Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Aeroflot set to spread its wings into Georgia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Aeroflot set to spread its wings into Georgia

    AEROFLOT SET TO SPREAD ITS WINGS INTO GEORGIA
    by Tracey Boles Transport Editor

    The Business
    June 20, 2004

    Empire building is alive and well in Russia - at least in its aviation
    sector. Aeroflot Russian Airlines has opened tentative talks with
    Georgian flag carrier Air Zena with a view to purchasing it outright
    or taking at least majority control of the airline.

    As well as developing its presence outside Russia, Aeroflot is looking
    to enhance its domestic services and is courting various Russian
    airlines as potential purchases. The national carrier is understood to
    be interested in Samara Airlines and Kuban Airlines, with the aim of
    establishing new regional bases at Samara and Kransnador. In addition
    it has not ruled out an investment in Siberia's Arkhangelsk Airlines.

    Air Zena was formed as a charter airline in 1994 and has established
    a strong network into Europe from its base at Tbilisi. Acquiring flag
    carrier status in 1999 following the demise of Georgian Airlines,
    it has played an important role in developing the country's economy
    and its links with the west. A private airline, it operates three
    Boeing 737-500 and two Antonov 2 aircraft on routes connecting Tbilisi
    with Moscow, Prague, Paris, Athens, Tel Aviv, Frankfurt, Amsterdam,
    Vienna and Kiev.

    Aeroflot believes an equity investment in the Georgian carrier will
    help expand its activities in the Commonwealth of Independent states
    (CIS) and prove a boon to the SkyTeam alliance, which the Russian
    airline will join within the next two years.

    "We confirm that we are in talks for Air Zena , but this is a
    preliminary stage and it is too early to talk about results," Lev
    Koshlyakov, deputy general director of Aeroflot, said. "We have
    an interest in the CIS market and we are building up contacts and
    relations as this could be our trump card in the SkyTeam alliance."
    If Aeroflot buys up Air Zena, it will be following the example of
    Russia's number two carrier Sibir, which acquired Armenia's Armavia
    airline in 2002. Sibir has used Armavia not only to expand its network,
    but also to import Airbus 320 planes duty-free and to gain experience
    operating them on the CIS market.

    Sibir has already imported four such aircraft and is only required to
    pay a small registration fee in Armenia. But the aircraft cannot be
    used on the routes of Sibir proper due to government restrictions on
    using imported planes; Aeroflot is allowed to operate only 27 foreign
    jets in its fleet of 78.

    Last month Aeroflot signed a preliminary agreement to join the Air
    France-led SkyTeam airline alliance, a deal that could take a year
    to be finalised.

    Aeroflot intends to increase market share on Russian-US routes
    with what it bills as an improved service - supposedly gone is the
    unfriendly and unreliable image of Soviet times, to be replaced with
    new uniforms and an la carte menu. The first North American office
    for frequent fliers opened recently.

    But Aeroflot's ability to revamp its much-maligned fleet is limited
    by the measures designed to protect Russia's aircraft industry;
    value-added-tax and import duties that increase the price of
    foreign-made jets by up to 40%. As a result, Boeing, which has 500
    engineers in Russia and has invested $ 1.3bn (715m, E1bn) into joint
    ventures with the country since the early 1990s, sells more planes
    to Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Ukraine.

    The good news for both manufacturers is that the Russian airline
    plans to double its fleet to 150 jets by the end of the decade;
    the lack of sufficient Russian aircraft may play straight into their
    hands. Of 110 foreign-made jets flown by CIS airlines, 88 are Boeings.
Working...
X