AirAsia: No new aircraft deliveries this year

by BERNAMA/ pic by MUHD AMIN NAHARUL

LOW-COST airline AirAsia Group Bhd is relooking at its orderbook with Airbus SE and will not take any new aircraft deliveries this year.

AirAsia Group executive chairman Datuk Kamarudin Meranun in a statement yesterday said: “We do not intend to take any new aircraft deliveries this year with the target to end 2020 with 242 aircraft, a net reduction of one aircraft from last year.”

It was reported that the European aircraft maker gave up on AirAsia’s six reserving planes and intended to put them on sale as crisis in the aviation industry deepens due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sharing AirAsia’s previous experience in selling and leasing its aircraft in late 2018, Kamarudin said the decision had provided the airline greater flexibility to scale back growth than owning aircraft today.

The airline group was also able to lock in the best price for those aircraft at prime market conditions while eliminating the residual risk of owning aircraft, he said.

“We have also restructured a major portion of the fuel hedges with our supportive counterparties and are still in the process of restructuring the remaining exposure.

“This will help deal with the excess of hedged volume against expected fuel consumption post-Covid-19 and reduce the hedging losses if fuel price remains at today’s prices,” he added.

Kamarudin said further measures in managing and containing costs include both the management and senior employees of AirAsia Group volunteering a salary sacrifice, renegotiating contracts and deferring all non-essential expenditures.

He expects all these cost-cutting initiatives to result in at least a 30% cost reduction year-on-year in the 2020 financial year.

Meanwhile, AirAsia resumed its scheduled domestic flights yesterday in Malaysia and would be followed by Thailand (May 1), the Philippines (May 16) and Indonesia (May 7), subject to approval from the authorities.

Kamarudin said strict health controls and social distancing protocol are in place, in compliance with the regulations.

He also said all aircraft, which are fitted with hospital-standard high-efficiency particulate air filters, would also be sent for a thorough disinfection every night stop.