The National - News

Emirates grounds 20 jets as Ramadan and low season coincide

- Deena Kamel

Emirates, the biggest operator of Airbus A380 and Boeing 777s, has grounded 20 jets as sluggish demand from business and regional travellers during Ramadan coincides with the typically low season for internatio­nal travel in May.

The jets, a mix of A380s and 777s, are expected to return to service after Eid, which will take place around mid-June, with the fleet returning to its maximum capacity by September or October, Emirates president Tim Clark said yesterday. The aircraft are currently parked in Dubai’s second hub at Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Airport and Emirates’s home base Dubai Internatio­nal Airport. Mr Clark was speaking to reporters at the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n annual meeting in Sydney.

“On top of Ramadan we have May, so demand for travel is down significan­tly in the Muslim world,” he said. “It’s not easy” doing business at that time, when traffic falls 50 per cent on the month before.

Emirates, the world’s biggest airline by internatio­nal travellers, earlier said that a shortage in pilots is one factor in trimming flight frequencie­s this summer.

Mr Clark clarified yesterday that the lack of cockpit crew is not related to the grounding of the 20 jets. Middle East airlines are expected to earn $1.3 billion (Dh4.76bn) in net profit this year, up 30 per cent from $1bn in 2017, but are still “lagging” behind their global peers, Iata said in a briefing in Sydney yesterday.

Emirates is facing a “double whammy” of the strengthen­ing dollar, to which the UAE dirham is pegged, and rising fuel prices, he said.

“Naturally, that is going to take a mathematic­al hit on the yields that we get out of the markets that are non-dollar denominate­d, at the same time that we have fuel rising,” he said. “We’re quite good at dealing with that now, but it’s not easy.”

Iata said average oil prices are expected to reach $70 a barrel this year, up from $54.9 a barrel in 2017, with fuel costs making up 24 per cent of global airlines’ operating costs.

Emirates will introduce premium economy class on its aircraft in 2020, making it the first airline in the Arabian Gulf to do so, in a bid to stem the

“leakage” of some of its passengers to rivals who offer the product, Mr Clark said.

The new class will be available on the latest batch of A380s ordered earlier this year, with some of the double-deckers already in service be retro-fitted, and on new 777s. It will make up 6 per cent to 8 per cent of Emirates’s total fleet capacity.

“Premium economy is something that’s here to stay,” he said. “We’ve also had any number of passengers asking for it, saying we’d like to pay for the better seat, more leg room, better food, more exclusivit­y and all the other bits and pieces that we talk about bundling into it.”

The new class will not cannibalis­e Emirates’s business class bookings if the maths is right.

“It has to produce a price point which doesn’t draw traffic down from business,” he said.

“The idea is that it takes business from economy and recognises the people who are already paying a high fare in economy because they want flexible fares, flexible bookings, refundabil­ity

etc, and these are the people saying for this and a bit more we’ll pay you.” Emirates had considered the option of adding premium economy since 2016 when low oil prices clipped demand for travel in the region and the offering was expected to lure price-sensitive travellers. “We’re going to make sure that the price point is such that it won’t draw people from a flat bed,” he said.

“So if you look at the A380 and the upper deck what we have there with business class, flat beds, minibar, essentiall­y exclusive little suites and the bar at the back, you don’t want to bring them down.”

The new class may give Emirates a competitiv­e edge over regional rivals.

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