Home
FacebookSearchMenu
  • Subscribe (free)
  • Subscribe (free)
  • News
  • Features
  • TravelInfo
  • Columns
  • Community
  • Sponsored
  • Contact Us
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send Us News

Share

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

High costs, low confidence

01 Jul 2024 - by Kiran Molloy
Comments | 0

African airlines are plagued by a range of expenses including high operational costs, large statutory charges, unstable and soft home currencies, delays in receiving new aircraft and rising jet fuel prices. These costs, along with the lack of affordable available finance (due to the small size of the market) mean that growth for the industry on the continent is stunted.

 

“African airlines have a relatively high operational cost base, but Africa has limited disposable income and thus there is low propensity to spend on air travel,” says Joachim Vermooten, University of Johannesburg Aviation Economist and Researcher. He was echoing the concern expressed by IATA in its Airline Profitability Outlook for 2024.

 

Operational costs

“Africa has a rapidly growing population and only accounts for about 2% of the global aviation market,” explains Linden Birns, MD of PR consultancy Plane Talking.

“However, it also has low per capita income across the continent, combined with rising costs, including jet fuel, labour costs and more.”

According to IATA’s Airline Profitability Outlook for 2024, jet fuel is expected to average US$113,8/barrel (R2 070) in 2024, translating into a global fuel bill of US$291 billion (R5,3 trillion), accounting for 31% of all operating costs.

Additionally, airlines’ global employment is expected to reach 3,07 million which exceeds the 2,93 million employed in 2019, and so the overall cost of labour is expected to grow 7,6% to US$214 billion (R3,9 trillion) in 2024. 

Birns explains that statutory charges for the use of airports, airspace navigation service providers and weather service providers, fees by aviation safety regulators and tourism bodies, and the EU’s latest range of carbon taxes, further impede African airlines.

“Most of these fixed costs are incurred in US dollars, pounds or euros, but for African airlines, most revenue is generated in softer local currencies. This widens the gap between revenue and costs,” says Birns.

In AFRAA’s 2022 published feature entitled ‘The burning questions on aircraft financing in Africa’, Boeing says there are a number of hurdles to be addressed when financing aviation assets in sub-Saharan Africa, including post-pandemic recovery, finance costs, finance availability and appetite among financiers. Henok Teferra Shawl, MD for Africa at Boeing, told Travel News on June 17 that the aircraft producer still saw as critical the issue of aircraft financing for African carriers.

Some aviation experts believe that Africa’s demand for air travel is grossly overestimated.

While Africa’s population is large, with pockets of wealth, its continental GDP remains low, calling into question the general affordability of air travel and the demand for it, says Birns.

“The key driver for me that brings about the requirement for air travel in the first instance is affordability. Air access and the supply of air access has to follow the market. It's not the other way around,” Rodger Foster, CEO and MD of Airlink, explained during a recent panel discussion at Aviadev in Windhoek, (Aviadev is an African aviation conference).

IATA has recorded over 400 airlines across the continent, says Foster, adding that when the size of the sub-Saharan market is compared with the sheer number of air travel providers, it is unsustainable.

“I think we've got far too many competing airlines and if we are ever going to develop an industry premised on viability and on economies and efficiencies of scale, there needs to be rationalisation, consolidation and collaboration,” says Foster.

 

Challenges

According to Birns, financing is also hindered by inflation and high interest rates that impact the cost of finance and loans, as well as high insurance premiums because of risk profile.

In the AFRAA publication mentioned above, Boeing says most financiers take into account a number of factors when choosing investments, and African airlines can project a high-risk profile.

Perceived risk can be managed to a greater degree with thorough preparation and providing comprehensive information to financiers, recommends Boeing.

 

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.

‘Women of Doha’ cleared to sue QR

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

DBN tourism levy: ‘The opposite of what is needed’

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Fastjet to launch Bulawayo-Vic Falls flight

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Sunlife takes over management of Mauritius resort

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Feature: First Car Rental zooms into Namibia and Cape Winelands

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

New Cambodia airport nears completion

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Virgin Voyages offers crime-themed cruise

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Air travel round-up: BA expands short-haul network

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Latest Changes on Travelinfo (24Jul'25)

24 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Grenades on board: a fine mess

23 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Pilot wellbeing at core of FlySafair talks

23 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

EES roll-out dates and ETIAS price hike

23 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Kinshasa Airport set for major overhaul

23 Jul 2025
Comments | 0
  • Load more

FeatureClick to view

The Mediterranean July 2025

Poll

Does your company run an internship programme for new entrants in the industry?
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Travel News on Facebook
  • eTNW Twitter
  • Travel News RSS
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send Us News