The Jerusalem Post

Airlines struggle with global pilot shortage

- • By JAMIE FREED, CHAYUT SETBOONSAR­NG and ALLISON LAMPERT

SYDNEY/BANGKOK/MONTREAL (Reuters) – A growing shortage of airline pilots is putting the industry’s recent growth at risk, as planes sit idle, higher salaries cut into profits, and unions across the globe push for more benefits.

Carriers such as Emirates and Australia’s Qantas Airways have poured resources into hiring, but struggled in recent months to use their jets as often as their business plans dictate, because of training bottleneck­s.

Pilots at Ireland’s Ryanair are forming unions across Europe, seeking better working conditions, and those at Air France are striking over pay.

In the United States, pilots who took pay cuts when carriers went bankrupt a decade ago are receiving big raises under new contracts, now that airlines are posting strong profits.

The surge in employee costs, which rival fuel as the biggest strain on an airline’s finances, comes as higher oil prices are already squeezing margins. Airlines say ticket prices have not kept pace with costs.

“These cost pressures are not about to stop imminently,” Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n chief economist Brian Pearce said at the trade group’s annual meeting in Sydney, where IATA lowered its airline profit forecast by 12%, citing higher fuel and labor costs.

“It’s the symptom of a wider issue. If we look at developed economies, unemployme­nt in the OECD has fallen to lows, and we are starting to get wage pressures, of which pilot shortages are a symptom in our industry,” he told airline bosses, many of whom expressed concern about a shortage, on the sidelines of the IATA annual meeting this week.

Inflation is beginning to take hold in OECD economies after years of lying dormant, and pilot wages also reflect that, Pearce added.

The high cost of pilot training and several years of earlier hiring freezes in markets like the United States and Australia have deterred potential aviators from entering an industry that Boeing says will need 637,000 more pilots over the next 20 years.

IATA estimates airline traffic will nearly double during that period, so companies like Canadian training group CAE and L3 Technologi­es are building new flight simulators to cash in on training demand.

Plane makers Airbus and Boeing are also expanding into services like training, where margins are potentiall­y higher than building jets.

And some airlines are planning to expand in-house training programs. Qantas says it will invest A$20 million ($15.26m.) in a new flying school to ensure a supply of pilots amid high turnover in its regional arm QantasLink. Emirates opened a $135m. flight training academy in November for up to 600 cadets.

“We have a social responsibi­lity,” Qantas Domestic CEO Andrew David said. “We can continue to take pilots from smaller players in this country and elsewhere, but we need to give back, and that is part of what we are doing here as well.”

Other airlines are having to look outside their home markets, competing with China, where experience­d foreign captains are in high demand and airlines offer annual salaries of up to $314,000 – tax free.

“There is not so much a shortage of pilots as a rising cost of attracting and retaining the pilots you need, particular­ly the experience­d ones,” said Andrew Herdman, director-general of the Associatio­n of Asia Pacific Airlines. “There is a bidding war going on.”

In countries where average wages are relatively low, pilots are being offered much cushier pay packages than other profession­s because they are internatio­nally mobile and must speak English, the global language of aviation.

SriLankan Airlines has lost a “steady trickle” of pilots to Gulf carriers, SriLankan CEO Suren Ratwatte, who was an Emirates pilot, said.

“We pay pretty well because the pilots going [away from the company] go mainly to the Middle East, and we tend to get very close to Gulf salaries, except [we are] living in Sri Lanka,” he said. “Your lifestyle is pretty decent.”

Thailand’s Bangkok Airways PCL is raising pilot salaries and benefits and hiring foreigners for internatio­nal flying, president Puttipong Prasartton­g-Osot said.

Pilot unions are taking advantage of shortages to ask for better conditions for their members.

Dan Adamus, president of the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n, Canada, said Canadian pilots are generally getting pay raises, although salaries at US mainline carriers are higher than at Air Canada.

 ?? (Benoit Tessier/Reuters) ?? AN AIR FRANCE pilot at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Roissy, France.
(Benoit Tessier/Reuters) AN AIR FRANCE pilot at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Roissy, France.

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