The National - News

Wide-body aircraft part of Flynas flight plan

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Saudi Arabian low-cost airline Flynas plans to operate wide-body aircraft for the first time in its 10-year history as part of a network expansion strategy that could see it service long-haul destinatio­ns such as Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Europe and Africa, its group chief executive said.

The airline is to commence talks with plane manufactur­ers Boeing and Airbus within the next two months with a view to placing a sizeable order for either Boeing 777s or Airbus A330s, plus Airbus’s long-range A321-ER neo, Bander Almohanna said yesterday.

“We are starting now to study long-range A321-ER neos and wide-body jets – we’ll either go with A330 or B777,” Mr Almohanna said.

“We will launch in the next couple of months a campaign for wide-body jets, targeting destinatio­ns that cannot be reached by the existing equipment.” If a deal is reached, it is expected to be for a similar number of aircraft as Flynas’s order placed at the end of 2016 for 120 A320neos, which is due for delivery between the fourth quarter of 2018 and 2026 and intended to replace its outdated fleet of 30 aircraft, predominan­tly A320s.

“We always think big,” Mr Almohanna told The National at the ATM travel conference in Dubai.

Operating wide-body aircraft would be a wholly new strategy for the airline as it seeks to grow its network in line with the kingdom’s plans to develop its nascent tourism sector.

“The market size of Saudi Arabia is more than the airline so we are not competing with [national airline] Saudia, we are complement­ing it by trying to reach markets not served well by any Saudi airline, and to get people to come direct instead of through connecting traffic,” Mr Almohanna said. The discussion­s with Airbus and

Boeing is a new project, he said, “but our whole strategy is to get aligned with Vision 2030”, which sets a target to attract 15 million pilgrims by 2020, and 30m by 2030.

“Those pilgrims will not be able to come in a convenient way without having an airline like Flynas pushing a strategy, frankly, to have wide-body aircraft.”

Pilgrims are only one segment of Flynas’s target market, he said. Flynas, which is partly owned by Prince Alwaleed bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding, forecasts 10 per cent earnings growth this year after a flat 2016/17 due to sluggish conditions in the regional economy and the wider aviation industry, according to Mr Almohanna.

He said the market was “starting to pick up”.

The airline is targeting an increase in passenger numbers to 7.5m in 2018 from 6.4m in 2017, helped by an anticipate­d 5 per cent rise in Umrah and Haj pilgrims to the kingdom this year.

This summer it will launch five new destinatio­ns – Tbilisi in Georgia, Baku in Azebaijan, Vienna in Austria, Athens in Greece and Trabzon in Turkey. Flights will commence for sale this week.

To facilitate the network expansion, the carrier is in discussion­s with Airbus to fast-track a portion of its A320neo order, Mr Almohanna said.

The airline plans to add five new aircraft to Flynas’s fleet this year, including two A320s and three Boeing 737s.

“We are negotiatin­g with Airbus to advance more than what the slot has given to us,” he said.

“We are also in talks with other lessors to maybe swap their slot with ours to accelerate the planned replacemen­t and support our growth strategy.”

Mr Almohanna declined to comment on the planned initial public offering of around 30 per cent of the company, reportedly targeted for early 2019. The plans are still on the table, he said.

Flynas was reported in February to have appointed Citigroup to advise on a potential IPO, alongside Morgan Stanley and NCB Capital.

 ?? Leslie Pableo for The National ?? Flynas chief executive Bander Almohanna says the airline is not competing with Saudia
Leslie Pableo for The National Flynas chief executive Bander Almohanna says the airline is not competing with Saudia

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