Emirates says to shift planes eastwards amid US demand slump – Transport

1492719929 Tim Clark

Emirates will shift aircraft to destinations in Malaysia, Oceania and Africa as the airline scrambles for alternatives after eliminating 25 weekly flights to the US in the fallout from President Donald Trump’s travel restrictions.

ADVERTISEMENT

Planes on US routes usually fly more than 80 percent full in the summer season but are now “percentage points” less than that, hurting the flights’ profitability, Emirates President Tim Clark said in an interview at company headquarters in Dubai. The airliners might be redeployed to markets ranging from countries in the Pacific to Africa and Europe, he said.

Emirates can reinstate the capacity if the US relaxes  H-1B work visa and general entry rules, helping traffic, Clark said. “Unintended consequences need to be dealt with by the US,” as it’s also losing out on “pretty robust and powerful spending” capacity of families making leisure visits from the Middle East, he said.

The state-owned carrier outlined plans Wednesday to scale back capacity as of May on five of the 12 US routes it serves, citing the country’s tightening visa restrictions and a ban on carrying personal electronics from some locations, including Emirates’ Dubai hub. The capacity cutbacks mark an unusual move for an airline that in recent years was known for huge plane orders to add flights and routes across its network, which currently comprises 155 destinations.

The flight reductions are also a sign that Emirates is backing down from an ambitious expansion that Clark was pushing in defiance of US competitors’ efforts to fend off Persian Gulf airlines from their home market. Chief Commercial Officer Thierry Antinori outlined plans in 2013 to serve 15 US cities by 2018, and Clark predicted three years ago that the market would become one of Emirates’ three largest sources of revenue.

Emirates’ traffic growth rates have already been fading. The carrier posted its first annual revenue decline in a decade for the 12 months ended March 2016, and sales since then have been hurt by lower oil prices reducing Middle East business travel as well as terrorism attacks in western Europe, Turkey and North Africa that have discouraged tourism.

Source link

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Why Lok Sabha Election For 20 Seats In Kerala Is Crucial For Future Of Left In Indian Politics? // Liverpool FC continues international growth with first official retail partnership in South Korea // CapBridge Shares Insights on the Recent Launch of Digital Asset ETFs in Hong Kong // Downpours in Oman and UAE Likely Amplified by Warming Planet // TPBank and Backbase Clinch ‘Best Omni-Channel Digital CX Solution’ at the Digital CX Awards 2024 // Emirates to Embrace Electric Seaglider Travel // AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference // World Football Federation Secures Sponsorship From Saudi Oil Giant // NetApp’s 2024 Cloud Complexity Report Reveals AI Disrupt or Die Era Unfolding Globally // Moomoo Wins “Digital CX Awards 2024” by The Digital Banker // DIFC Courts Cement Role as Top English Dispute Resolution Choice // Forward Fashion’s Artelli Presents: Nobuyoshi Araki’s “Paradise” Starting from April 27th, at K11 MUSEA // Oman Seeks Growth Through Strategic Economic Alliances // ByteDance Eyes US Shutdown for TikTok // GE Jun, Chairman and CEO of TOJOY, Delivers an Inspiring Speech: “Leaping Ahead Again” // Nano-Care Deutschland AG launches next generation of sustainable PFAS-free oleophobic coatings // Crypto Market Poised for Boom as Baby Boomers Embrace Bitcoin ETFs // UN Commends Vietnam’s Progress on Climate Goals // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology //