Gulf Today

Lufthansa plans faster plane groundings after record loss

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BERLIN: Lufthansa may permanentl­y ground more jets to emerge leaner from the coronaviru­s pandemic, the German airline group said, as it reported a record 6.7 billion euro ($8.10 billion) loss for 2020.

The group, which also owns Austrian Airlines, Swiss and Eurowings, trimmed its 2021 capacity plans as COVID-19 disruption drags on, but held out hope for a summer upturn.

“We are examining whether all aircraft older than 25 years will remain on the ground permanentl­y,” Chief Executive Carsten Spohr said, pledging to make 2021 “a year of redimensio­ning and modernisat­ion” for the company.

He also confirmed the expected retirement of Lufthansa’s eight remaining Airbus A380 superjumbo­s - a younger but fuel-thirsty model that is harder to fill in a downturn.

Lufthansa reported a 1.14 billion-euro ($1.38 billion) fourth-quarter net loss with a 1.29 billion deficit in adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT). Revenue fell 71% to 2.59 billion euros.

Its shares were down 2.3% at 12.49 euros as of 1230 GMT in Frankfurt, after gaining nearly 15% since the start of the year on recovery hopes.

Bernstein analyst Daniel Roeska said that despite “tangible progress” on cost-cutting at its airline subsidiari­es, “Lufthansa mainline is still stuck at step one” with short-term crisis union agreements. “More needs to happen - and faster,” Roeska said.

Lufthansa cut its global workforce by 20% to 110,000 in 2020 and is seeking to eliminate another 10,000 German jobs or equivalent wage costs.

The group, which received a government­backed 9 billion euro bailout last June, said it will operate at 40-50% of pre-crisis capacity this year, lowering its earlier 40-60% ambition.

Summer travel will nonetheles­s pick up swiftly whenever restrictio­ns are eased, Spohr said, and Lufthansa stands ready to restore 70% of its schedule “in the short term”.

The group’s full-year net loss of 6.73 billion euros was on 13.59 billion euros in revenue, down 63%.

The company predicted a narrower 2021 EBIT loss than last year’s 5.45 billion euros.

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