Turkish Airlines profits in
Africa, where others fear to fly
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[September 12, 2017]
By Maggie Fick
NAIROBI (Reuters) - When Turkish Airlines
opened a direct daily route to a war-ravaged African failed state
plagued by Islamist militants, industry insiders were skeptical.
Not anymore.
"Somalia is one of our most profitable destinations worldwide," Mustafa
Ozkahraman, Kenya country manager for Turkish Airlines, told Reuters in
an interview. "Because we are the only (international airline). The
first and the only one."
The Istanbul-based carrier is replicating the move across Africa,
expanding to destinations shunned by others. The move comes as political
unrest at home last year pushed the airline into the red for the first
time in 17 years.
In 2011, Turkish Airlines flew to 14 African cities. By the end of this
year, it will operate 52 routes from Istanbul across Africa, after
launching a route to Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone.
From January to June, just under a tenth of total passenger and cargo
revenues came from Africa, according to results for the first half of
2017 that showed a net loss of $434 million.
Rival Emirates has less than 30 routes. Last year, the Dubai-based
airline cut one African flight and reduced the frequency of several
others.
It cited weak economic conditions in Africa, where many countries
dependent on revenues from commodities exports have seen economic growth
fall below population growth.
But Turkish Airlines, which is 49 percent state-owned, is bullish on
Africa, a continent of 1 billion people.
Ozkahraman denied the growing ties between Ankara and many African
states drove the airline's strategy.
"A lot of people would think our flights to Somalia were not
business-related," he said. "(But) we do the feasibility and we have to
believe the route will be profitable, either now or imminently."
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Employees work on a
Turkish Airlines plane after its arrival at Aden Abdulle
International Airport in Mogadishu, Somalia March 6, 2012. REUTERS/Ismail
Taxta/File Photo
He declined to give a specific breakdown on profits for African flights, but
said routes like the daily flight on a wide-body jet from the Nigerian city of
Lagos were critical to the airline's bottom line.
Despite challenges like poor security or electricity cuts at some airports, such
flights feed passengers into Turkish Airline's hub, making routes like Istanbul
to London profitable.
"You have to have those destinations to make your hub busy and your profitable
destinations more profitable," he said.
Last year the company posted a net loss for the first time since 2000, after a
demand slump caused by political turmoil and militant attacks at home.
Ozkahraman said some of the shortfall was also due to new planes - 210 have been
ordered, he said.
Load factors - a measure of how full planes are - are over 70 percent on many
African routes, just below the airline's global average of 80 percent, he added.
The wide network means that, unlike Ethiopian Airlines, Turkish does not partner
with smaller African carriers notorious for poor service.
It opened a business class lounge in Nairobi's airport in July 2016, its second
international lounge after Moscow. British Airlines and Emirates began renting
the Nairobi lounge for their business class travelers earlier this year,
Ozkahraman said.
(Editing by Katharine Houreld and Mark Potter)
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