0 Comment(s) 18/04/2008 +0100 GMT
by James Latham
Fasten your seatbelts and expect a rough ride over the months and
possibly years to come as business and, in particular, transatlantic
airlines experience financial turbulence. News that Silverjet plc and
six other business-only airlines, including Oasis Hong Kong Airlines
Ltd and MAXjet Airways Inc., are to either cease operating or require
refinancing is adding to growing concerns that a combination of fuel
prices, underinvestment, poor maintenance and a more discerning
web-centric consumer market is driving the airline industry back into
the red.
Rises in fuel costs are cited as the most significant
barrier to profitability for the business-only carriers - in January
2007 it sat at $57/barrel, today it exceeds $110 - but years of cost
cutting by US carriers is coming home to roost as older fleets are
grounded due to their gas-guzzling and the backlog of spare parts
previously sold off to raise short-term cash which is now causing
delays to essential maintenance.

Silverjet: feeling the pinch
Carriers such as Delta,
Northwest and United also missed the boat as foreign operators secured
the first wave of new and more fuel efficient airlcraft the Airbus and
Boeing 787, so like it or not, they`re stuck with a shortfall of
planes, costing more and more to operate and making the destinations
they serve less attractive to business and luxury travellers.
European
operators, including British Airways and the political football that is
Alitalia, face issues of their own making (which in the latter’s
instance includes survival after Air France/KLM’s refusal to bid for
the ailing national carrier). This leaves new carriers, such as
Emirates and Etihad Airways out of Dubai and Abu Dhabi respectively,
neither with the baggage that BA for example has to manage, to snap up
the business and luxury travelers. As event, corporate and association
meeting planners avoid inevitable disruption to customer, delegate or
staff experiences out of North America and parts of Europe, emerging
destinations deemed as short haul with C21 airport services and the
promise of sunshine thrown in, are set fair to take off.
When
the global credit crunch and western recessions are complete, the
global meetings and events space will have shifted markedly east
demanding reinvestment in airport and carrier services alike in the
developed economies if market share and commercial carrier viability is
to be restored.
For meeting and event planners alike, buyer
beware. The customer, delegate or staff experience is likely to be
disrupted. If delay and inconvenience is unavoidable, we suggest that
time can be passed with some sense of revenge by visiting
www.weewilliewalsh.co.uk.




































