Thursday, November 30, 2006
ââ¬ËPIA to be overhauled soonââ¬â¢
* Suffered Rs 4.4b loss in 2005, Rs 9.2b loss in 2006
* PIA chairman confident 3 new Boeing 777s will help improve organisation
KARACHI: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) will try to pull out of a recent tailspin with a major restructuring plan and the acquisition of new planes, the chairman of the state-run carrier told AFP.
PIA has racked up record losses over the past two years, reportedly prompting President Pervez Musharraf to summon the management and demand action to save the company.
PIA had a further shock earlier this month when it pulled part of its 747 fleet from service after European authorities complained about their condition.
ââ¬ÅWe have drawn up a business plan for the restructuring of the organisation and renewal of the existing fleet,ââ¬Â PIA chairman and chief executive Tariq Kirmani told AFP in an interview.
The airline, which has 40 planes and 22,000 employees, suffered a Rs 4.4 billion loss in 2005, compared with a profit of Rs 2.3 billion in 2004. For the first nine months of 2006 its losses more than doubled to hit 9.2 billion rupees.
The major loser is the government, which owns 88 percent of PIAââ¬â¢s shares.
ââ¬ÅWe keep calling on the president and prime minister (Shaukat Aziz) with regard to our efforts as to how PIAââ¬â¢s performance could be improved and we keep appraising them on what directions we are putting our efforts,ââ¬Â said Kirmani.
The PIA chief laid most of the blame for the carrierââ¬â¢s woes on high fuel prices that have affected airlines around the world.
He said there was a Rs 3.5 billion rise in operating profits for 2005 but expensive fuel accounted for 48 percent of PIAââ¬â¢s revenues until two months ago.
However, Kirmani predicted PIA would turn the corner soon.
ââ¬ÅThings take time. We hope that in the next six months results will start coming and in 2007 PIA will be a neat and clean organisation and we would turn it into a profitable company,ââ¬Â he said.
He refused to give details of the restructuring plan but analysts said PIA must improve both its image and its planes to compete with new private airlines at home.
The fleet caused PIA problems in early November when the European Aviation Safety Agency criticised the poor condition of some of its jumbo jets, after which the airline removed them from service on European routes.
The chairman downplayed the incident, saying the ââ¬ÅEU has not banned or blacklisted any of the aircraftââ¬Â.
ââ¬ÅThe European Union has started its ramp inspection for past six months which examines appearance of the aircraft, cabin and cockpit crews, seats and the general appearance of the flight,ââ¬Â the chairman said.
He said that after one of these inspections PIA voluntarily refurbished its 747s and two had already returned to the air.
The airline is also battling punctuality problems, having grounded its seven-strong fleet of ageing Fokker F27 turboprops after one crashed in July, killing all 45 people on board.
But the PIA chief said the upcoming introduction of nine new aircraft ââ¬â three Boeing 777 jets and six ATR 42 turboprops ââ¬â made him ââ¬Åvery much confident of improving our operation in the next six monthsââ¬Â.
The European-made ATR 42-500s will replace the Fokkers at a cost of 100 million dollars. The 777s are part of PIAââ¬â¢s biggest ever purchase of eight aircraft from Seattle-based Boeing in a 2002 deal worth $ 1.6 billion.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\11\30\story_30-11-2006_pg7_9