Prices of airline tickets stay high as upkeep woes crimp fleets
Send a link to a friend
[September 21, 2022] By
Jamie Freed
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Labour shortages and
supply chain snarls are making it harder for airlines and lessors to
return airplanes grounded during the pandemic to the skies as quickly as
they would like, operators and maintenance providers say.
A global squeeze on maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) capacity is
one of the factors contributing to higher airfares for travellers, as
demand has rebounded faster than aircraft can be made available and
costs are rising.
"Some suppliers are coming out with double-digit escalations and
surcharges," said Mahesh Kumar, chief executive of Asia Digital
Engineering, the maintenance arm of Malaysian budget carrier AirAsia.
"The airlines keep increasing their fares but that is not a sustainable
business," he added at the MRO Asia-Pacific conference in Singapore.
Complications of that kind mean that just about 110 of AirAsia's fleet
of 200 planes have returned to service, he added.
Yet getting the rest back in the air is challenging because of the
scarcity of MRO slots that also drives up their prices.
The bottlenecks at MROs have been compounded because airlines returned
planes to lessors at a much higher rate than usual during the pandemic,
which crushed travel demand.
PAINTED INTO A CORNER
Aircraft switching to a new airline need maintenance checks, cabin
interior changes and livery repainting at MROs that are often
short-staffed after pandemic lay-offs of workers while facing delays at
parts suppliers struggling with similar woes.
"We've had real issues with the number of paint shops that can take
aircraft and in addition to that, the inability of some of the paint
shops to get some of the specialist paint," said Robert Martin, chief
executive of aircraft lessor BOC Aviation Ltd
"If you've got some logo on the back of the aircraft with multiple
colours, if you are missing one colour, that's a bit of a problem."
[to top of second column] |
A Thai AirAsia aircraft engine is seen
covered, after not being used during the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) pandemic, on the tarmac of Bangkok's Don Muang
International Airport, Thailand, October 27, 2021. Picture taken
October 27, 2021. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo
Now it takes about three months to make the changes required to
shift a narrowbody plane from one customer to another, up from one
before the pandemic, Martin added.
Hangar capacity and workers were not sufficient to meet customer
demand, said Jeffrey Lam, commercial aerospace president of
Singapore Technologies (ST) Engineering Ltd.
"The ST Engineering network, we are full and so customers are always
asking for more slots," he said.
"We have operations in the United States, Europe, China and
Singapore. Apart from China, all of our operations are facing labour
challenges."
The strong demand is driving up labour costs as MROs compete for
staff and available workers are being asked to do more overtime, Lam
said.
"We don't want to too much overtime, because you have concerns
around safety and quality," he said.
"We wish we could add more labour and take on more work. So we are
worried about schedules, redelivery schedules, costs and all that."
Lessor BBAM has not had much success getting MRO slots this winter,
leaving out in the cold some airline customers who sought planes
quickly to meet demand in next year's summer peak, said Patrick Low,
its vice president for technical matters.
"The speed of recovery is really determined about whether we can get
MRO slots," he said. "I think the earliest an MRO is telling us is,
come back June next year, possibly we have slots for you."
(Reporting by Jamie Freed; Additional reporting by Anshuman Daga;
Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|