United Arab Emirates

Dubai flights: Emirates set to report exceptionally good results for 2022-23

Dubai flights: Emirates set to report exceptionally good results for 2022-23

by

Waheed Abbas

Published: Tue 2 May 2023, 1:29 PM

Last updated: Tue 2 May 2023, 3:07 PM

Dubai’s flagship carrier Emirates is set to report exceptionally good results for 2022-23, thanks to the airline’s approach to bringing its fleet back as quickly as possible after the pandemic as well as revenge travel and tourism witnessing boom globally, said its president.

While speaking during a panel discussion, Sir Tim Clark said the aviation industry has benefited from surprising changes in trading conditions internationally and domestically since the pandemic ended.

He added that the airline started working as soon as it could after the pandemic and that helped it to get into good shape and “there is no notion that we will stop or slow.”

Highlighting the strong demand, he added that they didn’t subscribe to the idea of demand will remain the same as before the pandemic.

“We moved quickly and were first to bring the fleet back in the air, therefore, results are exceptionally good this year. And credit goes to the team,” Clark said during the second day at the Arabian Travel Market 2023.

The airline is expected to announce full-year results in the coming week.

Emirates airline profit for the first half of 2022-23 hit a new record of Dh4 billion ($1.1 billion), compared to last year’s loss of Dh5.8 billion. Despite an unfavourable currency exchange environment, Emirates revenue, including other operating income, of Dh50.1 billion was up 131 per cent compared with the Dh21.7 billion recorded during the same period last year.

“The airline’s strong turnaround performance is driven by strong passenger demand for international travel across markets and shows the airline’s ability to plan ahead to meet the demand, activate capacity, and attract customers with its high-quality products and value proposition,” it said in its first-half report.

Aviation industry sources say that Emirates will most likely report a record profit for the full year as well.

Clark said Emirates was able to move quickly and deploy resources despite all problems of borders closing and opening after the pandemic.

“By autumn of 2021, we were up there. As a result of that, we were able to get the resources of the business back into place and get production where it needed to be. At one point we were bleeding $250-300 million cash a month with no income. But we were not going to sit there. So we stabilized cashflow and grew very fast after that,” he said.

Moving fast to China

While replying to a query about the reopening of the Chinese market after the pandemic, he said: “We are not there where we used to be but we are getting there rapidly.”

China reopened its borders for international travellers in March, three years after the pandemic.

He said the travel sector is highly resilient and demand will continue to be robust.

“In the last 30 years, the leisure segment has grown, and it is still a huge opportunity. Leisure will grow more and more going forward. Demand will boom with leisure and hospitality seeing see a big uptake in the next five years. Saudi will have 100 million tourists by 2030 and that is an enormous number of people going in one country. If you look at what happened in Dubai last year, it already exceeds pre-pandemic numbers,” he said.

-waheedabbas@khaleejtimes.com

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source: khaleejtimes

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