The Borneo Post

Protection­ism, taxes, fuel: The high cost of air travel in Africa

- Aymeric Vincenot

ADDIS ABABA: Travelling 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) by air between two capitals on the same continent does not seem like a challenge. But it can be one in Africa.

Take Libreville and Bangui for instance. The journey takes a minimum of nine hours, requires passengers to change planes and shell out US$1,000 - an example of the challenges facing Africa’s aviation sector because of high taxes and protection­ist policies.

In comparison, a flight between Paris and Madrid - which crosses an equivalent distance - takes two hours and costs five times less.

Unlike Europe, ‘travel on the continent is very difficult’, said Moses Munga, a 27-year-old constructi­on consultant on his way to Ghana from Nairobi.

Like Munga, who told AFP that work took him to West Africa several times a year, civil engineer Ahmed Mekewi said he was a frequent business traveller.

But he confided: “I would have difficulty travelling on my own.”

“The cost of travelling in Africa is very challengin­g,” the 29-year-old said.

Unlike Europe, which liberalise­d its aviation sector in the 1990s, Africa does not have ‘a unified... market’, an expert in the sector told AFP.

“In Europe, Air France for example can make as many flights as it wants, to Germany, Belgium, Spain or Portugal. This freedom... does not exist within Africa” for African carriers, he said, requesting anonymity because of the nature of his work.

Restricted traffic rights granted by African government­s to airlines limit the number of direct routes and the frequency of flights, and make journeys longer across the 54-nation continent, he added.

According to a study conducted in 2021 by the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) for the African Union, out of the 1,431 possible connection­s between each of the bloc’s member states, only 19 per cent had a weekly direct flight.

‘Protection­ist mechanisms’

“Protection­ist mechanisms favouring local airlines such as charging foreign companies more for flying over or operating inside their territory... hampers competitio­n and drives prices up,” said Linden Birns, an aviation consultant based in South Africa.

As a result, “air traffic is so expensive in Africa (that) it isn’t really growing. Routes are very thinly served,” said Guy Leitch, aeronautic­al analyst and publisher of the South African magazine SA Flyer.

According to IATA, ‘Africa is the region where airfares are by far the highest’.

In addition to government restrictio­ns, the price of intraAfric­an air travel is also affected by ‘very high’ taxes and the cost of aviation fuel, said Robert Lisinge, head of the energy, infrastruc­ture and services section at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).

Africa’s low refining capacity means that aviation fuel is largely imported and “often 30 per cent more expensive than elsewhere, including in... oilproduci­ng countries,” said the expert source.

The Yamoussouk­ro Decision - a 1999 treaty intended to pave the way for the liberalisa­tion of Africa’s aviation sector - was followed by the Single African Air Transport Market (SAATM) project in 2018.

But such ambitions have struggled to take off.

“The whole idea is that if you liberalise the market, it will increase connectivi­ty and it will reduce costs,” Lisinge told AFP.

But bilateral air service agreements between countries mean that many companies are unable to operate flights “as many times as they want, using the planes of whichever capacity they choose”, he added.

Economic gains

A 2014 IATA study covering 12 African nations said liberalisa­tion would cause air traffic to jump 81 per cent between these countries.

Removing market barriers between just a dozen countries would generate US$1.3 billion in additional economic activity and help create 155,000 jobs, the study concluded.

For now, “regional travel across the continent is very challengin­g and makes business hard”, said constructi­on consultant Munga.

“Once you get a client and are drawing up your quotation, you must consider the costly cost of travel,” he said, adding that high airfares sometimes made a contract too expensive for certain customers, forcing him to abandon business opportunit­ies.

For UNECA’s Lisinge, the continent stands to lose out on crucial economic gains unless air travel is made easier.

“Africa is a vast continent, connectivi­ty by road is relatively poor,” he pointed out.

“Air transport is necessary to move the perishable goods, the traders, the expertise that will be required for intra-African trade”.

 ?? ?? An aircraft model of a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bearing Kenya’s national carrier, Kenya Airways (KQ) logo stands outside the headquarte­rs.
An aircraft model of a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bearing Kenya’s national carrier, Kenya Airways (KQ) logo stands outside the headquarte­rs.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? An Ethiopian Airlines plane is seen at the Addis Ababa internatio­nal airport.
— AFP photos An Ethiopian Airlines plane is seen at the Addis Ababa internatio­nal airport.

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