Arab News

Three airlines interested in Air Berlin assets: CEO

Insolvent German airline aims for deal with at least two buyers by end of September

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FRANKFURT: Insolvent German airline Air Berlin aims to strike deals to sell assets to two or more buyers by the end of September, before a government loan keeping its planes in the air runs out, its chief executive said.

The group is in talks with a total of three aviation firms, including Lufthansa, German newspaper Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) quoted Thomas Winkelmann as saying in its Thursday edition.

All three are “reputable in terms of their finances, sufficient­ly large to offer Air Berlin a secure future and are interested in keeping Germany as a base of operations,” he said, without naming any of the interested parties.

Air Berlin, Germany’s second-largest airline, filed for bankruptcy protection on Tuesday after key shareholde­r Etihad Airways withdrew funding following years of losses, leaving valuable runway slots up for grabs.

The insolvency comes as thousands of Germans take summer holidays, and just ahead of a September general election.

The German government granted a bridging loan of €150 million to allow Air Berlin to keep its planes in the air for three months and secure the jobs of its 7,200 workers in Germany while negotiatio­ns go on.

The move offers Lufthansa and rivals a chance to acquire slots at airports such as Berlin Tegel and Duesseldor­f, with Germany’s largest airline keen to defend its domestic position against expansion by low-cost rival Ryanair.

According to Winkelmann, the negotiatio­ns also include assets of Air Berlin unit Niki, which Etihad had agreed to buy for €300 million ($354 million) earlier this year.

Redaktions­Netzwerk Deutschlan­d (RND), a group which represents German newspapers, cited government sources as saying that Lufthansa, its budget carrier Eurowings and Condor would likely snap up Air Berlin’s most valuable landing slots.

It said a few slots could also go to Ryanair, which has filed a complaint with German and EU competitio­n authoritie­s over the insolvency process, which its chief executive describes as a “conspiracy.”

Lufthansa has confirmed it is in talks to take over parts of Air Berlin’s business, while a source has said easyJet was also part of the negotiatio­ns.

Thomas Cook’s German airline Condor said on Wednesday it was ready to play “an active role” in Air Berlin’s restructur­ing, without being more specific.

Germany’s Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt said the asset sales were an opportunit­y for the country’s aviation sector to bolster its footprint.

“The opportunit­y should be seized to strategica­lly position the 140 aircraft, the capacities and the employees of Air Berlin and strengthen the position of Germany’s aviation sector in the internatio­nal market,” German daily Bild quoted him as saying.

 ??  ?? Air Berlin filed for bankruptcy protection after key shareholde­r Etihad Airways withdrew funding following years of losses. (AFP)
Air Berlin filed for bankruptcy protection after key shareholde­r Etihad Airways withdrew funding following years of losses. (AFP)

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