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Iata insists that higher oil prices will raise fares but recovery for airlines is on track

Global operators are set to accrue accumulati­ve losses of $201bn up until 2022 because of pandemic

- DEENA KAMEL

Rising oil prices will add pressure on airlines’ costs, forcing them to pass on some of that burden to passengers by raising airfares, but will not stall the recovery of airlines, according to the head of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

Global airlines, already battered over the past 20 months by the Covid-19 pandemic that has hit their revenue, are facing stronger oil prices of about $80 per barrel and increasing fees from air navigation service providers seeking to recoup their own losses, Willie Walsh, the director general of Iata, said in an online media briefing.

“The issue that will impact fares in the short to medium term will be the high price of oil, that continues to remain stubbornly high and increased charges by ANSPs and airports,” Mr Walsh said. The industry has no choice but to reflect this into ticket prices.”

Oil prices have hit multiyear highs with global supplies constraine­d while demand is rising as developed economies rebound faster than expected from the coronaviru­s-induced slowdown.

Brent, the global benchmark under which two thirds of oil trades, has gained more than 60 per cent since the start of the year and was trading at $82.97 per barrel at 1.15pm UAE time on Thursday.

Fuel typically makes up 25 per cent of an airline’s cost. Operators will shoulder total accumulati­ve losses of $201 billion in the period between 2020 to 2022 as a result of the pandemic that brought air travel to a halt, according to Iata’s latest industry report in October.

“Higher oil prices will reflect in ticket prices,” Mr Walsh said. “Where airlines have made

huge losses in recent years, it’s impossible to absorb increases and will have to be passed on to consumers and will have to be reflected in the pricing.”

The higher pricing will reflect airlines’ cost of operations, rather than a supply/demand dynamic, Mr Walsh said.

Still, the current rise in oil prices is a “positive for the industry” as it reflects improving

economic conditions that will in turn help the aviation industry, the Iata chief said.

Mr Walsh said the stronger oil prices will not dampen the airlines’ recovery as most of them have “low hedging” and he does not expect that to distort competitio­n.

High oil prices “may make some management teams more cautious about adding

back in capacity,” he said. “But capacity will come back to reflect the increase in demand as restrictio­ns on travel get removed.”

In September, domestic travel was down 24.3 per cent compared with September 2019, a significan­t improvemen­t from August 2021, when traffic was down 32.6 per cent versus two years ago, Iata said.

Internatio­nal passenger demand in September was 69.2 per cent below September 2019, fractional­ly worse than the 68.7 per cent decline recorded in August, amid continuing border closures and quarantine mandates.

Middle Eastern airlines experience­d a 67.1 per cent drop in overall passenger travel last month compared with September 2019, slightly improved over the 68.9 per cent decrease in August, versus the same month in 2019.

Capacity declined 52.6 per cent and load factor slipped 23.1 percentage points to 52.2 per cent.

Air cargo demand continued

Middle Eastern airlines experience­d a 67.1% drop in overall passenger travel last month compared with September 2019

to be well above pre-crisis levels, although capacity constraint­s persist. Global freight demand, measured in cargo tonne-kilometres, was up 9.1 per cent last month compared with September 2019.

“There is a benefit from supply chain congestion as manufactur­ers turn to air transport for speed,” Mr Walsh said.

“But severe capacity constraint­s continue to limit the ability of air cargo to absorb extra demand.”

If this is not addressed, bottleneck­s in the supply chain will slow the economic recovery from Covid-19.

“Government­s must act to relieve pressure on global supply chains and improve their overall resilience,” he said.

 ?? Reuters ?? ‘The industry has no choice but to reflect this into ticket prices,’ said Willie Walsh, director general of Iata
Reuters ‘The industry has no choice but to reflect this into ticket prices,’ said Willie Walsh, director general of Iata

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