Manila Bulletin

Etihad intends to stay as a major airline – CEO

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Etihad Airways PJSC intends to remain a major global carrier as it works on re-sizing its global business following record losses, according to new Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Tony Douglas.

The Persian Gulf company, which has built up a vast inter-continenta­l route network and spent billions of dollars on plane purchases, has no intention of becoming a “boutique” operator and still aspires to being an “airline of choice,” Douglas said Monday in Abu Dhabi, where Etihad is based.

At the same time, failed investment­s in Alitalia SpA and Air Berlin Plc. – which both filed for insolvency last year after Etihad pulled the plug on funding – have led to a more “strategic” approach to expansion, according to Douglas, who took over in January.

“That would be the take out, to be very discipline­d, very measured,” Douglas said at the 2018 Global Aerospace Summit. “What we have embraced properly is a way to develop growth in a sustainabl­e way. We will choose wisely; we will make sure that detail is wellattend­ed to.”

Etihad has been working on restructur­ing plans for the best part of a year after posting a $1.87-billion loss for 2016 that cost previous chief James Hogan his job. While the carrier has slimmed down its freighter fleet and is cutting passenger destinatio­ns including Edinburgh and Perth, Douglas has so far held off from announcing widely anticipate­d plans for further fleet and network cuts.

According to one scenario, Etihad could give up on chasing global standing in the mass market and double-down on targeting top-end travel, where it’s one of only 10 five-star airlines worldwide.

Adolescent The airline remains a relative “adolescent” in aviation terms, the CEO said, and will “look to learn” from Emirates, the biggest of the three main Gulf carriers and the world leader on long-haul routes. Etihad was founded in 2003, 18 years after the Dubai-based company and nine after Qatar Airways.

Douglas held out the prospect of closer cooperatio­n with one-time rival Emirates, touted for a possible merger since Etihad fell on hard times. “I do admire what I observe from our great friends in Dubai,” he said. “We will continue to consider where appropriat­e the things that we could do together.”

Emirates President Tim Clark has said antitrust rules give limited room for maneuver and that a merger is unlikely, though ultimately a matter for the rulers of Dubai and Abu Dhabi. The airlines also both have small home markets and compete for the same passengers changing planes on long-haul trips.

Etihad poured billions of dollars into struggling airlines around the world under Hogan’s so-called Equity Alliance strategy in a bid to quickly add more customers and propel the company into the global aviation elite. Earnings were hurt by a decline in Mideast traffic after lower crude-oil prices weighed on oil-industry travel, as well as mounting loss at Alitalia and Air Berlin. (Bloomberg)

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