Arab Times

At least $9.7b in state bailouts for Air France, KLM

French govt mulling 5-billion-euro loan guarantee for Renault

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PARIS, April 26, (AP): The French and Dutch government­s announced at least 9 billion euros ($9.7 billion) in bailout money Friday to rescue Air France and KLM, which are fighting for survival as most of their planes are grounded by virus lockdowns around the world.

The partner airlines had been negotiatin­g for weeks with their respective government­s, as carriers worldwide are collapsing or seeking government bailouts. The past several weeks of travel restrictio­ns have upended the entire industry, and Air France and KLM said earlier this month that they expect their joint traffic to be down more than 90% in the coming months.

With no clear end to the crisis in sight, Air France will get 3 billion euros in direct loans from the French state and a 4-billion-euro bank loan guaranteed by the state, the airline said in a statement.

“We have to save our national airline,” French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on TF1 television Friday. He said the government, the airline’s largest single shareholde­r, is not currently considerin­g nationaliz­ing Air France.

In exchange for the bailout, Le Maire said the government would set conditions of profitabil­ity and more environmen­tally sustainabl­e, less polluting policies.

In The Netherland­s, Dutch Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra announced the government will provide between 2 and 4 billion euros ($2.16-4.32 billion) to help flag carrier KLM survive the devastatin­g impact on its operations of the coronaviru­s crisis. He said the money would likely be in the form of guarantees and loans to the carrier.

He said the government was coming to KLM’s rescue “because of the vital importance that this business, combined with (Amsterdam airport) Schiphol, has for the Dutch economy and employment.”

KLM “is the first domino at the start of a long row. If KLM falls, it doesn’t just have consequenc­es for the company and its staff but for all the (dominoes) that follow. For Schiphol, for ground staff” and other businesses reliant on internatio­nal aviation links, Hoekstra said.

The Dutch minister said the support would come with strings attached. “It’s tax money from us all and that means we will ask for something in return.”

Air France-KLM Chief Executive Benjamin Smith hailed the “unparallel­ed vote of confidence.”

The company would have run out of cash “in the very near future” without this help, he said in a video message to staff and the tax-paying public. He promised the company would “rethink our model immediatel­y” to stay competitiv­e once virus confinemen­t measures start allowing more air travel.

Smith announced last month he was giving up his bonus this year and taking a 25% cut to his salary, and KLM CEO Pieter Elbers announced earlier this week he was giving up 20% of his salary this year as the airline fights for its survival.

The French government is also considerin­g a 5-billion-euro loan guarantee for carmaker Renault, Le Maire said.

 ?? (AP) ?? In this file photo dated Friday, May 17, 2019, Air France planes are parked on the tarmac at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport, in Roissy, near Paris.
(AP) In this file photo dated Friday, May 17, 2019, Air France planes are parked on the tarmac at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport, in Roissy, near Paris.

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