Air passengers face higher fares, fewer flight choices and crowded aircraft as European carriers trim seating capacity growth or cut routes altogether, as they battle to salvage profits and fend off the impact of rising fuel prices.
With jet fuel prices near record highs at the same time as taxes and airport charges rise, airlines are curbing the growth of capacity — the number of seats they make available — and the frequency of some flights to lower costs and not drive away customers already spooked by rising fares.
According to the Association of European Airlines, capacity among its member airlines eased by 4.6 percent in the first half of this year compared with the year-earlier period. However, that decline comes after an increase of almost 23 percent between 2004 and last year, driven by new aircraft ordered by airlines when demand was much stronger than it is now.
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“We have 10 to 20 percent overcapacity in Europe, based on the number of seats offered,” said Philipp Goedeking, managing director and airlines expert at consultancy AlixPartners.
Deutsche Lufthansa, for instance, added more than 50 percent capacity between 2007, the airline industry’s last peak, and last year, according to Reuters data, boosted by the acquisition of carriers — including Brussels Airlines and Austrian Airlines.
The low-cost segment has been growing even faster, with Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair adding 72 percent more seats and British peer easyJet growing 59 percent.
Expansion has slowed dramatically this year, with Lufthansa adding only 2.3 percent capacity in the first half and British Airways (BA) owner IAG 2.6 percent. Easyjet added 5.9 percent more seats in the first nine months of its fiscal year.
SHRINKING FLEET
Some airlines are now retiring older aircraft sooner than planned, delaying delivery of new planes or selling some smaller aircraft to shrink their fleet, but none want to be caught out with too little capacity when demand picks up again.
Australia’s struggling flagship carrier Qantas Airways this week canceled orders for 35 Boeing Dreamliner jets as part of a plan to cut costs at its loss-making international business.
Most airlines saw profitability — in terms of revenue per seat offered — drop during the global financial crisis as demand for air travel fell faster than they could cut capacity. Since then, they have regained ground, but there is concern a further deterioration of European economies will lead to a repeat.
Spanish carrier Iberia’s unit revenue, for instance, dropped to 0.05 euro in 2009 from 0.06 euro in 2007. IAG, the group created by the merger of Iberia and BA, had unit revenue of 0.0672 euro in the first half of this year.
Lufthansa still plans to grow this year, but has cut its capacity expansion plans to 0.5 percent from 12 percent. Air France-KLM has also scaled down capacity growth, having already shrunk 20 percent before the crisis.
Many airlines are focusing on axing their less-profitable routes, especially short-haul services to secondary cities in Europe, hitting travelers who rely on regional airports — such as Britons with second homes on the continent.
Nicholas Blair, from Leicester in central England, bought a holiday home in the Loire region of western France five years ago, partly because Ryanair had regular flights to nearby Nantes from his local airport. However, the Irish carrier stopped services to Nantes late last year.
“It used to take us four hours door to door flying from East Midlands airport, but now we either have to fly to Dublin and change flights or go to Limoges, hire a car and drive, which makes it so much more inconvenient and much more expensive. One of the reasons we bought the property was because of the convenient and cheap travel to it,” Blair said.
In Britain, regional airports have also had European services cut by airlines because higher airport charges that came into force this year have made it unprofitable for budget carriers to offer short flights to neighboring countries.
They have also been hit by the UK’s air passenger duty and the winding down of low-cost carrier Bmibaby after its parent was bought by IAG. It plans to scrap several Bmi routes — including to Amritsar in India and Casablanca in Morocco — after the summer, due to “poor revenue performance.”
EasyJet recently announced plans to close its base at Madrid airport next year due to a combination of overcapacity, leading to low revenue per passenger, and rising airport charges.
FEEDER FLIGHTS
Ryanair routinely justifies route changes with the airport charges and taxes it pays, but it has shifted capacity in recent months from Spain and increased it in faster-growing Poland.
Legacy carriers like BA make most of their profit on long-haul flights and need to offer domestic and European flights to bring passengers to their hubs to fill long-haul seats.
“If 70 to 80 percent of an airline’s passengers are transferring to other flights, you cannot do without feeder flights,” Goedeking said.
European airlines, stung by an economic crisis sweeping the continent, are also keen to add services to emerging markets in Asia and fast-growing nations in eastern Europe to tap into growing passenger numbers that can fill up bigger planes.
BA recently announced new routes from London Heathrow to Seoul and is competing with easyJet to win rights for 14 weekly flights from London Gatwick to Moscow, using slots formerly held by Bmi.
Data seems to show that airlines’ efforts are paying off to some extent. The passenger load factor in Europe widened to 82.5 percent on international routes in June from 80.6 percent a year earlier, according to industry body International Air Transport Association (IATA).
For domestic flights, the figure improved to 81.6 percent from 79.8 percent a year earlier, showing airlines are offering fewer seats that end up unused. However, those figures do not take into account whether airlines are lowering ticket prices to lure more customers onto their planes.
Data from industry bodies IATA and the International Civil Aviation Organization show average fares globally increasing 1.4 percent between 2005 and 2010, during which time the price of oil — a key factor for airlines costs — rose by more than 40 percent.
Not everyone admits to viewing such trends in a negative light.
“I love price competition,” Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary said on a recent conference call. “[It] means the competition blow their brains out even faster than would normally be the case.”
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