The Star Early Edition

SAA maps a R1.3bn saving

Acting chief executive outlines blueprint to curb losses at national carrier

- Kamlesh Bhuckory

SAA SHOULD curb losses by securing R1.3 billion in annual savings from dropping weaker routes and accelerati­ng plans to retire inefficien­t jets, according to its interim chief.

Route changes could contribute R507 million to earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on, while restructur­ed plane leases should save R300m, acting chief executive Nico Bezuidenho­ut said earlier this week.

“It’s challengin­g,” Bezuidenho­ut said, disclosing that losses worsened in the fiscal year through March due to a weaker rand, the wider impact of the Ebola crisis and the failure to implement a savings strategy unveiled last year.

Bezuidenho­ut has been running the airline since November 7, when he moved over from its discount unit Mango after chairman Dudu Myeni ousted chief executive Monwabisi Kalawe. While the blueprint for a 90-day recovery plan for SAA was handed to the Treasury and Department of Public Enterprise­s on November 10.

Regardless of longer-term plans to upgrade the wide-body fleet with new planes such as the Airbus Group A350 or Boeing 787, SAA needs to cease flying A340-600s, which are fuel-hungry and leased on terms “as if they are in high demand”, Bezuidenho­ut said. The four-engine jetliners should be replaced with more efficient two-engine models, also on a lease basis.

That might point to interest in used Boeing 777-300ERs, which would offer a similar combinatio­n of seats and range to the A340s, or possibly the A330-200, which features in the SAA fleet, though the model carries fewer passengers.

Kalawe, described as being on a leave of absence, said a year ago that he was seeking to upgrade the engines of the nine A340-600s to cut fuel costs while deciding between new long-haul models, which he envisaged being delivered from 2017.

Some R250m of savings could be secured through the renegotiat­ion of services contracts, while other measures might deliver a R100m revenue boost, according to Bezuidenho­ut. He didn’t say how the balance of the R1.3bn sum targeted would be achieved.

South Africa would seek potential buyers for an equity stake in SAA as part of a recovery plan, Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown said on October 23. The carrier was surviving off state-guaranteed loans because its applicatio­ns for grants were turned down.

SAA said on Monday that it stood by the appointmen­t of Bezuidenho­ut as acting chief executive, citing his “proven experience, capability and track record”, after claims that he had misreprese­nted his qualificat­ions. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? SAA interim chief executive Nico Bezuidenho­ut’s annual savings plan requires the dropping of weaker routes and A340-600s.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED SAA interim chief executive Nico Bezuidenho­ut’s annual savings plan requires the dropping of weaker routes and A340-600s.

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