The Phnom Penh Post

Air Berlin preparing for bidders

- Daphne Rousseau

INSOLVENT Air Berlin was to decide yesterday the future of its 140 aircraft and 8,000 employees, with Lufthansa, EasyJet and Condor favourites to divide the spoils of the German airline.

Its supervisor­y board was set to approve the shortlist of bidders for Air Berlin’s assets agreed among the company’s creditors on Thursday, with technical details around winding up the carrier to be thrashed out in the coming weeks.

At stake are the carrier’s 140 leased aircraft – including those wholly owned by Austrian subsidiary Niki – coveted landing and takeoff slots at German airports, and some prime Berlin real estate.

Air Berlin triggered bankruptcy proceeding­s in mid-August after losing a cash lifeline from its biggest shareholde­r Etihad Airways, giving potential buyers a month to make their offers.

Media reports suggest that large parts of Germany’s second-largest airline will be gobbled up by the country’s flagship carrier Lufthansa.

In the race to strip down Air Berlin, Lufthansa reportedly beat out IAG – owner of Iberia and British Airways – and three bids of between € 500 million and € 600 million ($600 million and $715 million) apiece from private investors.

Irish low-cost airline Ryanair stayed out of the bidding as its outspoken chief Michael O’Leary denounced a German “stitch-up” designed to favour Lufthansa.

No resurrecti­on

The German government, which extended a bridging loan to Air Berlin to keep its aircraft aloft, ruled out any one competitor taking over the carrier whole for competitio­n reasons.

That did not stop rivals attacking Lufthansa for what they saw as a grab at monopoly power by the yellow-liveried giant.

“There’s a scandal going on here. Lufthansa’s monopoly would be cemented by this decision,” Bavarian business tycoon Hans Rudolf Woehrl told Handelsbla­tt business daily on Friday, warning that he could sue the government over its role in the deal.

Frankfurt-based Lufthansa has set its sights on up to 78 aircraft, while EasyJet is reportedly interested in Air Berlin’s popular short-haul routes.

“Our top priority is to stabilise opera- tionally the 38 aircraft we’ve been wetleasing from Air Berlin over the past few months,” Lufthansa chief Carsten Spohr told journalist­s last week.

“Wet-leasing” refers to airlines leasing aircraft from each other rather than a leasing company.

“We expect Air Berlin to exit the market and for us to be able to grow by 20 to 40 aircraft,” Spohr added.

Negotiatio­ns between Air Berlin, Lufthansa and EasyJet are expected to continue until October 12.

Also jostling for Air Berlin assets is Thomas Cook subsidiary Condor, which has joined forces with Formula One legend Niki Lauda, setting their sights on 21 planes belonging to the Air Berlin subsidiary that bears his name.

German newspaper Bild and Berlin tabloid B.Z. reported at the weekend creditors expected the sale of Air Berlin assets to bring in € 250-350 million.

Workers in the cold?

Amid concern about job losses, Lufthansa has signalled it could hire up to 3,000 people to go with its new planes, possibly including some from Air Berlin’s ranks.

As European low-cost airlines engage in dogfights for control of the skies, trade union Verdi fears that some buyers plan to use their own staff to profit from Air Berlin’s aircraft and landing slots, rather than offering existing employees opportunit­ies.

Verdi board member Christine Behle said the union expected the successful bidders to “take on responsibi­lity for Air Berlin’s employees and offer them good opportunit­ies for the future”.

But the clock is ticking.

Despite the government’s € 150 million-cash infusion, Air Berlin is running on fumes, slashing most long-haul flights and suffering from a recent wildcat strike by huge numbers of pilots calling in sick.

Chief Executive Thomas Winkelmann labelled the “sick-out” an “existentia­l threat” to the company.

Air Berlin, which transporte­d 36 million passengers in 2016, has insisted it will operate scheduled flights until bankruptcy proceeding­s are completed, although some of the winning bids could pose technical problems that would take time to resolve.

Passengers who bought plane tickets after August 15 can be reimbursed for their reservatio­ns.

 ?? STOLLARZ/AFP PATRIK ?? Employees of German airline Air Berlin follow the speech of German Chancellor Angela Merkel during an election campaign event in Neuss, western Germany, on Thursday.
STOLLARZ/AFP PATRIK Employees of German airline Air Berlin follow the speech of German Chancellor Angela Merkel during an election campaign event in Neuss, western Germany, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia