Khaleej Times

Etihad Airways’ passenger numbers increase 6% in 2016

- Deena Kamel Yousef

dubai — Etihad Airways’ group chief, James Hogan, who is standing down as the Gulf carrier grapples with losses at European partners, detailed growth plans for 2017, while defending his strategy as one that’s attracting passengers and is here to stay.

Etihad will add 12 wide-body aircraft, including two A380 superjumbo­s, swelling capacity in what will be “another challengin­g year,” the Abu-Dhabi-based carrier said in a statement Tuesday. That follows the addition of 10 planes in 2016, three of them A380s.

Hogan, due to leave in the second half, said in the release that the aim is to expand “prudently and efficientl­y” in light of the prevailing economic environmen­t, adding: “We remain optimistic and have every belief that our robust business model will succeed and, most importantl­y, stand the test of time.” Etihad’s customer tally increased six per cent last year to 18.5 million. Passenger traffic - the number of people carried times the distance flown - advanced eight per cent, just shy of the nine per cent hike in capacity, so that seat occupancy levels held steady at 79 per cent.

The bigger challenge has been to shore up the so-called equity alliance of carriers in which Etihad holds minority stakes, with two companies, Air Berlin and Alitalia, continuing to bleed cash despite restructur­ing efforts. The German carrier is shrinking its operations, while Rome-based Alitalia is set to undergo another revamp.

The alliance, which last year had a combined 705 aircraft and 126.6 million passengers, remains a source of vital feeder traffic for Etihad, which in the Arabian Gulf ranks behind Dubai-based Emirates and Qatar Airways by size.

Equity and code-share partners delivered 5.5 million passengers to its flights during the year, an increase of nine per cent compared with 2015.

Hogan, a 60-year-old Australian, announced last month that he planned to stand down and was headed for an investment company located outside the UAE and not linked to Etihad or its affiliates.

Etihad is meanwhile continuing with a review of its own size and shape and the equity holdings, though chairman, Mohamed Mubarak Fadhel Al Mazrouei, has said it remains committed to the partnershi­p strategy. — Bloomberg

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 ?? SOURCE: ETIHAD AIRWAYS ??
SOURCE: ETIHAD AIRWAYS

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