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Tuesday 13 October 2020 1:22 pm

Global airlines get nearly £100bn in state aid and bailout funding

By: Edward Thicknesse

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Are vaccine passports inevitable to keep the global travel industry afloat?
The UK government today confirmed that it was looking at vaccine passports as a way of getting international travel going again.

Easyjet last week became the latest airline to indicate that it may need more money from the state to deal with the financial hammering it has taken at the hands of coronavirus.

Around the world, governments have already splashed out a whopping £98.7bn on airlines, a figure that could jump by another $25bn (£19.3bn) if US Congress can approve a new package for US carriers.

Here’s a breakdown of how much governments have provided so far. 

UK: £1.8bn

Unlike many countries, the UK has resisted rolling out a sector-specific plan to protect its airlines. Although it said it would offer carriers financial support on a case-by-cases basis, it rebuffed Virgin Atlantic’s plea for £500m earlier this summer.

However, carriers have been able to access emergency loans worth almost £2bn from the Bank of England’s Covid Corporate Financing Facility.

  • Ryanair – £600m
  • Easyjet – £600m
  • British Airways – £300m
  • Wizz Air – £300m
BRITAIN-HEALTH-VIRUS
British Airways is among a number of UK carriers to seek funding from the Bank of England.

Europe: £29.5bn

In Europe, governments have taken a different tack, offering much needed cash in exchange for taking stakes in the carriers in question.

Way out in front is Lufthansa, which was handed an enormous €9bn in funding by the German state – in return for 20 per cent of the carrier. 

The state insists that the deal is temporary. 

Franco-Dutch Air France-KLM has also been on the receiving end of governmental generosity, with the respective administrations pouring money into each wing of the group.

SWEDEN-HEALTH-VIRUS-TRANSPORT-AIRPORT-NORWEGIAN
Low-cost carrier Norwegian is currently in talks with the government over a new funding deal.

And the pile could yet grow larger, with Norwegian in talks with the Scandinavian country’s ministers over another bailout. 

  • Lufthansa – €9bn (£8.2bn)
  • Air France – €7bn (£6.4bn)
  • KLM –  €3.4bn (£3.1bn)
  • Alitalia – €3bn (£2.9bn)**
  • Tui – €3bn (£2.9bn)
  • TAP Air Portugal – €1.2bn (£1.09bn)
  • Aeroflot – $1.15bn (£850m)
  • SAS – €1bn (£900m)
  • Iberia – €750m (£692m)
  • Finnair – €600m (£545m)
  • Condor – €550m (£500m)
  • Austrian Airlines – €450m (£408m)
  • Brussels Airlines – €290m (£263m)
  • Norwegian – 3bn Norwegian Krone (£250m)
  • Vueling – €260m (£236m)
  •  Air Baltic – €250m (£227m)

US/North America: $38.6bn

Again, in the US officials have gone for another option, rolling out a $25bn (£19.3bn) package of grants for the sector designed to keep employees on company payrolls.

Another $25bn has been made available to airlines through state-backed loans, though most carriers have sought to avoid tapping these.

Only American Airlines has taken a Treasury-funded loan, worth $4.8bn (£3.7bn) with Southwest and Delta both turning to private sources instead.

Read more

Easyjet board reaches agreement over £5.2bn Castlelake takeover

EasyJet airplane at airport terminal with passengers boarding, representing airline industry and travel news updates

With the payroll grant money now having run out, carriers are pleading for a new round of funding to prevent them from making vast job cuts.

American and United Airlines have begun placing a combined 32,000 staff on unpaid leave due to the money running out.

Last week Donald Trump urged Congress to pass a new package which would see airlines receive an extra $25bn. 

Canadian unions have also pushed for a $5.3bn bailout for the country’s airlines, although a deal is not yet agreed.

Asia: £21.5bn

With countries in the far east the first to implement travel restrictions as the coronavirus began to spread at the beginning of the year, airlines across the continent saw passenger numbers plummet before the rest of the world had woken up to the crisis.

SINGAPORE-HEALTH-VIRUS
Singapore Airlines has asked for a mammoth £10.8bn in state support.

Carriers such as Virgin Australia fell into administration as borders shut, while a number of other airlines tapped authorities for desperately needed cash.

  • Singapore Airlines – S$19bn (£10.8bn)
  • China Eastern Airlines – 31bn yuan (£3.5bn)
  • Cathay Pacific – Hong Kong $29bn  (£2.9bn)
  • Thai Airways – $1.8bn (£1.4bn)
  • Australia – AUS$2.7bn general package (£1.5bn)
  • Garuda – $1bn (£800m)
  • Air New Zealand – NZ$900m (£450m)
  • Air Asia – 1bn ringgit (£180m)

Latin America: £2.69bn

Save some exceptions like Brazil, which never fully shut its commercial airspace, flights across Latin America stopped in mid-March.

Traffic flatlined for two months, but airlines saw less help than much of the rest of the world. 

LATAM and Avianca, two of the continent’s biggest carriers, were taken to bankruptcy court as a result of the shutdown, before receiving emergency funding deals.

  • LATAM Air – $2.5bn (£1.9bn)
  • Brazil (Gol and Azus) – $660m (£506m)
  • Avianca – $370m (£280m)

Middle East/Africa: £4.6bn

Some of the jewels of global aviation are located in the Middle East, with carriers such as Emirates and Etihad considered the world standard for luxury in aviation.

Many of the region’s airlines are fully owned by various Gulf states, meaning that in some cases the levels of financial support were not disclosed.

GERMANY-TRAVEL-ETIHAD-BOEING
Abu Dhabi-owned Etihad has been on the receiving end of “remarkable support”, its chief exec said.

Etihad’s chief exec Tony Douglas, for example, said that the carrier had received “remarkable support” from the Abu Dhabi government.

  • Emirates – $2bn (£1.5bn)
  • Qatar – $1.95bn (£1.5bn)
  • South Africa Airways – $1.2bn (£900m)
  • Kenyan Airways – $750m (£575m)
  • Egypt Air – $191m (£147m)
Read more

Easyjet rejects fourth bid but holds out for ‘more attractive’ offer

Ryanair has axed around 170 services while Easyjet said it was cancelling 274 flights because of French air traffic control strikes.

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