Bangkok Post

Norwegian Air appoints new CEO

- TERJE SOLSVIK VICTORIA KLESTY

OSLO: Loss-making Norwegian Air has appointed Jacob Schram as chief executive officer to take charge of the budget carrier’s restructur­ing as it struggles with a low-cost, long-haul model in an overcrowde­d industry.

Schram, who does not have a background in aviation, joins Norwegian from management consulting company McKinsey & Co and was previously a top executive in the petrol retail industry.

He replaces Bjoern Kjos, Norwegian’s founder who stepped down in July having built the carrier into Europe’s third-largest budget airline, shaking up the market for transatlan­tic travel with low fares to challenge traditiona­l carriers such as British Airways.

Schram, 57, will be tasked with cutting costs and making the airline profitable again after the breakneck expansion left it with hefty losses and high debts, forcing it to repeatedly ask shareholde­rs for new funds to stave off collapse.

In 2010, he led the process to list Statoil ASA’s petrol station business, Statoil Fuel and Retail, later acquired by Canada’s Couche-Tard to become Circle K.

“Petrol retailing is not the aviation industry, but it’s still a tough business that’s gone through restructur­ing,” Schram said at a news conference.

“There have been many cost cutting programmes, transforma­tion programmes in Statoil Fuel and Retail and in McKinsey projects, so I’m used to working with that,” he later told Reuters, adding that he used to clean airplanes as a teenager at the old Oslo airport and was “fascinated” by the airline industry.

That industry is currently plagued by overcapaci­ty which has led to the collapse of several airlines this year alone.

While Norwegian has prioritise­d profits over growth this year, it has been hampered by the global grounding of Boeing’s 737 MAX aircraft and long-running technical problems with Rolls Royce engines on Boeing Dreamliner­s.

Disruption­s to its fleet, such as leasing replacemen­t aircraft for its 18 Boeing MAX, added around 300 million crowns ($32.7 million) to its costs in the third quarter.

Norwegian has been run on an interim basis since July by chief financial officer Geir Karlsen, who has raised cash, postponed debt payments, sold off assets and cut unprofitab­le routes to keep the company aloft. Karlsen will continue as CFO. “The two of them are a dream team to me,” chairman Niels Smedegaard said of Schram and Karlsen.

Amid a flurry of deals to save Norwegian, Karlsen in October announced plans for a Chinese leasing firm to take stakes in its fleet, and partnered with US carrier JetBlue to feed passengers into each others’ network.

The company has a similar deal in Europe with Britain’s easyJet.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Jacob Schram, new CEO of Norwegian Air, smiles during a news conference in Oslo on Wednesday.
REUTERS Jacob Schram, new CEO of Norwegian Air, smiles during a news conference in Oslo on Wednesday.

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