Khaleej Times

Airports of the future

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Face scans and robot baggage handlers at the airports will soon become reality as new technology is rolled out. Dubai and Abu Dhabi airports will lead a technology transforma­tion in the Middle East airports.

paris — A dogfight over the assets of troubled Alitalia and airberlin heralds a new shake-up in the European airline industry — but unless other carriers cut costs they may meet a similar fate themselves, analysts warn.

Facing insolvency, both airlines may now be snapped up whole or carved up by rivals interested in getting ahold of their planes and airport landing slots.

But the overhaul is unlikely to end there. “The sector will continue to consolidat­e because the business models are in the process of changing,” said Stephane Albernhe, managing partner at Archery Consulting.

“It is an underlying trend in Europe and the United States, where four ‘consolidat­ors’ are in the lead: American, Delta, United, and low-cost Southwest.”

For Europe, consultant Jerome Bouchard at Oliver Wyman believes that eventually “there will be an oligopoly centred around Lufthansa, IAG and Air France-KLM”.

Internatio­nal Airlines Group is the parent company of British Airways, Aer Lingus, Iberia and Vueling.

Before major consolidat­ion can take place, however, Bouchard believes the airlines need to find a business model where they are no longer operating on the brink of bankruptcy.

Alitalia and airberlin had both been operating at losses for years. Low-cost airlines had eaten away at Alitalia’s market share in particular, with Ireland’s Ryanair having eclipsed it as the largest operator in Italy.

Low-cost Ryanair has soared to become Europe’s top airline by number of passengers. Fellow budget operators easyJet and Norwegian are also major players.

While former flag carriers still offer a full range of services on both

The sector will continue to consolidat­e because the business models are in the process of changing Stephane Albernhe, managing partner at Archery Consulting

medium- and long-range flights, low-cost airlines offer fewer services and until recently have focused mostly on shorter journeys.

“It is the never-ending battle between a super generalist and super specialist,” said Bouchard.

The situation is similar in Asia, where carriers such as Cathay Pacific and Japan Airlines have seen profits plunge amid intense competitio­n from lower-cost rivals.

Australia’s Qantas was able to staunch the red only by undertakin­g in 2014 a major restructur­ing that saw it axe thousands of jobs, sell off dozens of aircraft and defer orders for new ones.

The pressure on former national carriers will only continue as low-cost airlines push into the long-haul segment, which has until now been an area where they enjoyed comfortabl­e profits.

With profit margins already tight, airlines are going to have to attack their high fixed costs on planes, fuel and labour.

“Worldwide competitio­n is so fierce with yields declining continuous­ly that cost reduction is paramount,” said Mark Bobbi, an analyst at IHS Markit.

In this context “mergers, takeovers and joint ventures will be increasing­ly important,” said John Strickland, director of JLS Consulting.

Airlines took their first step towards consolidat­ion in the 1990s with alliances which allowed them to share flights and run joint loyalty programmes. — AFP

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