The Borneo Post

Germany’s second-largest airline Air Berlin to cut 1,200 jobs

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BERLIN: Struggling Air Berlin, Germany’s second-largest airline, announced a major restructur­ing plan that shrinks its fleet and cuts 1,200 jobs.

In a statement, the loss-making company said it planned to “concentrat­e its core operations as a dedicated, focused network carrier serving higher-yielding markets, from its two key hubs in Berlin and Dusseldorf”.

Air Berlin said it would provide up to 40 Airbus 320 aircraft to rival Lufthansa, the leading German carrier. It would operate up to 38 of the planes under a six-year agreement beginning in 2017.

“Fewer staff will be required, with up to 1,200 positions becoming redundant,” Air Berlin said in its statement.

Air Berlin said it would operate a core fleet of 75 aircraft from Berlin and Dusseldorf beginning in mid-2017. The carrier had a fleet of 144 planes in June.

Air Berlin also announced it would separate its touristic business into an independen­tly operating business unit “as strategic options are evaluated”.

Lufthansas­eparatelya­nnounced the same 40-aircraft deal, saying it will allow its budget airline Eurowings “to significan­tly expand its capacities and strengthen its position in the European point-topoint air transport market.”

The final agreement is expected to be concluded in the fourth quarter of this year, Lufthansa added, and is subject to the companies’ supervisor­y boards and competitio­n authoritie­s.

Air Berlin chief executive Stefan Pichler said the restructur­ing plan was necessary due to “significan­t external market pressures which dictate a change to our current complicate­d business model.”

“We have to make reductions but we will aim to do so in a supportive manner, offering new opportunit­ies to employees where possible,” he added in the statement.

The company plans to concentrat­e on it profitable long-haul business which will be expanded with new routes and additional frequencie­s, particular­ly to the United States. Last year the company suffered a record loss of 447 million euros (US$501 million).

The company has only survived until now thanks to regular cash injections from Etihad, one of the fast-growing Gulf carriers, which owns 29.1 per cent of its shares. — AFP

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