AIR TRANSPORT NEEDS A NEW MODEL
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Specialising in passenger & cargo GSA representation, IET solutions, BSP, ARC & TCH support services & NDC distribution
Modern air transport dates back to the end of the Second World War, it will be 80 years old next year. Since then, it has undergone a tremendous evolution, driven by the manufacture of increasingly efficient aircraft models, highly reliable air traffic control, all to keep up with a demand for transport that continues to increase as a middle class arrives on the market on the most populous continents. But, while technological progress is permanent and impressive, the airline model has remained fixed around two concepts: traditional carriers and "low-cost" airlines. However, it seems that a new model must be invented.
Incumbent operators are facing the increase in their production costs as a result of the growing demands on their staff. This is also the role of the unions, which have become very powerful, even capable of blocking a corporate strategy, as we saw a few years ago in the Air France/KLM group, where the growth of the group's "low-cost" operator was blocked by the unions. Since then, things have fortunately been settled. We have also seen in the United States, the unions take over the management of United Airlines, one of the three American majors, with the disastrous consequences that have led the company to reorganize. Faced with rising costs, traditional airlines have had to face the arrival of "low costs", the other new concept of air transport. This is based on simplicity and better productivity, and aims to attract new layers of customers by lowering sales prices, which has been made possible by a reduction in costs that is at least equivalent.
This is the landscape in which air transport must move. At the same time, the manufacturers have grouped together and there are only two left: Airbus in Europe and Boeing in the USA, at least for aircraft with more than 100 seats while waiting for the arrival of the Chinese. However, one of them, Boeing, is facing considerable difficulties largely due to a management that has favoured the distribution of real or supposed dividends to shareholders, to the detriment of the obligation of safety. The consequence is that instead of delivering around 100 aircraft per month, which was the goal, the American manufacturer is only releasing less than half of them. This comes at a time when, after emerging from the terrible Covid era, passengers are scrambling to travel and companies are placing orders by the hundreds. The portfolio of the two major companies is currently around 15,000 aircraft, which represents 100 months of production, i.e. more than 8 years, all while orders continue to pour in. However, operators make their medium-summer long-term operating plans according to the delivery date of the aircraft ordered and this can no longer be respected. Engine manufacturers are not keeping up, maintenance workshops are struggling and the 400 or so subcontractors needed to manufacture the aircraft are struggling to provide their services on time.
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And what do passengers think? There is no doubt that they are sensitive to the communication of the companies who promise to make them travel at fares well below their cost prices. Of course, everyone knows that this promise is fallacious, it only concerns at best a very small number of seats and if not, the "low cost" seat, it is compensated by the extreme modesty of the service, which forces customers to buy, often very expensive, services that should be included in the price of the ticket. Basically, companies don't care about the expectations of customers who are, in professional language, only "pax", i.e. consumer units.
However, it should be acknowledged that, although widely criticized in some of their aspects, the two concepts have brought about the results we know: nearly 5 billion passengers per year and a level of safety close to perfection. However, we now have to deal with a doubling of demand in the next fifteen years, while equipment is having great difficulty keeping up, whether on the ground with airports or in flight with aircraft.
It is high time that air transport invented a new model that is both respectful of the environment and of passengers, who should really become customers with the quality of service that this requires. This would perhaps slow down the development of the sector, but is it not necessary at a time when we are having so much trouble absorbing growth? The solution is certainly not easy to find, but after all, it was not either when the "low costs" were created. So let's trust the imagination.