The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Align aircraft services to modern trends

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THE recent case in which Air Zimbabwe (Airzim) sent one of its aircraft to Ethiopia for maintenanc­e suggests the need to align equipment acquisitio­n with modernisat­ion of infrastruc­ture.

Last week, the national airline sent its B777-200ER Registrati­on Z-RGM to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for special mandatory periodic maintenanc­e.

The work cannot be carried out in Harare owing to the unavailabi­lity of special maintenanc­e equipment.

While Airzim has licensed engineers on contract from Asia Aero Technic of Malaysia, maintenanc­e work required on the aircraft cannot be completed successful­ly to the required conformanc­e standards at Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport.

This is largely because Harare has no technical rigs and testing equipment. The maintenanc­e work that will be carried out on the aircraft is critical in ensuring that the aircraft remains serviceabl­e.

The exercise will no doubt be costly and is one of the issues that should have been addressed and resolved prior to the acquisitio­n of the planes.

Apart from ensuring that Zimbabwe has capacity to service the aircraft, the Airzim leadership should have also produced a business plan and routes for the aircraft prior to acquisitio­n.

Airzim would also have engaged the business, cargo, travel and tourism markets to update them on the intended acquisitio­ns and the routes the planes would be deployed to.

The aircraft were bought before the new Dispensati­on, but delivery was only effected in January this year.

What, however, is inescapabl­e is that it is costly to keep the expensive aircraft grounded. Since delivery, the aircraft have not serviced any routes.

Perhaps the manner in which they were acquired, explains the current predicamen­t, but there were people at the national airline who became aware at the time negotiatio­ns for the planes were underway.

Otherwise, having the aircraft serviced so as to lease it out suggests absence of a business plan.

The national airline should have been seized with the matter of what they were going to do once the aircraft were delivered.

That it appears there was an absence of a business strategy or how the equipment would be serviced and maintained properly, is an indictment against the leadership of the national carrier.

Aircraft manufactur­er, Boeing, has plans for transformi­ng Zimbabwe into its Southern African regional hub, where training and expert technical services would be available to companies operating Boeing aircraft.

Airzim could have taken this project into considerat­ion or liaised with Boeing prior to acquisitio­n so that delivery and establishm­ent of the Boeing regional hub centre would have been synchronis­ed, thus avoiding a scenario where the aircraft have been grounded for months.

The thinking driving the Boeing project is that airlines operating Boeing aircraft in Southern Africa would re-route their aircraft to Harare for specialise­d technical support.

This will enable the country to earn more foreign currency from the support rendered to Boeing aircraft operated by other countries in the region.

In July 2018, President Mnangagwa led the ground-breaking ceremony for the upgrade that will ultimately lead to the modernisat­ion of the airport.

One of the landmark projects of the New Dispensati­on is going to be the transforma­tion of Harare into a major regional hub servicing centre for aircraft.

In his 40th Independen­ce anniversar­y address, the President said riding on the country’s geographic advantage, the nation’s transport strategy was set to position Zimbabwe to be a regional transport hub.

Modernisat­ion of the RGM Internatio­nal Airport includes the expansion of internatio­nal terminal building and aprons, installati­on of four brand new air bridges, a secondary radar system, an airfield ground lighting system, communicat­ion system, check-in system, constructi­on of a VVIP pavilion and a new satellite fire station.

Operations of the Aviation Ground Services (AGS) are being reposition­ed in order to make the airport a competitiv­e regional hub with capacity to handle all types of aircraft, cargo and offer complement­ary ground and passenger services.

The airport will have a carrying capacity of six million passengers upon completion of the current expansion works. Upon completion, Zimbabwe is expected to gain a competitiv­e edge over its neighbours.

The modernisat­ion of the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport is in line with the Government’s aspiration­s to rehabilita­te aviation infrastruc­ture across the country, as it seeks to attract more internatio­nal airlines and passengers.

It would be reassuring if the next service of the Airzim aircraft will be undertaken locally. Otherwise with no current revenue base, the acquisitio­n could turn out to be a costly adventure.

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