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Tag: AIR

  • FCM: Q2 Prices Rise Amid ‘Incremental’ Corp. Travel Growth

    FCM: Q2 Prices Rise Amid ‘Incremental’ Corp. Travel Growth

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    Business travel in the second quarter continued “incremental growth” and was set to continue to increase for the balance of 2024, according to FCM Consulting’s Global Quarterly Trend Report, released Thursday. Meanwhile, most average airfares throughout the world rose year over year, according to the travel management company. 

    Economy airfares in 2024 through May on average increased about 15 percent year over year globally, about $65, according to the report, which is based on FCM’s corporate booking data. Business-class airfares, meanwhile, increased about 11 percent year over year, about $209, in that same January-May timeframe. 

    Some pockets of pricing softness emerged: second-quarter international economy fares from the U.S. declined an average of 8.8 percent year over year, “a welcome sign for corporate travelers that often do business overseas,” according to FCM. 

    The average daily hotel room rate logged by FCM’s corporate clients in the first half of 2024 in most global regions declined year over year, including by $13 in North America to $237 and by $11 in Europe to $180. Overall, the first-half average room rate across FCM’s top 100 corporate cities reported by FCM Consulting’s business analytics team was $182, down $5 year over year.

    Generally speaking, business air and lodging demand remained solid in Q2, according to FCM.

    “It’s encouraging to see the steady upward trajectory for business travel and the way the industry continues to demonstrate consistent and positive growth throughout the year,” said Ashley Gutermuth, Head of FCM Consulting, Americas. “This trend signifies the increased demand we are seeing for in-person meetings and events and the ongoing commitment to foster and build strong, meaningful relationships through business travel.”

    Still, the report, while projecting further business travel growth, highlighted the uncertainty of future pricing projections, noting that “geopolitical unrest” and “economic uncertainty” would “continue to impact travel industry forecasts through the rest of 2024.”

    “This Q2-2024 report represents six months of positive travel industry momentum, which is somewhat difficult to forecast for H2-2024,” according to the report. 

    RELATED: FCM’s Q1 Quarterly Trends Report

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  • DOT Launches Probe of Airline Loyalty Programs

    DOT Launches Probe of Airline Loyalty Programs

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    The U.S. Department of Transportation has launched a probe into the airline reward programs for the four largest U.S. carriers, the agency announced Thursday. 

    DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg sent letters to the CEOs of American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines, “ordering them to provide records and submit reports with detailed information about their rewards programs, practices, and policies.” 

    The agency said it is focused on how people who participate in these programs are affected by the “devaluation of earned rewards, hidden or dynamic pricing, extra fees, and reduced competition and choice.”

    “[U]nlike a traditional savings account, these rewards are controlled by a company that can unilaterally change their value,” Buttigieg said in a statement. “Our goal is to ensure consumers are getting the value that was promised to them, which means validating that these programs are transparent and fair.”

    The industry lobbying group Airlines for America said in a statement that “consumers have the power of choice when selecting an airline for a trip, and carriers want to reward travelers for their return business and brand loyalty. Because there is fierce competition among airlines for customers, loyalty programs are a way carriers can say ‘thank you’ to travelers. … U.S. carriers are transparent about these programs, and policymakers should ensure that consumers can continue to be offered these important benefits.”

    The deadline for each carrier to respond with the requested loyalty program information is Dec. 4, according to DOT.  

    Reports surfaced last December that DOT was looking into frequent-flyer programs for potentially deceptive or unfair practices. These programs and their affiliated credit cards also have been the target of the Credit Card Competition Act, which aims to change regulations for competition in credit card transactions and could “kill rewards programs” if it was passed, according to United CEO Scott Kirby on a third-quarter 2023 earnings call.

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  • DOT: June U.S. Air Cancellations Drop

    DOT: June U.S. Air Cancellations Drop

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    About 1.3 percent of U.S. passenger flights in June were canceled, down from 2.1 percent in June 2023 and 1.4 percent in May 2024, the Department of Transportation announced Friday.

    In the first six months of 2024, reporting carriers canceled 1.4 percent of flights, down from 1.6 percent in the first six months of 2023, DOT said in its monthly Air Travel Consumer Report .

    Southwest Airlines posted the lowest June cancellation rate at 0.3 percent, followed by the Alaska Airlines network at 0.6 percent and Hawaiian Airlines at 0.7 percent. Networks include branded codeshare partners.

    Frontier Airlines had the highest June cancellation rate at 3.5 percent, with Spirit Airlines at 2.6 percent and JetBlue Airways at 2.5 percent. 

    U.S. carriers in June operated nearly 652,000 domestic flights, up more than 6 percent year over year less than half a percentage point from May 2024 levels. 

    Those carriers in June had a mishandled baggage rate of 0.58 percent on 44.6 million bags, the same percentage as the month before and down from 0.70 percent in June 2023.

    DOT said it plans to release data on consumer complaints about air travel for January through May 2024 in September.

    RELATED: DOT May 2024 air travel data

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  • IATA: Int’l Demand Paces July Air Travel Growth

    IATA: Int’l Demand Paces July Air Travel Growth

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    July global air passenger demand as measured in revenue passenger kilometers increased 8 percent year over year, pushed by another double-digit increase in international demand, according to the International Air Transport Association.

    Passenger demand reached an “all time high for the industry and in all regions except Africa,” IATA director general Willie Walsh said in a statement.

    International demand in July increased 10.1 percent year over year, IATA noted, while international capacity as measured in available seat kilometers increased 7.4 percent. Global international load factor decreased 0.3 percentage points to 85.9 percent. 

    July domestic demand increased 4.8 percent year over year while domestic capacity increased 2.8 percent and load factor increased 1.7 percentage points to 86.1 percent.

    Overall July global capacity increased 7.4 percent year over year.

    “People need and want to fly. And they are doing that in great numbers. Load factors are at the practicable maximum,” according to Walsh. “But persistent supply chain bottlenecks have made deploying the capacity to meet the need to travel more challenging. As much of the world returns from vacation, there is an urgent call for manufacturers and suppliers to resolve their supply chain issues so that air travel remains accessible and affordable to all those who rely on it.”

    [Report continues below chart.]

    Total July regional demand and capacity increased most rapidly in the Asia-Pacific region, where demand increased 12 percent year over year and capacity grew 9.8 percent. Overall demand and capacity each grew at least 4.9 percent in every region. 

    The Asia-Pacific and Latin American regions in July each recorded double-digit-percentage year-over-year increases in international demand capacity. Brazil led domestic markets with a demand increase of 8.9 percent and a capacity increase of 7.1 percent.

    RELATED: IATA June 2024 air passenger demand figures

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  • Delta COO Mike Spanos to Depart Carrier

    Delta COO Mike Spanos to Depart Carrier

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    Mike Spanos will depart Delta Air Lines on Aug. 31.

    Delta Air Lines chief operating officer Mike Spanos is to
    depart the company effective Aug. 31, according to a U.S. Securities and
    Exchange Commission filing. He is leaving to take a position at another
    company, according to a memo Delta CEO Ed Bastian sent to employees Friday
    morning, and that the carrier shared with BTN.

    The
    Wall Street Journal originally reported the story

    Spanos has been in his role just over one year, and his
    departure comes about a month after Delta struggled to resume normal operations
    after the CrowdStrike
    IT outage in July
    . The carrier, which canceled about 7,000 flights over
    five days, has estimated its cost
    from the outage at $500 million
    .

    Delta does not currently plan to replace Spanos, who
    approached Bastian earlier this summer, prior to the IT outage, to say he was
    considering other opportunities, according to the memo. EVP and chief customer
    experience officer Allison Ausband and EVP and chief of operations and
    president of Delta TechOps John Laughter, who each reported to Spanos, will now
    report directly to Bastian.

    “Under Mike’s leadership, he has helped to advance Delta’s
    performance over the past year, and we continue to lead the industry across all
    operating metrics,” Bastian wrote. “Importantly, we’ve seen significant
    reductions in injuries during the first half of 2024 versus last year. He also
    partnered closely with our finance and commercial teams to improve our asset
    utilization and go-forward strategy.”

    Spanos
    joined Delta June 12, 2023
    , with no prior aviation background. He previously
    was president and CEO of Six Flags entertainment and had spent more than 25
    years at PepsiCo and the Pepsi Bottling Group in various positions.

    RELATED: Delta
    Names Former Six Flags Head Spanos COO

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  • United to Revamp O’Hare Polaris Lounge

    United to Revamp O’Hare Polaris Lounge

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    United Airlines on Sept. 3 will begin renovations on its
    Polaris Lounge at Chicago O’Hare International Airport, the carrier confirmed
    Monday. Once the update is complete, the space will be nearly 25,000 square
    feet in size, an addition of more than 8,500 square feet, and will accommodate
    nearly double the capacity of the current lounge. 

    The lounge will be partially closed from Sept. 3 to early
    2025. From early 2025 to spring 2025 it will be fully closed. While partially
    open, full amenities will be available, however “customers may encounter
    crowding during peak hours due to reduced space capacity.” The updated lounge
    is expected to open in spring 2025.

    Polaris customers during the renovation period, can visit
    any of the United Club locations at O’Hare, which will have “updated and
    improve premium beverage offerings, complimentary to Polaris guests,” according
    to the carrier.

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  • FAA Awards $291M in Air Sustainability-Related Grants

    FAA Awards $291M in Air Sustainability-Related Grants

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    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has awarded $291
    million for projects that will help achieve the goal of net-zero greenhouse gas
    emission from aviation by 2050, the agency announced Friday. 

    About $244.5 million is for 22 projects that produce,
    transport, blend or store sustainable aviation fuel and for reviewing studies
    related to SAF infrastructure needs, according to the FAA. These grants will
    “expand SAF production, enhance SAF supply chains, and increase SAF accessibility.”

    Another $46.5 million will go for 14 projects that “develop,
    demonstrate or apply low-emission aviation technologies,” according to the
    agency, and aim to reduce carbon pollution, improve aircraft fuel efficiency
    and increase SAF use.

    SAF manufacturer Gevo, which has partnered with several
    airlines globally, will receive $16.8 million to convert an existing fuel
    facility in Luverne, Minn., to a fully integrated alcohol-to-jet production
    facility for SAF production.

    JetZero, which
    Alaska Airlines recently invested in
    , will receive $8 million to develop
    key technologies for a highly fuel-efficient blended-wing-body airplane.

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  • Lufthansa Opens Premium Lounge at Newark Airport

    Lufthansa Opens Premium Lounge at Newark Airport

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    Lufthansa’s premium lounge at Newark Airport includes a dining area for first-class passengers

    Lufthansa has opened its newly renovated premium lounge at Newark Liberty International Airport inside Terminal B, the carrier announced Wednesday. The lounge is available to Lufthansa, Swiss and Austrian Airlines’ first- and business-class customers, as well as to HON Circle and Senator status passengers, according to Lufthansa.

    The nearly 6,400-sq.-ft. lounge had been closed for eight months during the $10 million renovation, which added a kitchen and opened up the space to seat about 165 guests, a 25 percent increase from the previous capacity. The entrance leads to a centerpiece “Skyline Bar” and various seating areas, including a “bistro area” with a seasonal rotating menu. 

    “One-third of the seating was designed for working and the other two-thirds was designed for relaxing,” said Lufthansa head of product Victoria Schuster during a media preview, adding that the lounge is the first with the company’s new “concept design.” 

    The space includes two private rooms for calls or meetings. There’s also a separate first-class dining section that serves a sit-down meal with seating for about 20 customers.

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  • Delta Begins Rollout of Int’l Free Wi-Fi

    Delta Begins Rollout of Int’l Free Wi-Fi

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    Delta Air Lines in July began adding its free Wi-Fi for SkyMiles loyalty members on Viasat-equipped flights between the United States and each Paris and Nice in France, the carrier announced Monday. The service on additional international flights will roll out on an ongoing basis.

    In August, Delta plans to add the service on flights to and from the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and Italy. September will see additional European countries added, including Iceland, Ireland, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Greece, Portugal, Sweden and Switzerland. Israel also will be added in September, though service there is suspended through Aug. 31.

    During October, the carrier will offer free Wi-Fi on flights between the U.S. and South America (Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru) followed by Hawaii. By January 2025, flights to and from Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal will be added, with South Africa and transpacific flights (Asia, Australia and New Zealand) slated to offer the service by mid-to-late 2025.

    Delta began to offer domestic free inflight Wi-Fi to its SkyMiles loyalty program members in February 2023, and today “free, streaming-quality connectivity is available on nearly 700 aircraft—more than 90 percent of Delta’s domestic fleet,” according to the carrier. 

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  • Where to Escape Chicago’s Air and Water Show

    Where to Escape Chicago’s Air and Water Show

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    Chicago is in for a weekend of Air and Water Show fanfare.
    |

    Getty

    Technically, Chicago’s annual Air and Water Show on Saturday, August 10, and Sunday, August 11 will be held between Fullerton Avenue and Oak Street, but the strafing planes have been known to fly as far north as Rogers Park. There are, however, options for escape. One possibility is leaving town altogether. Another is hiding in a basement with snacks for sustenance. A third, and arguably best solution, is finding a peaceful patio far from the lake, with nice food, drink, and a quiet summer sky as a pleasant backdrop.

    Those who aren’t excited about the Blue Angels’ return can take back the weekend with Eater Chicago’s list of top bars and restaurants where patrons can avoid the roar of aircraft through the two-day event.

    Read More

    Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

    If you buy something or book a reservation from an Eater link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics policy.

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    Ashok Selvam

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  • Elliott Reiterates Southwest CEO Change Demand, Details Stake

    Elliott Reiterates Southwest CEO Change Demand, Details Stake

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    Elliott Investment Management on Monday detailed its holdings in Southwest Airlines and reiterated its call for changes to top management at the carrier, according to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

    The investment firm in June announced it had taken a stake worth approximately $1.9 billion in Southwest and called for the carrier’s CEO, Bob Jordan, to be replaced.

    Monday’s SEC filing noted that Elliott representatives had met with Jordan, Southwest chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly and other members of the board, but did not provide details. In addition, Elliott noted it has “identified and had discussions with a number of highly qualified former airline executives, industry leaders and other qualified persons with relevant experience who are eager to serve on the board,” according to the filing. 

    As indicated in its July 8 letter to Southwest, Elliott in the SEC filing said it intends to provide shareholders with the opportunity to elect new leadership and board members either by calling a special shareholder meeting or at an annual meeting of shareholders. That same day, Southwest announced the addition of a new board member, and on July 3 adopted a shareholder rights plan, also known as a “poison pill” defense strategy, to deter activist investors or acquirers from gaining a controlling interest.

    In addition, Elliott purchased 17.3 million shares of Southwest common stock via 14 transactions between July 11 and Aug. 5, for a total of just under 42 million shares when added to its previous shares, according to the filing. 

    The investment company now has a 7 percent beneficial ownership of the company, as well as a 4 percent economic exposure in cash derivative agreements, for a total 11 percent economic interest in the carrier, which is the same as it had in June when it made its initial $1.9 billion purchase. 

    Investors are required to file with the SEC within 10 days after a purchase exceeds a 5 percent ownership stake in a company. 

    Southwest did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    RELATED: Elliott Threatens Southwest with Proxy Battle

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  • IAG: ‘Good Recovery’ for Corp. Travel in Q2

    IAG: ‘Good Recovery’ for Corp. Travel in Q2

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    International Airlines Group executives on a Friday second-quarter earnings call described the corporate travel segment as “resilient,” “steady” and in “good recovery.”

    Though corporate still trails the leisure demand recovery, it has “different recovery rates across the airlines,” IAG CEO Luis Gallego said. IAG is composed of British Airways, Iberia, Aer Lingus, Level and Vueling.

    “At BA, we are still in volume around 65 percent and revenue around 80 percent compared with 2019,” Gallego said of corporate demand, adding that capacity at British Airways also has not recovered to 2019 levels.

    “At Iberia, the volume is around 90 percent, and the revenue is above the revenue they had in 2019, with an increase in capacity,” Gallego said. For Aer Lingus, “volumes are close to 100 percent and revenue at 95 percent. So different performances, but a good recovery in general.”

    Iberia CEO Marco Sansavini said that the carrier’s second-quarter corporate revenue from and to Latin America was ahead of that in the second quarter of 2019. “That’s the first time that’s happened since Covid, demonstrating the resilience of demand over there,” he said.

    For BA, second-quarter North Atlantic business volume was up more than 13 percent year over year, BA chairman and CEO Sean Doyle said. “That really helped get a better mix of traffic across the network, and it helped us drive load factors up by a point to about 88 percent.”

    Doyle added, however, that while volume through corporate channels is 65 percent of 2019 levels, “when we look at the purpose of travel through all channels, it’s a little bit higher,” he said. “We think the volume of people traveling for business is probably up to above 70 percent and revenue more like 85 percent, because we do see traffic that used to book through a business channel, some of that now is booking through our direct channel. But generally speaking, it’s steady improvement and steady growth, particularly across the North Atlantic routes.”

    IAG Q2 Metrics

    IAG reported second-quarter passenger revenue of more than €7.4 billion, up 9.9 percent year over year. Total revenue was nearly €8.3 billion, up from €7.7 billion a year prior. The company’s operating profit for the quarter was more than €1.2 billion, down about 0.8 percent year over year. 

    Capacity for the second quarter increased 8 percent compared with Q2 2023 for the total network. The North Atlantic accounts for about 32 percent of capacity, which increased 6.1 percent year over year. Europe (not counting Spain and the United Kingdom) is next with 27 percent of capacity, which increased 5.8 percent. Latin America and the Caribbean accounts for 18 percent of IAG capacity, which increased 17 percent during the second quarter. Asia-Pacific accounts for just more than 4 percent of the company’s capacity, but it increased nearly 32 percent year over year in Q2. 

    The outlook for 2024 includes continued strong demand for IAG’s core markets of the North Atlantic, Latin America and intra-Europe. Full-year 2024 capacity growth is projected to be 7 percent year over year, the same as for the third quarter. 

    RELATED: IAG Q1 performance

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  • JetBlue Downplays Corp. Network in New Profit Strategy

    JetBlue Downplays Corp. Network in New Profit Strategy

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    JetBlue executives unveiled a “refocused strategy” during the company’s Tuesday earnings call that is designed to increase the carrier’s profitability through a renewed focus on leisure operations, a change that already is affecting its network of business travel destinations.

    Dubbed JetForward, the plan is built on four pillars: providing reliable and caring service, building the best East Coast leisure network, offering products and perks that customers value, and creating a secure financial future, according to a JetBlue presentation. It aims to provide incremental earnings before interest and taxes of $800 million to $900 million between 2025 and 2027.

    Network changes will have the most drastic effect on corporate travel. Throughout, JetBlue has announced it is pulling out of 15 cities and exiting 54 routes. “Every route and station needs to earn its way into our network, and our push for profitability has lessened our patience for underperforming routes,” said JetBlue president Marty St. George. 

    The carrier’s “profit engine” is composed of leisure, visiting friends and relatives, and transcontinental routes to and from “core East Coast geographies” including New York, New England, Florida, Puerto Rico and the Caribbean, St. George said. “Many of the changes we’ve made to our network are driven by the stronger recovery and quicker ramp of leisure travel,” he added. “As a result, and specifically in New York, we’ve shifted capacity out of corporate-focused routes and into leisure and VFR routes.”

    That doesn’t mean the carrier will stop serving corporate customers.  

    “There’s no walking away from the corporate market,” St. George said. “The better way to describe it is we’re not really designing the network for corporate like we once did. And if you look at some of the changes we’ve made in New York, some of the routes we pulled, I think it’s very consistent with what we’ve seen as far as a slower recovery of corporate travel in New York.”

    St. George added that contracted corporate business revenue is up by “high single-digit” percentages compared with a year prior, “so it continues to grow. With the retreat that we have been doing over the last three quarters at LaGuardia, that was a bit of a pleasant surprise for us because those are much higher business-share markets when we flew those.”

    JetBlue earlier this year announced reduced flights to and from Los Angeles International and LaGuardia airports. 

    Still, St. George gave the example of JetBlue’s departure from the Minneapolis market, and noted that business revenue on the Boston-Minneapolis route was “pretty strong” and “more corporate” at 30 percent share of bookings instead of the historical 20 percent. “But I guess I would say it was not more corporate enough,” he said. “So as far as 1,000 flights a day, I don’t think it’s going to dramatically move that [corporate revenue] number from where it is now.”

    Aircraft Challenges

    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration in 2023 and 2024 issued directives requiring planes with certain Pratt & Whitney GTF engines grounded until they can be inspected, a situation that “challenge[s] our ability to plan our business over the long term,” JetBlue CEO Joanna Geraghty said. “We now expect aircraft on the ground to significantly increase in 2025.” 

    Because the carrier “can’t afford to continue taking delivery of costly new aircraft that may need to be parked due to engine availability issues,” JetBlue and Airbus have come to an agreement in which JetBlue would defer delivery of 44 of its A321neo aircraft—the part of the fleet most affected by the Pratt & Whitney GTF issues—to 2030 and beyond, as opposed to receiving deliveries scheduled for 2025 to 2029. That will reduce capital expenditures by approximately $3 billion over the next five years, JetBlue CFO Ursula Hurley said.

    With the average number of grounded aircraft in 2025 projected to be in the mid- to high teens “with greater uncertainty in 2026 and beyond,” it will drive flat year-over-year capacity in 2025, Hurley added. And to reach flat growth, “we’ll need to continue investing to extend the lives of our [Airbus] A320 fleet. While it comes at a cost to buy out leases and extend the lives of aircraft, the return profile is more attractive than investing in new aircraft.”

    JetBlue Q2 Metrics

    JetBlue reported second-quarter passenger revenue of nearly $2.3 billion, down 7.9 percent year over year. Total revenue was down to $2.4 billion from $2.6 billion one year prior. The carrier’s net income for the quarter was $25 million, down from the $138 million reported in Q2 2023. 

    Second-quarter capacity decreased 2.7 percent compared with last year. The average fuel price was $2.87 per gallon. 

    Third-quarter guidance includes a year-over-year decline in revenue of 1.5 percent to 5.5 percent, with full-year revenue projected to be down 4 percent to 6 percent. JetBlue plans for third-quarter capacity to be down 3 percent to 6 percent year over year, with full-year 2024 capacity down 2.5 percent to 5 percent. 

    The average third-quarter fuel price is projected to be $2.82 to $2.97 per gallon, with full-year costs estimated at $2.80 to $3 per gallon.

    RELATED: JetBlue Q1 performance

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  • Air New Zealand Scraps 2030 Carbon Target, Withdraws from SBTi

    Air New Zealand Scraps 2030 Carbon Target, Withdraws from SBTi

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    Air New Zealand has removed its 2030 target to reduce its carbon intensity by 28.9 percent compared with a 2019 baseline, and it has withdrawn from the Scient Based Targets initiative, the carrier announced Monday. 

    The “levers” needed to meet the target that are “outside the airline’s direct control” include the availability of new aircraft, the affordability and availability of alternative jet fuels, and global and domestic regulatory and policy support, according to the carrier.

    “In recent months, and more so in the last few weeks, it has also become apparent that potential delays to our fleet renewal plan pose an additional risk to the target’s achievability,” Air New Zealand CEO Greg Foran said in a statement.

    The carrier is considering a new near-term carbon emissions reduction target “that could better reflect the challenges relating to aircraft and alternative jet fuel availability within the industry.”

    Air New Zealand, however, remains committed to reaching its 2050 net zero carbon emissions target, according to the carrier. 

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  • Air France-KLM Notes ‘Challenging’ Q2 Environment

    Air France-KLM Notes ‘Challenging’ Q2 Environment

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    One quarter ago, executives at Air France-KLM were looking forward to a “promising summer season,” particularly with the Olympics and Paralympic Games being held in Paris. In a Thursday second-quarter earnings release, however, Air France-KLM CEO Benjamin Smith noted the “negative effect of the Olympic Games,” particularly for Air France.

    The company estimated that negative impact in June to be €40 million, contributed by less international inbound traffic to Paris as a “consequence of the Olympic Games.” It also projects a negative effect on unit revenues in the third quarter of €150 million to €170 million. 

    But the sporting events were not the only factors contributing to the company’s results.

    “The second quarter of 2024 confirmed an increasingly challenging environment for aviation, with rising fuel prices and a continued pressure on costs,” Smith said in a statement. “In this context, KLM and Transavia delivered a stable yet sluggish performance, while Air France was in addition impacted by exceptional events,” including the Games.

    The company has taken measures to address the situation, including a hiring freeze and additional cost cuts, according to Smith, who added that it is “preserving its major investments to renew its fleet. … Our business model is robust and resilient, and we remain confident in our ability to achieve our mid- and long-term objectives, notably by leveraging our strong assets and unique competitive position.”

    Air France-KLM Q2 Metrics

    Air France-KLM reported second-quarter passenger revenue of €6.1 billion, up 2.8 percent year over year, or 3.2 percent on a constant currency basis. The group’s total revenue was more than €7.9 billion, up 4.3 percent year over year, or 4.6 percent in constant currency. Net income was €165 million, down €447 million from Q2 2023. 

    The company’s group capacity increased 4.1 percent year over year and had a load factor of 88 percent. During the quarter, the company’s carriers transported 25.7 million passengers, 4.4 percent more than a year prior. Group passenger unit revenue per available seat kilometer was up 0.2 percent in constant currency to €8.30 despite less international inbound traffic. 

    Air France-KLM projects capacity to increase 4 percent for full-year 2024 compared with 2023. The previous guidance was for a 5 percent increase.

    RELATED: Air France-KLM Q1 performance

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  • Virgin Atlantic Orders Seven Airbus A330-900 Aircraft

    Virgin Atlantic Orders Seven Airbus A330-900 Aircraft

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    Virgin Atlantic has ordered seven Airbus A330-900 aircraft to be delivered beginning in 2027, the carrier announced Tuesday. It will bring the airline’s total Airbus A330neo fleet to 19. The carrier currently operates the aircraft type to New York, Boston and Miami, with a “further three destinations to be delivered later this year, and four more by the end of 2026.”

    As part of Virgin Atlantic’s “$17 billion fleet transformation,” the carrier in September 2024 will begin to retire its Airbus A330-300 aircraft and will be replaced with A330-900 planes. By 2028, the airline plans to operate a total of 45 “next-generation aircraft” including 19 A330-900s, 12 A350-1000s and 14 Boeing 787-9 aircraft.

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  • Alaska Airlines Opens New SFO Lounge

    Alaska Airlines Opens New SFO Lounge

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    Alaska Airlines has opened a new lounge at San Francisco International Airport’s Harvey Milk Terminal 1, the carrier announced Wednesday. The 11,000-sq.-ft. space has 55 percent more seating compared with the airline’s previous lounge in Terminal 2. It also has plugs for charging devices at “nearly every seat.” There also are TalkBox booths for private calls or meetings, a first for an Alaska lounge, according to the carrier.

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  • ARC: June NDC Transaction Share Exceeds 20 Percent

    ARC: June NDC Transaction Share Exceeds 20 Percent

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    In 2018, the International Air Transport Association’s “leaderboard” of 21 airlines that were part of IATA’s New Distribution Capability initiative had a goal of processing 20 percent of indirect bookings through NDC channels by 2020. That didn’t happen, in part due to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

    NDC transactions, however, recently have been picking up speed. In June 2024, they represented 21.5 percent of Airline Reporting Corp.’s total transaction volume for the month, a 14.4 percent increase year over year and the first time they exceeded 20 percent. More than 1,000 travel agencies processed NDC transactions in June, according to ARC.

    ARC’s NDC transaction share started the year at 16.9 percent in January, and each month since has inched upward, hitting the 20 percent mark in May. 

    June Total Air Sales, Corp. Sales Down

    June air tickets sold by U.S. corporate agencies, those with at least 70 percent self-reported corporate and government business, dropped 7.2 percent year over year, according to ARC. 

    This is the second month this year that corporate sales have declined after increasing each month since 2021. In March, they declined 5 percent, then recovered to growth rates in April and May.

    Total June U.S.-based agency air ticket sales also declined by 6.2 percent year over year to $7.6 billion, which represents a 15.8 percent drop from May. June total passenger trips were up 1.8 percent from June 2023 to 22.7 million but were down 11.7 percent month over month. 

    U.S. domestic trips were up 4.4 percent year over year to more than 14.2 million, but international trips declined 2.2 percent to just under 8.5 million. Compared with May 2024, domestic trips were down 12 percent, while international trips were down 11 percent.

    Still, for the first six months of 2024, total U.S.-based agency air ticket sales totaled $53 billion, up 1 percent year over year, and the “highest total recorded by ARC for a consecutive six-month period.” Total passenger trips for the period increased 5 percent versus the first six months of 2023 to 149 million, with domestic trips up 8 percent to 86.8 million and international trips up 2 percent to 56.2 million.

    The June average price of a U.S. domestic roundtrip ticket was $526, down from $543 in May and below the $555 reported in June 2023. For the six-month period, the average ticket price was down 1 percent year over year to $552.

    “Travel demand remains strong for both domestic and international trips, with average ticket prices down year over year for the first six months,” ARC chief commercial officer Steve Solomon said in a statement. “Both corporate and leisure travel spending are experiencing similar growth rates, and airlines look to continue this momentum through the end of summer and into the fall.”

    June electronic miscellaneous document sales, which include fees for such ancillary products as upgraded seats and checked bags, increased 11.9 percent year over year to $27.5 million. That figure also was down 12.2 percent month over month. Ancillary transactions increased 27.2 percent versus a year prior to nearly 518,000. They were down, however, from the nearly 565,000 reported in May 2024.

    RELATED: ARC: May U.S. Air Sales Steady, Corp. Agency Sales Up

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • Southwest, Archer Partner for Air Taxis

    Southwest, Archer Partner for Air Taxis

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    Southwest Airlines has partnered with Archer Aviation, which manufactures electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, to develop operational plans for electric air taxi networks at California airports where Southwest operates, the companies announced Friday. 

    Archer’s Midnight aircraft is designed to replace 60-to-90-minute commutes by car with estimated 10-to-20-minute electric air-taxi flights, according to the companies. Southwest currently operates at 14 airports across California.

    United Airlines has invested in Archer and has made a $10 million deposit for 100 of the company’s eVTOL aircraft.

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • Delta, Riyadh Air Agree to ‘Exclusive’ Partnership

    Delta, Riyadh Air Agree to ‘Exclusive’ Partnership

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    Delta Air Lines will serve as the exclusive partner in North America for Saudi Arabia-based Riyadh Air, which is scheduled to begin operations in 2025, Delta announced Tuesday, with Riyadh to be Delta’s exclusive partner in “Saudi Arabia and beyond.” 

    The airlines’ agreement, subject to regulatory approval, includes interline and codeshare connectivity, as well as a “deeper partnership” that includes loyalty, customer experience, digital transformation and broader aviation services, such as maintenance, repair and overhaul services, ground handling and training, according to Delta. The carriers also intend to explore an immunized joint venture.

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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