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Pan-African LCC model doesn’t work – fastjet ceo

27 Jun 2018 - by Hilka Birns
Comments | 0

A ONE-size-fits-all,

European-style, panAfrican

Low Cost Carrier

(LCC) model does not

work in Africa because of

continued protectionism

and regulatory constraints

imposed by separate

African states, says fastjet

ceo, Nico Bezuidenhout.

He was speaking at the

recent AviaDev Aviation

Development Conference

held in Cape Town.

“When you are dealing

with 54 independent

states and 54 different

AOC’s (air operator’s

certificates), the ambition

to be a pan-African carrier

is quite grandiose if you

have a single cookie-cutter

type of approach,” he

said. Instead, fastjet was

now acting as regional

feeder carrier, he said,

“with the cost advantage

of focusing on aircraft

utilisation and people

productivity”.

Nico said market

access had been

“one of [his] biggest

challenges, frustrations

and disappointments at

fastjet”. “There needs

to be more conviction,

well beyond the Single

African Air Transport

Market (SAATM). There

needs to be action

towards a greater level

of standardisation at civil

aviation authority level,”

he said.

His views were echoed

during a panel discussion

about the future of LCC’s

in Africa. Sylvain Bosc,

fastjet chief commercial

officer, said the SAATM

made no real impact on

LCCs as it applied to

intra-continental travel

while LCCs mainly served

domestic markets. For

intra-continental LCC’s

to have a future, more

African countries needed

to provide a level playing

field with their state

carriers and stable

economic environments

conducive to private

sector investment.

Girma Wake, former

ceo of Ethiopian Airlines

and former chairman of

RwandAir, said LCCs in

Africa operated in a high

cost environment, their

costs being the same as

those of legacy carriers,

including a high fuel price

and crippling airport taxes,

which prevented proper

LCC operations.

Gwenvael RonsinHardy,

senior project

manager of EGIS Airport

Operation, advised African

governments to incentivise

LCCs. Africa World Airline

commercial head, Richard

Kyereh, suggested African

governments and airports

cut their aviation charges,

while Ahmed Aly, ceo of

Nile Air, pointed out that

visa restrictions presented

a major hurdle to LCC

development in Africa.

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