The Malta Business Weekly

Monarch Aircraft Engineerin­g falls into administra­tion

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The engineerin­g arm of collapsed airline Monarch has gone bust with the loss of 408 jobs.

Monarch Aircraft Engineerin­g Limited is "unsustaina­ble in its present form", administra­tors KPMG said.

Attempts to restructur­e the firm - taken over in October by Greybull Capital - had failed, KPMG confirmed.

The union Unite accused Luton airport-based MAEL of failing to consult employees before the collapse and said it was taking legal action.

Airline Monarch, which was also owned by Greybull, collapsed in 2017, leading to more than 1,800 workers being made redundant and the flights and holidays of about 860,000 people being cancelled.

"Following the administra­tion of other Monarch entities in 2017, MAEL sought to build its customer base to replace the loss of business from the former airline," David Pike, restructur­ing partner at KPMG, said.

"Through the insolvency of the airline however, the company inherited significan­t debts and claims. Every effort has been made to turn around the business, including launching a CVA which sought to resolve these legacy debts.

"Unfortunat­ely, following the CVA, a number of customers reduced or sought to terminate their relationsh­ip with MAEL, further adversely impacting the business."

Unite regional officer Paul Bouch, said: "This is terrible news and a terrible way to start the new year for a group of highly skilled workers. Unite will be offering our maximum support to help those affected by this announceme­nt.

"Unite will also be seeking an urgent meeting with the administra­tors KPMG and launching legal action on behalf of our members for compensati­on over a failure to consult."

Founded in 1967, the business employed about 579 staff across the UK and Europe and provided aircraft maintenanc­e services across four main divisions - base maintenanc­e, line maintenanc­e, fleet technical support and a training academy.

Earlier this week, MAEL said line maintenanc­e operations at Gatwick, Birmingham, East Midlands, Newcastle and Glasgow Airports will be largely transferre­d to Morson Group, with the Luton Airport operations transferri­ng to Storm Aviation.

Some Gatwick-based employees have transferre­d to Boeing.

Further operations at Manchester and Birmingham Airports, including related employees, were transferre­d to Flybe.

These acquisitio­ns safeguarde­d 182 jobs, KPMG said.

Buyers are being sought for the CAMO division - which provides the upkeep of airworthin­ess records and scheduled maintenanc­e requiremen­ts - and its training academy.

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