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Resumption of scheduled flights in July? Resumption of scheduled flights in July?

After officially exiting its lengthy business rescue process on 30 April, SAA has indicated it aims to resume scheduled flights from the beginning of July. According to the document seen by Fin24, the now liquid and solvent national carrier plans to take flight within the next two months. The document indicates that the airline intends to recommence domestic flights on 1 July.

The national carrier’s interim CEO Thomas Kgokolo stated that his team would review the airline’s existing route network and focus on efficiencies within the company when restarting the airline. Kgokolo stated that the airline would be restarting its route network in stages, beginning with   domestic and regional flight schedules before returning to international routes.

It seems that SAA has selected destinations where operations are possible and where demand exists. The airline appears to have avoided routes where there is an oversupply of seats by competitors who have already established a presence while SAA was grounded. The document seen by Fin24 indicates that SAA intends to start up its domestic flight schedule from the beginning of July this year.

The airline will operate a small internal route network with flights on just three routes from Johannesburg.  South African Airways intends to operate scheduled services between Johannesburg and Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town and Johannesburg and Gqeberha from 1 July.

SAA has dropped numerous destinations from its previous route network. Destinations, such as the Victoria Falls, Livingstone and Luanda, have been excluded. Services are being provided by private carriers including Cemair (Luanda), Airlink (Livingstone), Fastjet and British Airways operated by Comair (Victoria Falls).

The airline no longer has suitable aircraft in its fleet to be able to operate profitable services to several destinations in its proposed domestic and regional route networks.  SAA will need to acquire additional aircraft to operate flights to most of these destinations.

SAA’s former top international routes included destinations such as London, New York, Frankfurt and Perth. The airline used its wide-body Airbus A340 aircraft amongst others, on these routes.

While several governments have imposed flight and entry bans on South Africa, there would be no point in resuming flights to most of SAA’s international routes in the foreseeable future. Low passenger volumes would simply translate into more financial losses.

Now that the airline’s business rescue process is officially over and since R2.7bn has been prioritised for SAA’s embattled subsidiaries (Mango, Air Chefs and SAA Technical – to avoid the total collapse of these entities), the return of South African Airways to the skies is dependent on the airline acquiring a strategic equity partner who will inject much-needed cash into the airline.

Source: TheSouthAfrican.com