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SAA ‘no longer subject to conflicting mandates’

20 Apr 2016 - by Hilka Birns
Comments | 0

SAA plans to lower its

fares, fill up its planes,

boost capacity and

improve its operational

efficiencies in order to grow

its business, says chief

commercial officer, Sylvain

Bosc.

Speaking at a Satsa

Western Cape chapter

meeting in Cape Town, he

said SAA was making quick

progress in tackling its

revenue problems and the

“road ahead is clear” now

that it was no longer subject

to conflicting mandates but

had one clear instruction

from Treasury to become

profitable.

SAA is now empowered

to act on a strategy already

devised two-and-a-half years

ago but never implemented

because of governance

challenges. The airline has

also rebuilt its commercial

team with experienced airline

staff and is restructuring its

domestic market business.

“I am very confident that you

will hear a lot more good

news from SAA in the next

few months and years,” said

Sylvain.

He said network cuts

– such as the March 29

withdrawal from major lossmaking

routes Beijing and

Mumbai – would halve SAA’s

operating losses. “Although

we have 80% load factors

[on the India route], the

yields are so low that we

lose money on every flight;

we’re not even covering

the operating costs of the

services. So the earlier we

stop flying there, the better.”

Although Hong Kong is

loss-making, SAA is fighting

to keep the route, its last

remaining Asian route, by

offering more competitive

fares. Axing Hong Kong

would damage SAA’s São

Paulo services because of

through traffic from Brazil,

he said.

Emirates vs Etihad

Sylvain also shed light

on SAA’s unique dual

codesharing relationships

with rival UAE carriers,

Emirates and Etihad, and its

plans with the Abu Dhabibased

airline. While SAA

intends to maintain its longstanding

codeshare with

Emirates, it does not give

SAA reach beyond Dubai on

Emirates’ global network, nor

is Emirates prepared to let

SAA operate its flights to SA.

Etihad, meanwhile, is willing

to operate on an equal basis

hub-to-hub, allowing SAA to

extend its reach and gain

access to attractive fares

on Etihad’s network to Asia.

Etihad, in turn, gains access

to African regional traffic.

“We have not abandoned

Emirates. It’s not a political

but a business decision.”

He said it had become

impossible for SAA to

operate to Asia because

its direct flights could not

compete with the Gulf

carriers.

Ebola fears were also

affecting SAA and United

Airlines’ codeshare flights

from Washington DC,

said Sylvain, because US

passengers avoided routing

via Dakar and preferred

to fly via the Gulf. He said

SAA and Etihad’s codeshare

allowed passengers to clear

US immigration at Abu Dhabi

airport’s US Immigration PreClearance

facility and arrive

at a domestic terminal in

the US.

SAA’s London flights

were breaking even and

its Frankfurt and Munich

services were profitable,

said Sylvain. Consequently,

SAA had no plans to cut its

European routes, especially

since it had re-negotiated

reduced leasing costs of

the fuel-guzzling four-engine

A340s used on those

routes.

He said there was “not

too much appetite in

Pretoria” for new routes,

as these took two to three

years to become profitable.

“Treasury has made it clear

that there is no money

coming our way.”

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