ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Sunday, 22 November 2009
Aviation Power 50
View list by: Rank | Name | Country | Interactive Map
 
Email this to a friend
| Share |
Aviation Business Power 50
Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Whether it is power, influence or success driving their ambitions, our special guide to the region’s 50 most influential aviation professionals, profiles those who are driving the growth of the industry.

The Aviation Business Power 50 focuses on a variety of individuals who come from all walks of life – commercial aviation, business aviation, products and services – even environmental pioneers. Together, they represent a mix of roles that has significant relevance to the continued and successful growth of the Middle East aviation sector. While the power 50 does not include ministers of state or members of ruling families, Aviation Business recognises their considerable contribution to the development of the region’s aviation industry. So who is in this year’s list? Coming in at number one is Emirates Airline president Tim Clark and, as you may expect, hot on his heels to stake their place in the top 10 are a number of airline CEOs all gunning to make their carrier number one in the region.

But you will also find some unexpected names – CEOs who have recently been pushed from the top of the tree but have made an impact on the business over the last year or so – to those who have appeared to have taken a back seat in recent months, yet continue to hold significant influence in shaping the future of the industry. We should stress that the list is not scientific but entirely subjective. We accept that our readers will disagree/agree on almost every name and position and our apologies to anyone offended by their rankings (or non-appearance), these are the views of our distinguished editorial team based on the events of 2008/09.

Story continues below
advertisement

Power list researchers:

Gemma Greenwood, Sarah Cowell and Robeel Haq


View Aviation Power 50 List

Email this to a friend
| Share |
 
Comments (5)

Bias towards the UAE?
Posted by W Grigsby, Dubai, UAE on 19 August 2009 at 21:28 UAE time

Could that possibly be because the UAE accounts for over 65% of the passenger and freight movements through the Middle East Region??
Aviation power 50
Posted by Ali on 19 August 2009 at 07:12 UAE time

I do not agree with your list, I believe that its totally biased towards the UAE, the reason is simple. Arabian business is in UAE, hence being biased. if you notice your daily news too biased towards the UAE. If you want to publish such list it should be done by a professional survey firm.
Aviation top 50
Posted by AmaJ, London, UK on 17 August 2009 at 13:48 UAE time

J Marsh,
In terms of it being a subjective list, I'll agree with you, but in order for it not to be a random list of names with no criteria to their ranking makes it a stupid man's guess
As for the baby airlines, I also agree that it is those niche carriers that will be carrying the industry in a new direction, and will probably be much more profitable than the established in the long run, but this list is specifically about influence. By the very nature of the attribute, "new" "niche", whatever you want to call it, it may have the potential for being more influential in the future, but definitely not now, as you say with the current status quo.
By heavy industry executives I mean established airline executives, rather than airport executives. You state that "Airports are more complex, more capital intensive and in most cases face greater challenges than most airlines", maybe, probably not, but maybe. In any case, it is airline chiefs and other aerospace executives that control the planes, the flow of traffic, and every other revenue driver that airports need to operate, and so they have by far more influence. The only bargaining chip that airports have with regards to airlines is the distribution of the slots. This is even less true in the Middle East (where I'm from and have lived most of life) where airports are controlled by their respective ministries of transports who in turn allocate slots based on the political manifesto of the country. Regardless of whether they are tougher to run as you as you say, it doesnt make them more influential.
Aviation Top 50
Posted by J Marsh, Doha, Qatar on 17 August 2009 at 00:20 UAE time

Amaj, it clearly says in the article that it is a (subjective) list of the most influential leaders in Middle East Aviation - the only part of the industry that is not in the dolrums at the moment. And it's the baby airlines with new business models that are taking the industry in a new direction, not the established businesses who are trying to keep their slice of the status quo. And why do you think that airport directors are any less influential than 'heavy industry executives', whatever that means? Airports are more complex, more capital intensive and in most cases face greater challenges than most airlines. Perhaps your view of the Middle East from London is more obscure than those of us who are actually in the region - and the list seems pretty accurate from here.
Aviation top 50
Posted by AmaJ, London, UK on 14 August 2009 at 15:59 UAE time

I believe this list provides an inaccurate and poor assessment of the industry's leaders. How can this list have airport directors more influential heavy industry executives who actually influence the global industry? How is it possible that new baby airlines with CEOs who are equally relatively new to the scene be more influential than other established leaders? More over, some of the personal biographical and professional information shown for the some of the executives are factually incorrect.
Please give an explanation towards how this list came to be. I work in the aviation industry myself, and find it to be close to a joke amongst many of my peers.
Good luck on the next one
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason.Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Arabian Business would like to point out that only comments relevant to the story will be published. Any containing personal insults or inappropriate language will not be approved.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.

READER COMMENTS

Reader Comments (24 hrs)

  1. UAE announces Eid and National Day holidays 2
    21 Nov ' 09 at 10:22
    Is it any wonder that Emiratis are reluctant to work in the private sector? One day extra and no request for early payment of salaries.   More  »
  2. RTA to lease out last batch of retail outlets available on Red Line 1
    21 Nov ' 09 at 14:10
    What happened of Last Minute and their 28 outlets - one on each station?   More  »
  3. Dubai plans start-up help for expat entrepreneurs 1
    21 Nov ' 09 at 11:37
    this is great news really makes sense, especially since Small & Medium Enterprises actually make UAE. I sincerely hope that this is...   More  »

Read all user comments >

Gitex 2009