Ethiopian Airlines sees 30% surge in passengers this year
Ethiopian Airlines expects to carry 30 per cent more passengers in the year ended June from the year before buoyed by new routes and a rebound in global travel.
Africa's biggest airline,
however, faces risks from delayed aircraft deliveries and the grounding of some
planes due to engine shortages caused by supply chain disruptions, Mesfin Tasew
Bekele said in an interview.
The delivery problems
mainly affect narrow-body passenger jets from Boeing, he said, while the
grounding is affecting wide-body aircraft used for long-haul travel.
Ethiopian, which carried
13.9 million passengers in the year ended June 2023, does not operate the
variant of Boeing's MAX jets that suffered a panel blow-out earlier this year,
Mesfin said, and it is confident Boeing can deal with safety concerns.
"We believe that
Boeing is in a good position to fix all these," he said.
Ethiopian is operating a
fleet of 146 Boeing, Airbus and De Havilland planes, below the ideal
level of 150, Mesfin said, due to the delivery delays.
It has firm orders for 70
Boeing and Airbus planes and options to buy 54 more, part of a plan to double
its fleet and route network by 2035.
The growth plan is
expected to boost annual revenue and passenger numbers by 400 per cent and 440 per
cent respectively by the target year.
Ethiopian's passenger
numbers in the first nine months of its current financial year show it is on
course to hit its growth target for this year, including a 20 per cent increase
in revenue to $7.3 billion, Mesfin said.
"We are expanding
our network and we're increasing the frequencies on the existing network,"
he said, citing new destinations like London Gatwick, Madrid and Bangui.
The airline is also
investing in its cargo business, including launching a $55 million e-commerce
shipments handling facility at its Addis Ababa base in February this year,
targeting firms like China's Alibaba and others, Mesfin said.
"E-commerce
business is growing now, faster than ever," he said, referring to demand
on the African continent.
Reuters

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