Posted inLatest NewsTransportUAE

Etihad Airways posts highest-ever cargo revenues, lowering losses as passenger volumes recover

While ongoing travel restrictions and new variants of the virus dampened demand, Etihad Airways saw passenger revenues bounce back in Q4 2021, recovering to 50% of 2019 levels in December

Etihad Airways

UAE’s second-largest airline Etihad Airways has revealed a strong recovery in passenger operations along with a significant improvement in financial performance, posting a much-reduced loss of $476mn in its business results for 2021.

Overall, Etihad’s core operating loss of $476mn for fiscal year 2021 represents a 72% improvement compared to 2020, and a 41% improvement against pre-pandemic results in 2019. EBITDA improved by more than $1bn, turning to positive $408mn from a negative $651mn in 2020.

Meanwhile, cargo operations continued to outperform expectations reaching 729,200 tonnes in 2021, marking a 27% year-on-year increase in freight. Cargo revenues rose 49% to $1.73bn, the highest figure in the history of the airline.

The airline carried 3.5 million passengers in 2021, with an average seat load factor of 39.6%. Passenger loads doubled in the second half of the year, reaching 70.1% in December as travel demand peaked during the winter holiday period.

Etihad Airways sees recovery in passenger volumes

The airline also recorded a particularly strong surge in passenger volumes in Q4 2021, following the September relaxation of mandatory quarantine periods in Abu Dhabi.

Etihad Airways posted passenger revenues of $1.07bn in 2021, down by 14% year-on-year. While ongoing travel restrictions and new variants of the virus dampened demand, the airline saw passenger revenues bounce back in the last quarter of the year, recovering to 50% of 2019 levels in December.

Network capacity came in at 37.21 billion ASKs for the year, with the airline connecting Abu Dhabi to 71 passenger and cargo destinations across 47 countries.

Etihad Airways

Etihad continues to strengthen its business

The airline launched or restarted operations to 13 destinations in 2021, most notably introducing scheduled services to Tel Aviv following the normalisation of relations between the UAE and Israel.

The group chief executive officer of Etihad Airways, Tony Douglas, said: “In another year of global uncertainty, Etihad Airways has continued to move forward, strengthen its business, and build on its world-class travel proposition.

“As always, this has been thanks to our remarkable people who have gone above and beyond to make the most of every opportunity. Despite the slowdown caused by Omicron, we are confident that the spring and summer season will continue to see a resurgence in travel as more people return to the skies.

Douglas added: “We look forward to our guests being able to experience our state-of-the-art Airbus A350s when they debut later this year, taking pride of place alongside our Boeing 787s. With one of the most fuel-efficient fleets in the world and with sustainability at the very top of our agenda, we will continue to pave the way for more sustainable flying in 2022 and beyond.”

As operations progressively ramped up throughout 2021, Etihad maintained an absolute focus on cost control, decreasing operating costs by a further $110mn, despite a $197mn increase in fuel costs driven by rallying oil prices.

Fixed overhead costs and finance costs also recorded a significant reduction, decreasing by 14% (or $110mn) and 20% (or $90mn) respectively. As a result, the airline managed to maintain strong liquidity in 2021.

The chief financial officer of Etihad Airways, Adam Boukadida, said: “Despite Covid-19 suppressing global travel demand for a second year running, we have continued to transform Etihad Airways into a more efficient business, delivering additional line-by-line savings and further optimising our cost base. Our record cargo operations have provided much-needed uplift, helping to more than double monthly operating revenue between January and December.

“Pushing the frontiers of sustainable financing, we issued the first-ever sustainability-linked ESG loan in aviation, while at the same time reducing our outstanding debt by more than 20%. All these factors combined resulted in a strong year-end liquidity position, aligned to our pre-pandemic levels, and in a steadfast ‘A with a stable outlook’ credit rating reaffirmed by Fitch.”

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Abdul Rawuf

Abdul Rawuf