Bangkok Post

Southwest ends service to 4 airports

- J. EDWARD MORENO

S

outhwest

Airlines is ceasing operations at four airports, and reducing flights from others, in an effort to cut costs as its growth plans were also curtailed by fewer than expected plane deliveries from Boeing.

The airline, which flies only Boeing 737 planes, said Thursday that delays from the embattled aircraft manufactur­er contribute­d to its struggles. Southwest reported a loss of $231 million for the first quarter, worse than analysts expected, sending its share price down 10% in early trading.

To cut costs, Southwest said it would cease operations at four airports from early August: Bellingham Internatio­nal Airport in Washington state, Cozumel Internatio­nal Airport, George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston, and Syracuse Hancock Internatio­nal Airport. It would also “significan­tly restructur­e” its flights from other airports, most notably by reducing flights at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport and Chicago O’Hare

Internatio­nal Airport.

Southwest’s CEO, Bob Jordan, said in an interview with CNBC on Thursday that the decision to exit those airports was unrelated to delays in receiving new Boeing planes, although those delays were causing other problems.

“The network actions have really nothing to do with the Boeing delay, we are taking network actions regardless,” he said. “Now, the Boeing delays are very painful, they cause us to replan, they hurt us on the revenue front, they cause us to be inefficien­t, and we’re working all of that.”

The airline’s woes were another ripple effect of the incident on Jan 5, when a panel known as a door plug blew off a Boeing 737 Max 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight. The event led to the temporary grounding of the popular jet model and a slowdown in production as Boeing has faced increased regulatory scrutiny over its quality control.

Southwest said it expected to get 20 new Boeing jets this year, down from the 46 it had previously anticipate­d. The timing of the deliveries depends on the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, which has capped Boeing’s production while it gets quality issues under control.

“The recent news from Boeing regarding further aircraft delivery delays presents significan­t challenges for both 2024 and 2025,” Jordan said in a statement. The airline said it would limit hiring and end the year with 2,000 fewer employees. It also said it planned to take fewer planes out of service than it previously planned.

On Wednesday, Boeing reported a $355 million loss for the first quarter, a steep setback that was nonetheles­s less than analysts expected.

Demand for travel remains robust, but Southwest appears more adversely affected than its rivals, many of which also buy planes from Airbus.

 ?? ?? A ramp agent performs a walk-around inspection of a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-700 at BaltimoreW­ashington Airport in Baltimore.
A ramp agent performs a walk-around inspection of a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-700 at BaltimoreW­ashington Airport in Baltimore.

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