Lufthansa
to tighten its belt with drastic cuts
Germany's
biggest airline Lufthansa is planning drastic cuts in a bid to
increase its annual yield from passenger flights by 900 million
Euros, confirmed a spokesman on Saturday.
12
April, 2012
Lufthansa
will not buy any more planes for the next three years, will cancel
some routes and do away with first class tickets on many long-haul
flights according to a newspaper report.
"Our
return has been constantly sinking over the past years," wrote
Carstan Spohr, director of passenger flights, in a letter to
employees in which he outlined the plans, seen by the Süddeutsche
Zeitung newspaper.
Lufthansa
is struggling against competition from budget airlines the paper
reported on Saturday. Part of the plan will see the airline merge
together with its budget subsidiary German Wings outside of the hubs
of Frankfurt and Munich.
"In
2011 we only gained one percent of our turnover as profit. That this
margin is not sufficient in an investment-intensive branch such as
the airline industry doesn't require any further explanation,"
wrote Spohr.
Unprofitable
flight routes will be cancelled and first class tickets will no
longer be sold for many long-haul flights, confirmed a spokesman on
Saturday.
The
airline, which employs around 65,000 Germans, has not ruled out staff
redundancies, although the spokesman said plans have not yet been
finalised
See
also -
"Cathay
Pacific Airways warned that the airline may have to park aircraft
and reduce flights if weakening demand and high fuel
costs persist.
"The
Hong Kong-based airline says that revenue growth in recent weeks has
been falling 'well short of target' and failing to keep pace
with capacity growth."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.