Ottawa Citizen

Air Canada `confident' government support will be coming

- FRéDéRIC TOMESCO

Despite posting a massive fourth-quarter loss, Air Canada is increasing­ly confident the federal government will soon come through with a financial aid package for the beleaguere­d airline industry.

The net loss was $1.16 billion, or $3.91 per diluted share, Air Canada said Friday in a statement. A year earlier, in the last quarter before COVID -19 affected operations, the carrier had net income of $152 million, or 56 cents a share. Air Canada burned through $1.38 billion of cash, or about $15 million a day, in the last three months of 2020.

Canada's biggest airline has shrunk its network, retired older aircraft and eliminated about 20,000 jobs — more than half of its workforce — to comply with various government-imposed travel restrictio­ns since the pandemic began. On Tuesday, the company said it would lay off another 1,500 employees this month and suspend 17 U.S. and internatio­nal routes.

After reducing capacity by 67 per cent in 2020, Air Canada said Friday it plans to implement a further 85-per-cent cut in the first quarter of 2021 compared with the first quarter of 2019. Its net loss for all of 2020 was $4.65 billion, or $16.47 a share.

“While undeniably grim, results such as these are being reported the world over in our industry due to the impact of COVID-19,” outgoing CEO Calin Rovinescu said Friday as he bemoaned “extremely onerous” government measures.

Faced with restrictio­ns such as a ban on non-essential foreign travellers, global operations from just four airports, no service to the

Caribbean or Mexico through April and mandatory quarantine­s upon arrival, Air Canada “continues to be subjected to perhaps the strictest COVID-19 preventati­ve regime in the Americas,” Citigroup analyst Stephen Trent said in a note to clients.

A “patchwork of new and ever-changing travel restrictio­ns” is “stifling travel demand, impacting our ability to operate or plan, and even preventing us from formulatin­g reliable guidance,” Rovinescu said on a conference call.

Though Canada — unlike all other G7 member nations — has so far resisted calls to help airlines navigate through the pandemic, talks with the federal government offer some promise.

“Basically the discussion­s have picked up the pace,” Rovinescu told financial analysts. “I'm more confident that there can be an outcome now than I was, say, a month ago.”

Still, “even if Canada's government comes through with aid, it seems that an internatio­nal route recovery could take a long time,” said Trent, the Citigroup analyst.

Canada would do well to pattern its aid package after the U.S., which offered its carriers five-year loans and a payroll support program, said Air Canada chief financial officer Michael Rousseau, who will replace Rovinescu as CEO Monday.

The company says a recent study of internatio­nal travellers, conducted with McMaster Health Labs and the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, found that testing can “facilitate the safe relaxation of quarantine­s,” and that a 14-day quarantine is unnecessar­y for more than 99 per cent of passengers.

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