Business World

American Airlines to retire more jets in coronaviru­s downturn

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CHICAGO — American Airlines Group Inc. is set to sharply increase the number of jets it is planning to retire beyond its announced plans as it accelerate­s a fleet transforma­tion to respond to the coronaviru­s crisis, people familiar with the matter said.

Some 4,700 jets have been parked globally as airlines slash operations due to travel restrictio­ns, according to Ascend by Cirium fleet data, and American’s decision confirms industry speculatio­n that many of those older jets will not fly again.

In addition to the retirement of 34 Boeing Co. 757s and 17 Boeing 767s announced just two weeks ago,

American now plans to also sunset a batch of 76 Boeing 737s it acquired between 1999 and 2001, nine Airbus SE A330-300s and 20 Embraer E190s, the people said.

The plans were announced by President Robert Isom in a video Q&A with employees on Sunday, where he said the arrival of new Boeing 737 MAX jets, expected later this year after a prolonged global grounding, could help facilitate the retirement of older jets that would be in need of heavy maintenanc­e.

American is also considerin­g retiring some of its 50-seat regional jets, he said.

American said on March 12 it was accelerati­ng the retirement of its remaining Boeing 757s and 767s as it looks at removing older, less fueleffici­ent aircraft from its fleet.

“Decisions beyond the 757 and 767 have yet to be finalized, and we continue to make refinement­s to our overall fleet plan,” American spokesman Ross Feinstein said, adding that decisions would be based on demand.

Airlines around the world have slashed capacity and even the planes flying are nearly empty. Data firm OAG said the aviation industry was less than half the size it was in midJanuary, just before countries started confirming coronaviru­s cases outside China.

Aside from heavy maintenanc­e needs on the A330-300s and some of the 737s, American was also facing retrofitti­ng costs on some of the 737s. It said on Monday it would be seeking up to $12 billion from a government aid package meant to help airlines manage costs during the downturn, particular­ly for employee payroll.

The pace of aircraft retirement­s influences an airline’s cost structure since new aircraft are costly to buy but cheaper to run. It also gives a clue to potential future demand for new aircraft.

Some analysts are predicting a surplus of aircraft as a wounded airline industry emerges from the coronaviru­s lockdown into what many economists expect to be a broad recession.

Airlines’ fleet plans had been structured around expectatio­ns that global travel demand would continue to grow this year and beyond, but now analysts do not expect passenger traffic to recover 2019 levels for some time.

So far American has temporaril­y parked 135 out of 150 widebodies — including 787 Dreamliner­s – and more than 300 single-aisle jets, and may continue to park more of its smaller aircraft as the crisis continues, Mr. Isom told employees. —

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