Kuwait Times

US airlines burn through $10bn a month as traffic plummets

More than 3,000 US aircraft grounded after COVID-19 pandemic

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WASHINGTON: US airlines are collective­ly burning more than $10 billion in cash a month and averaging fewer than two dozen passengers per domestic flight because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, industry trade group Airlines for America said in prepared testimony seen by Reuters ahead of a US Senate hearing today.

Even after grounding more than 3,000 aircraft, or nearly 50 percent of the active US fleet, the group said its member carriers, which include the four largest US airlines, were averaging just 17 passengers per domestic flight and 29 passengers per internatio­nal flight.

“The US airline industry will emerge from this crisis a mere shadow of what it was just three short months ago,” the group’s chief executive, Nicholas Calio, will say, according to his prepared testimony.

Net booked passengers have fallen by nearly 100percent year-on-year, according to the testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee. The group warned that if air carriers were to refund all tickets, including those purchased as nonrefunda­ble or those canceled by a passenger instead of the carrier, “this will result in negative cash balances that will lead to bankruptcy.”

Separately, Eric Fanning, who heads the Aerospace Industries Associatio­n, will ask Congress to consider providing “temporary and targeted assistance for the ailing aviation manufactur­ing sector,” in testimony made public by the group. Boeing Co said last week it would cut 16,000 jobs by the end of the year, while GE Aviation plans to cut up to 13,000 jobs and airplane supplier Spirit AeroSystem­s Holdings Inc is cutting 1,450 jobs.

Fanning will say at the hearing that “there is strong support in our industry for a private-public partnershi­p to protect jobs and keep at-risk employees on the payroll through the pandemic,”

He will also raise concerns about some Federal Reserve and US Treasury lending programs that have “conditions that prevent companies from accessing this aid with the speed and flexibilit­y

required.”

‘Difficult path ahead’

US airlines have canceled hundreds of thousands of flights, including 80percent or more of scheduled flights into June as US passenger traffic has fallen by 95percent since March. They are conducting additional cleaning measures and requiring all passengers to wear facial coverings. Calio said airlines “anticipate a long and difficult road ahead . ... History has shown that air transport demand has never experience­d a Vshaped recovery from a downturn.”

The US Treasury has awarded nearly $25 billion in cash grants to airlines to help them meet payroll costs in exchange for them agreeing not to lay off workers through Sept. 30. Major airlines have warned they will likely need to make additional cuts later this year to respond to a long-term decline in travel demand.

United Airlines Co said on Monday it planned to cut at least 3,450 management and administra­tive workers on Oct. 1, or 30percent of those workers and has also said it will reduce hours for thousands of other workers. The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers sued United on Tuesday in US District Court in New York for what it called an “illegal implementa­tion of drastic pay and benefit cuts.”

United said in a statement that the lawsuit was “meritless,” and that the reductions were in compliance with the terms of its $5 billion in federal assistance and its collective bargaining agreements. —Reuters

Airlines carry 17 passengers

per flight

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 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: A United Airlines Airbus A319-100 taxis at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. United Airlines plans to lay off about 30 percent of its managers as the coronaviru­s slows global air travel sharply. —AFP
WASHINGTON: A United Airlines Airbus A319-100 taxis at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. United Airlines plans to lay off about 30 percent of its managers as the coronaviru­s slows global air travel sharply. —AFP
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