>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / BUSINESS / STORY
Fuel bills push Japanese airlines to cut routes
Wed, Aug 06, 2008
Reuters

TOKYO - ALL Nippon Airways Japan's second-largest airline, said on Wednesday it may cut services and its bigger rival Japan Airlines Corp was reported to be following suit, due to soaring costs for aviation fuel.

ANA said it may trim services on about 10 domestic and international routes, while the Nikkei business daily said Japan Airlines planned to cut flights on 21 routes, including services to London.

Skyrocketing jet fuel prices have hit the airline industry, with carriers worldwide shedding thousands of jobs and scrapping routes as losses mount, threatening some of them with insolvency.

The cost of jet fuel has jumped about 69 per cent over the last year to about US$144 (S$198) a barrel.

Japan Airlines is due to report results on Thursday, and a spokesman declined to comment on the media report, saying any announcement on flight cuts would be made then.

An ANA spokesman said the airline was considering halting international routes such as those to Guam and Taipei, and would make an official announcement soon. Guam and Taiwan are popular holiday destinations for Japanese.

The cuts by Japan Airlines were projected to save the airline 12 billion-13 billion yen (S$153 million-S$165 million) a year, the Nikkei said.

In the United States, AMR Corp parent of American Airlines, and Delta Air Lines Inc have both said they would trim capacity and slash headcount.

Shares of ANA rose 1.5 per cent to 405 yen while Japan Airlines added 0.5 per cent to 223 yen, both lagging a 1.8 per cent gain for the benchmark Nikkei average. -- REUTERS

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Fuel bills push Japanese airlines to cut routes
   
 
  Fuel bills push Japanese airlines to cut routes
   
 
  STI opens higher
   
 
  Asian shares open higher
   
 
  HK financial markets suspended as storm hits
   
 
  Wall Street rallies on Fed rate hold, falling oil
   
 
  STI lower at close
   
 
  Stanchart says net profit rises by third
   
 
  Treasury says N. Zealand economy in recession
   
 
  Japanese firm paid almost $1M a year to win ODA projects in Southeast Asia
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
   

Search: