Oman Daily Observer

Norwegian Air to end transatlan­tic flights, seeks state help

CEO Jacob Schram says has resumed talks with the government

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OSLO: Norwegian Air, which challenged British Airways and other long-establishe­d rivals by launching transatlan­tic flights, said on Thursday it will end those services, causing 2,000 job losses, and seek government help.

The budget airline, founded in 1993, has been forced to ground all but six of its 138 aircraft due to the pandemic and will now focus on Nordic and European routes.

“We have decided that longhaul is no longer in our business plan,” CEO Jacob Schram told an online news conference.

The plan also involves closing units in the United States, Italy, France and Britain, including its base at London Gatwick airport.

“The brutal reality is that (they) will be declared bankrupt ... 2,000 employees are affected,” said Schram. The airline aims to cut its fleet to about 50 aircraft before expanding to around 70 in 2022, it said.

The plan must be approved by an Irish bankruptcy court. The next hearing is on Jan. 22.

Norwegian’s 35-strong longhaul fleet of Boeing Dreamliner­s - most of which are leased - is now up for negotiatio­n, finance chief Geir Karlsen said.

“Overall, this seems like a sensible plan,” said brokerage Davy. “The long-haul business was volatile and generally loss-making since its launch in 2013 - in this environmen­t, withdrawal is the only viable option.”

Norwegian risks running out of cash by the end of March if it fails to restructur­e debt and liabilitie­s of 66.8 billion crowns ($7.89 billion), including 48.5 billion in interest-bearing debt, it warned late last year. It hopes to cut debt to around 20 billion crowns and raise 4-5 billion from new shares and hybrid capital. The new plan aligns with “signals” from Norwegian politician­s about what would be required for the state to provide further help, Schram said.

Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen said it was unlikely the government would take a stake in Norwegian, given its stated reluctance to do that. The industry ministry was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The plan could return Norwegian to profit before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (EBITDA) later this year, based on conservati­ve assumption­s, it said.

However, Bernstein analysts said the planned debt reduction was too small. “It is more likely in our view, that the current Norwegian will eventually have to be wound down, and any continuati­on of the business will need to be built anew.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Norwegian Air Sweden Boeing 737-800 plane SE-RRJ taxies to take-off in Riga Internatio­nal Airport in Riga, Latvia.
— Reuters Norwegian Air Sweden Boeing 737-800 plane SE-RRJ taxies to take-off in Riga Internatio­nal Airport in Riga, Latvia.

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