, (2) effective operations, (3) efficient
infrastructure and (4) positive economic measures. Bisignani urged MENA
governments to challenge Europe’s illegal and unilateral plan to
incorporate aviation into its regional emissions trading scheme (ETS).
“Europe’s governments have discovered a pot of green gold with aviation
taxes. MENA must be tough in defending the vision of Kyoto which is a
global solution for aviation brokered through ICAO. That means driving
ICAO’s success through Saudi Arabia’s participation in the ICAO Group on
International Aviation and Climate Change, challenging Europe’s
unilateral action and delivering efficiencies in line with the
four-pillar strategy,” said Bisignani.
- Commercial Freedom: Bisignani
urged MENA governments to support IATA’s efforts to facilitate greater
commercial freedoms for air transport. “Airlines need to operate like
any other business - with a level playing field, and the freedom to
access markets and global capital,” said Bisignani. IATA is facilitating
this discussion among progressive governments at the Agenda for Freedom
Summit this weekend in Istanbul. “In MENA, we have seen pockets of
progress, including open skies agreements and domestic liberalisation.
Now the region’s governments must think bigger and act faster,” said
Bisignani.
“The
industry crisis highlights the need for change. MENA has some great
advantages - strong oil economies, top-notch infrastructure and
fuel-efficient fleets. The crisis is a turning point. We must deliver
significant change with efficiency and commercial freedoms. If we can do
that, I am confident that we can weather this perfect storm and emerge as a
stronger and more profitable industry,” said Bisignani.
View
Giovanni Bisignani's full speech
- IATA -
Notes for Editors:
- IATA (International Air Transport Association)
represents some 230 airlines comprising 93% of scheduled international
air traffic.
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