Title: 1st African Airlines Forum 2006
11st African Airlines Forum 2006
Strengths and Weaknesses of African Airlines
By Raphael Kuuchi Commercial Director - AFRAA
6 - 7 April 2006 Bamako, Mali
2Structure of Presentation
Introduction
1
2
Strengths
4
Opportunities
3
Weaknesses
5
Threats
Recommendations
6
3Introduction
1
- The industry began to evolve following
deregulation in the USA in the late 1970s - Industry consolidation through alliances,
code-shares, mergers, etc started in the 1980s - At about the same time, privatisation of airlines
was happening - Africa failed to evolve with the industry
- The continent has since not caught up
- One of the fastest growing air transport markets
in the world but accounts for only 4 of global
traffic - African airlines carry only 30 of international
traffic - In the 1970s and 80s African airlines dominated
the African sky - The rules of balanced rights and reciprocity
ensured a level playing field at the time
4STRENGTHS
2
Core dedicated workforce despite low salaries
Prestige
Travel opportunities
Low staff turnover
5STRENGTHS
2
Well trained and experienced pilots and
engineers (who meet international standards)
6STRENGTHS
2
Significant number of airlines renewing their
fleet
Direct flights to most international destinations
7STRENGTHS
2
Competitive labour cost
Self handling at their hubs
8STRENGTHS
2
- State support
- Financial guarantee
- Debt underwriting
- Assumption of debt
Intimate knowledge of the African market
Domestic and regional routes that feed and
distribute long haul flights
9WEAKNESSES
3
Poor service delivery
High turnover of CEOs
Ageing fleet
Under-capitalisation Most never re-capitalised
since formation
10WEAKNESSES
3
Poor safety record
High operating cost
Government interference in operational matters
Limited network and frequencies
11WEAKNESSES
3
Low level of automation
Low aircraft utilisation
Lack of skilled non-technical Workforce
resulting in Over-staffing
Lack of loyalty programmes
12OPPORTUNITIES
4
Focus on tourism development
Undeveloped routes
Growing economies
Political stability Embracing democracy Trade
and business opportunities
Governments focus on tourism development as an
alternative source of revenue and employment
generation
Intra-Africa Between Africa and other parts of
the world
13OPPORTUNITIES
4
High yields on African routes
Liberalisation
Strategic location of Africa
- Liberalisation through the full implementation of
the Yamoussoukro Decision will result in - Significant growth in intra-African traffic
- Rapid hub development
- Integration
Yields on flights to/from Africa are among the
highest in the world
Strategically located with natural hubs to
Europe, Middle East, North and South America and
the Caribbeans
14THREATS
5
- Invasion of African sky by foreign airlines
- European and Middle East carrier are here
- North American carriers may start flights to
Africa - The effect will be
- Increased competition
- Lower yields
- Elimination of weak African airlines
Uncontrolled granting of traffic rights to
foreign airlines at the expense of African
carriers
15THREATS
5
Globalisation and the impact of the mega-alliance
Groupings. While African airlines continue to
operate point-to-point, these airlines
criss-cross the globe with convenient schedules
and frequencies
Failure to privatise African airlines
Failure of African airlines to work together or
join mega alliances
16THREATS
5
- Increases in charges and taxes
- Airport tax
- Handling charges
- ATNS fees
- Fuel surcharge
- Security surcharge
Limited access to preferred airports in Europe
17THREATS
5
Proliferation of hi-tech in the industry Modern
aircraft E-ticketing, Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID), Common Use Self-Service
(CUSS), Bar-Coded Boarding Pass (BCBP), E-freight
Unpredictable business environment Forex and
interest rates fluctuation Political uncertainties
18Recommendations
6
Where do we go from here?
196
Recommendations
- Privatise airlines
- Bring in needed capital
- Avoid government interference
- Management stability
- Retain skilled manpower through better
remuneration - Work together
- Through code share, joint operations, mergers,
alliances, cross-border investments, etc - Resources and knowledge could be shared by
airlines
206
Recommendations
- Improve service delivery by recruiting, training
and giving competitive remuneration - Modernise fleet
- Match aircraft with traffic
- Improve operating economics
- Improve level of safety and reliability
- Undergo the IOSA programme to assure all that
African airlines are safe
216
Recommendations
- Liberalise the African sky in accordance with the
Yamoussoukro Decision - Stimulate further growth in intra-African traffic
- Increase the movement of people and goods and
speed up integration - Allow airlines with the resources to effectively
extend their network across the continent and
beyond - Enable Africa to evolve common positions in
response to decisions of third countries - Liberalisation coupled with the harmonisation of
the immigration and customs regulations on the
continent will put Africas development and its
air transport industry on the right track to
recovery
22Our flights will be full with smiling passengers
willing to fly with African airlines at all times
23This is how we see the future intra-African route
network
24THANK YOU