The National - News

Airline that was the pride of Qatar faces flights chaos

Doha airport in chaos as national carrier grounds 50 flights a day and airspace restrictio­ns leave only one route open

- Samanth Subramania­n Foreign Correspond­ent ssubramani­an@thenationa­l.ae

The decision by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the UAE to suspend ties with Qatar will severely hit Qatar Airways, the state-owned carrier that has risen to be considered among the best airlines in the world.

Already, air travel between Qatar and these four countries has stopped, resulting in the grounding of at least 50 daily flights. Doha’s airport has been thrown into chaos, and passengers have been stranded. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are the two largest markets for Qatar Airways. The loss of this traffic and the forced grounding of aircraft could wipe out up to 30 per cent of revenue, as estimated by the consulting firm Frost & Sullivan. But an even bigger impact would be the loss of airspace over these countries. Qatar Airways has emerged as a popular airline for travellers from Asia heading to the West or Africa, but if its planes are denied overflight privileges by these four countries, they will be forced to find longer or alternativ­e routes towards Europe, Africa and the US.

Saudi Arabia closed off its airspace to Qatar Airways on Monday. Egypt and the UAE followed suit, and Bahrain has permitted just one route through its airspace, according to aviation tracking website Flightrada­r24.

This route, which represents Qatar Airways’ sole exit to the outside world, is guaranteed to grow incredibly congested.

Yemen, Libya and the Maldives have also joined Saudi Arabia and Egypt in entirely banning Qatar Airways from their airspace. But it is primarily the restrictio­ns by Saudi Arabia and Bahrain that will worry the airline’s executives.

The restrictio­ns affect Qatar Airways severely because of its hub-and-spoke model, which make it reliant on transfer traffic rather than home markets, said John Strickland, who runs JLS Consulting, a London-based aviation consultanc­y. “The bans on UAE and Saudi local flights cut off two key point-to-point markets and important sources of transfer traffic,” Mr Strickland said.

“Overflight bans make operating to a number of destinatio­ns more complex, as well as adding time and cost to journeys.

“This also affects the hub model, because it will mean that a number of schedule timings will not be able to be maintained, critical for transfer passengers.”

With its 197 aircraft, Qatar Airways flies to more than 150 destinatio­ns around the world. About 30 per cent of its seats are booked for travel to Europe and the North Americas, 8 per cent to Africa (excluding Egypt), and 31 per cent to Asia (excluding the UAE, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia).

The airline’s usual routes westward over Saudi Arabia and eastward over the Arabian Gulf are now cut off. The primary alternate route – over Iran – is restricted, because it will almost invariably involve flying through Bahraini airspace.

“It’s a severe issue for Qatar Airways,” said Gabriel Tilmann, executive chairman of the Internatio­nal Pilot Training Associatio­n. The single route through Bahraini airspace “will be used primarily to fly into Iranian airspace and then north-west” towards Europe or east into Asia, he said.

The lengthier route, Mr Tilmann said, will add 30 to 50 minutes to flying time. “Going west to North Africa would be a much longer delay, as Saudi Arabia and Egypt have to be circumvent­ed,” he said.

Qatar Airways did not respond to a request for comment.

Part of the reason the airline has been plunged into uncertaint­y is the unusual division of airspace in the region.

Qatari airspace is encircled almost wholly by Bahraini airspace, with the only other exits through Saudi Arabia to the south and through UAE airspace to the east. As a result, Qatar has no immediate access to internatio­nal airspace or to Iranian airspace.

This is primarily a legacy of history, Mr Tilmann said.

“Bahrain was the first in the region [ to launch an airline] with Gulf Air, therefore it was ‘their’ airspace to control,” Mr Tilmann said. “Doha has been trying for a long time to get the airspace better organised. “The whole region should be controlled by one organisati­on,” such as a neutral regional bloc, he said.

“But that has been an ongoing discussion.”

In theory, Qatar Airways’ rights are protected by the Internatio­nal Air Services Transit Agreement of 1945, a multilater­al treaty that permits overflight­s. Saudi Arabia is not a signatory to the treaty, but Bahrain, the UAE and Egypt are.

But the treaty’s rules are easily broken, with those who break it facing few consequenc­es.

Countries routinely cite geopolitic­al or security reasons to selectivel­y shut down their airspace.

The Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on, a UN agency, has a weak dispute resolution mechanism, which offers little hope for Qatar Airways.

The airline has little leverage in retaliatin­g as well, since closing off Qatari airspace to flights originatin­g from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE will have little impact on their flight paths.

The bans will thus effectivel­y ground Qatar Airways, a report from the Centre for Aviation said. But Qatar has one hope, the report added: “It is difficult to see the ban persisting for long. There can be few winners from it.”

 ?? Source: Centre for Aviation ??
Source: Centre for Aviation
 ?? AP Photo ?? Alternate paths: Flight radar shows how Qatar Airways flights are getting round the bans by flying over Iranian airspace.
AP Photo Alternate paths: Flight radar shows how Qatar Airways flights are getting round the bans by flying over Iranian airspace.

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