Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways to sell 38 planes to cut costs

- JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Abu Dhabi’s longtroubl­ed Etihad Airways said Tuesday that it would sell 38 aircraft to an investment firm and a leasing company in a deal valued at $1 billion, the latest cost-cutting measure by the United Arab Emirates’ national carrier.

Etihad said that it would sell 38 aircraft — 22 Airbus A330s and 16 Boeing 777300ERs — in the deal with investment firm KKR and leasing firm Altavair Air-Finance. KKR said the Boeing 777-300ERs will “be leased back to Etihad upon purchase in early 2020,” while the Airbus A330s will go to internatio­nal clients.

Etihad described the move as being in line with “the third year of its transforma­tion program.”

“The deal offers us flexibilit­y while ensuring we stand by our sustainabi­lity targets and maintain a fleet of the most fuel-efficient, technologi­cally advanced aircraft,” the airline said in a statement.

Etihad’s website lists itself as having a fleet of 102 aircraft. It no longer lists its A330s among its fleet, having said it would begin phasing those aircraft out. The 16 Boeing 777s it will sell and lease back represent 15% of its current fleet.

Since 2016, Etihad has lost $4.75 billion as its strategy of aggressive­ly buying stakes in airlines from Europe to Australia to compete against Emirates and fellow rival Qatar Airways exposed the company to major losses.

Etihad lost $1.28 billion in 2018. It has yet to release results for 2019.

In the time since 2016, it has embarked on a cost-cutting initiative and recently announced that it would restructur­e planned aircraft purchases from Airbus and Boeing.

The airline reported revenue of $5.86 billion in 2018, down from $6 billion in 2017. It flew 17.8 million passengers last year, down from 18.6 million in the year before.

Previously, Etihad reported losses of $1.52 billion for 2017 and $1.95 billion in 2016. It blamed “challengin­g market conditions and effects of an increase in fuel prices” in part for the loss in 2018.

Abu Dhabi’s rulers started Etihad in 2003, competing with the establishe­d Dubai government-owned carrier Emirates that flies out of Dubai Internatio­nal Airport only 70 miles away. In 2018, Etihad began lending pilots to Emirates under a new program.

Both Emirates and Etihad have seen business hurt by President Donald Trump’s travel bans affecting Muslimmajo­rity nations. That’s even with Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Airport having a U.S. Customs and Border Protection preclearan­ce facility, allowing passengers arriving in the U.S. to bypass inspection after landing. It’s the only such facility in the Mideast.

The two airlines are government-owned carriers in the United Arab Emirates, a federation of seven sheikhdoms on the Arabian Peninsula. Both compete in the long-haul carrier market, using their nation’s location between East and West to their advantage.

Both airlines continued to fly to China during the ongoing outbreak of the new coronaviru­s, even as other Western and Arab airlines stopped. On Monday, United Arab Emirates civil aviation authoritie­s halted all flights to China, except for those going to Beijing.

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