Khaleej Times

Good news for long-distance travellers: Emirates may cut fares

- Andrea Rothman

toulouse — Emirates, known for luxurious planes with showers and bars, is considerin­g adding cheaper long-distance flights in order to better fend off aggressive competitio­n from low-cost carriers.

“More and more internatio­nal network carriers will be starting to move into the long-haul, low-cost market,” Emirates president Tim Clark said at a press briefing in Berlin. “That will be the shape of things to come.”

Traditiona­l airlines such as Deutsche Lufthansa AG and Air France-KLM are trying to expand their low-cost offerings as discount carriers including Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA and Singapore’s Scoot push into the sector’s most lucrative segment.

The rivalry is burdening network carriers such as Emirates at a time when terrorism, the economic slowdown in the Middle East and the UK’s planned exit from the European Union are already

More and more internatio­nal network carriers will be starting to move into the long-haul, low-cost market Tim Clark, President, Emirates

depressing travel and reducing fares. Emirates has exploited its Arabian Gulf location to turn its Dubai hub into an inter-continenta­l crossroads.

Low energy prices have sapped demand for lucrative premium bookings from executives in the oil and gas industry, while terrorist attacks in Europe have scared off travelers from Asia.

Emirates’ fleet comprises about 250 planes, including Airbus A380 superjumbo­s which seat as many as 600 passengers. It’s set to get another 50 A380s and has one Boeing Co. 777-300ER coming each month for the next two years.

The carrier will stick to its orders, in part because the A380’s size gives them a lower per-seat operating cost compared to many of the aircraft operated by the competitio­n, allowing Emirates to break even at a lower ticket price.

New York-based JetBlue Airways Corp, for example, is planning a European expansion as early as 2019 that would rely on much smaller narrow-body planes.

The outlook for fares and passenger demand for the rest of this year “looks fairly flat, but we’ll continue to grow our business because we have planes coming,” Clark said. “Full-service network legacy carriers will have to adjust their businesses for what will be a fierce segment.” — Bloomberg

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Tim Clark at a Press briefing in Berlin. —
Bloomberg Tim Clark at a Press briefing in Berlin. —

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