Bangkok Post

Lufthansa buys big chunk of Air Berlin

- DAPHNE ROUSSEAU TOM BARFIELD

BERLIN/FRANKFURT: Years of struggle for Germany’s second-ranked airline Air Berlin appeared close to an end yesterday, as airborne behemoth Lufthansa announced plans to buy more than half the bankrupt carrier’s planes.

The deal has sparked controvers­y in the European aviation sector, with the German government facing accusation­s it helped steer the process under a plan to build the Frankfurt-based carrier into an all-conquering juggernaut.

“Germany’s largest airline will snap up some 81 of Air Berlin’s 144 aircraft and take on 3,000 of its 8,500 staff,’’ Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr said in Berlin, hailing it as a “great day” for his company.

“Air Berlin is continuing to negotiate today with easyJet, the other bidder chosen for exclusive takeover talks with a Thursday deadline,’’ a spokesman told news agency DPA.

Spohr said that easyJet was interested in between 20 and 30 of Air Berlin’s mediumrang­e aircraft.

Lufthansa has yet to say how much it will pay under the deal, but Spohr told newspaper Rheinische Post yesterday that the group would invest €1.5 billion ($1.8 billion) related to the takeover.

He added that 80 aircraft was the largest addition to Lufthansa’s fleet that competitio­n authoritie­s would accept.

“European authoritie­s must now decide whether to give the deal a green light, in a process that could take several weeks or months,” Air Berlin CEO Thomas Winkelmann said.

In the meantime, the carrier will operate flights as a subcontrac­tor for the buyers, as insolvency rules forbid it from operating flights on its own account after October 28.

Air Berlin triggered bankruptcy proceeding­s in August after losing a cash lifeline from its biggest shareholde­r Etihad Airways.

Its aircraft have been kept aloft by a €150-million ($178 million) emergency loan from the German government while details of the breakup were worked out.

A crowd of German and internatio­nal investors and competitor­s lined up after the bankruptcy was announced, with an eye not only on Air Berlin’s aircraft but also its coveted takeoff and landing slots at the country’s crowded airports.

In the race for exclusive talks, Lufthansa and easyJet reportedly beat out Internatio­nal Airlines Group (IAG) — owner of Iberia and British Airways — and three bids of between €500 million and €600 million apiece from private investors.

Irish low-cost airline Ryanair stayed out of the bidding as its outspoken chief Michael O’Leary denounced a German “stitch-up” designed to favour Lufthansa.

And Bavarian businessma­n Hans Rudolf Woehrl claimed the government was favouring the creation of a Lufthansa “monopoly” by rejecting out of hand offers to take over Air Berlin whole.

“It’s right that carriers who haven’t been able to make ends meet are disappeari­ng from the market,” Spohr told Rheinische Post, pointing to Britain’s Monarch, Italy’s Alitalia and now Air Berlin.

“Neverthele­ss, competitio­n will intensify in Europe and worldwide,” he said, adding that “he expects falling prices for passengers in future.

Spohr also stressed that “it’s in the German interest to have a strong national airline” with worldwide connection­s.

Lufthansa also used a briefing paper earlier this month to take a swipe at Ryanair, arguing its complaints were “an attempt to distract from their own problems”.

The Irish company’s chief operations officer stepped down this month after Ryanair was forced to slash thousands of flights up to March, mainly owing to a shortage of pilots.

As bosses wrangle over their grand strategies for the sector, unions complain that many of Air Berlin’s staff face an uncertain future.

Air Berlin pilots called in sick en masse in September in a protest against the lack of informatio­n, but they will benefit from a stripped-down recruitmen­t process at Lufthansa — hungry for aircrew for low-cost subsidiary Eurowings.

The company has organised job fairs for other staff in cooperatio­n with local government­s, other big German firms and the federal employment agency.

 ?? AFP ?? An airplane operated by German airline Air Berlin rolls on the tarmac past a Lufthansa plane at the Duesseldor­f Airport on Tuesday.
AFP An airplane operated by German airline Air Berlin rolls on the tarmac past a Lufthansa plane at the Duesseldor­f Airport on Tuesday.

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