The National - News

EMIRATES EXPECTS IMPROVED PERFORMANC­E THIS FISCAL YEAR

▶ Airline optimistic following stronger performanc­e as a result of revenue-boosting measures

- DEENA KAMEL AND SARAH TOWNSEND

Emirates airline, the world’s biggest long-haul carrier, expects a stronger performanc­e in its current fiscal year than the last, as it benefits from a reversal in US President Donald Trump’s electronic­s ban and closer ties with low-cost sister service flydubai.

Emirates is also seeking to raise $1.1 billion in an Islamic bond sale, with the proceeds to be used partially for aircraft financing, chairman of Emirates Group Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed said on the sidelines of a GE Aviation event in Dubai yesterday. The airline expects an increase in annual earnings for the fiscal year ending March 31, compared with the previous year.

“It’s going to be better than last year in general,” Sheikh Ahmed said, declining to provide details of the growth.

The projected increase comes after Emirates, which operates the world’s largest fleet of widebody aircraft, saw profits plunge 82 per cent in the 2016-17 fiscal year. The carrier’s performanc­e for the first six months of 201718 financial year was a marked improvemen­t with profits soaring 111 per cent to Dh1.7bn.

The rise in profitabil­ity came as the airline implemente­d a number of measures which included a reduction in its payroll and charging for advance seat selection to boost revenues.

Factors that have weighed on earnings in the last financial year have begun to ease with the lifting of a ban on electronic­s on US flights and travel restrictio­ns on passengers from certain Middle East countries to the United States. The airline is also working to ramp up some of the routes it had scaled back following the restrictio­ns.

Demand on US routes is “much better now,” Sheikh Ahmed said.

Emirates’ move to forge closer links with discount carrier flydubai last year, in the first stirrings of regional airline consolidat­ion in response to economic headwinds, will also help improve its bottom line, analysts said.

“The new network structure between Emirates and flydubai has the potential to improve yields,” said Mark Martin, head of aviation company Martin Consulting in Dubai. Flydubai’s regional flights will help fill Emirates’ jets, particular­ly as African, CIS and South East Asian markets have a need for longhaul connectivi­ty, he said.

“I am very pleased with the co-operation between the two,” Sheikh Ahmed said. “It’s beyond our expectatio­ns and we’ll see it very much closer to the summer schedule.”

Next year, both airlines will have to contend with repairs on one of the two runways at their home base in Dubai Internatio­nal Airport for 45 days. The southern runway will be closed from April 16 to May 30 in 2019, resulting in reduced capacity and airlines scaling back their operations.

“The biggest cut will be on Emirates and flydubai,” Sheikh Ahmed told reporters at the official opening of US conglomera­te GE’s aircraft engine repair facility close to Dubai’s second hub at Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Airport. All operators at Dubai Internatio­nal are being informed in advance in order for schedules to be adjusted, he added.

GE Aviation is expanding its regional presence with a second engine repair and maintenanc­e operations facility in the UAE, where it will support all local carriers including Emirates, flydubai, Air Arabia and Etihad Airways. It did not disclose the value of the investment. The On-Wing Support Centre at Dubai South Aviation District spans 1,500 square metres and is entirely owned and run by GE. Emirates has been operating the other facility in conjunctio­n with GE since 2013.

Around 1,000 GE-manufactur­ed engines power 400 aircraft in the Middle East, the company’s global chief executive John Flannery said on Monday. The firm’s regional expansion comes as the UAE is ramping up efforts to grow its aviation manufactur­ing and maintenanc­e, repair and operations industries.

GE is using new manufactur­ing technologi­es including 3D-printing to develop a new turbo propeller aircraft engine over the next two years, Mr Flannery said. The 3D-printing mechanism is expected to help GE – which is undergoing a hefty restructur­ing after suffering its worst financial slump in 125 years – trim costs by around 5 per cent.

The new engine will give airline customers a 20 per cent improvemen­t in fuel burn and 10 per cent more power output, Mr Flannery said.

US-listed GE’s stock fell 12 per cent in February, marking the 12th consecutiv­e monthly decline and representi­ng the group’s biggest losing streak on record, according to Bloomberg. Shareholde­r losses amounted to $138bn as the group battles falling demand for industrial equipment and other factors.

Mr Flannery was appointed as chief executive in mid-2017 to cut costs and to help the company recover.

The new network structure between Emirates and flydubai has the potential to improve yields SHEIKH AHMED BIN SAEED

 ?? Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed, chairman of Emirates Group, at the launch of GE facility at Dubai South today
Chris Whiteoak / The National Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed, chairman of Emirates Group, at the launch of GE facility at Dubai South today

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