Vietnamese airlines suffer losses amounting to hundreds of billions of dong each month
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If fuel prices keep increasing and are maintained at a high level for a long time, no carriers will earn a profit, Chief accountant at Vietnam Airlines Tran Thanh Hien said. (Photo: Dân trí) |
Vietnamese airlines are suffering losses amounting to hundreds of billions of dong each month due to a surge in fuel prices, according to the director of the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) Dinh Viet Thang.
At a conference of the transport ministry reviewing its work in the first half of the year earlier this week, Thang said that fuel costs accounted for 40-50% of operation costs, and revenue increases were insufficient to compensate for high fuel prices.
He said domestic aviation transport had recovered with higher growth than in the pre-pandemic period. However, Vietnamese carriers had not fully escaped difficulties due to the slow recovery of the international market.
It was estimated that domestic carriers suffered a loss of nearly 100 billion VND per month on skyrocketing jet fuel prices.
Tran Thanh Hien, chief accountant at Vietnam Airlines, said Jet A1 prices averaged 72 USD per barrel in 2021, and carriers developed the scenario where the average jet fuel price was 110 USD for 2022. However, the fuel price reached 162 USD, two times higher than last year.
If fuel prices keep increasing and are maintained at a high level for a long time, no carriers will earn a profit, Hien said.
As domestic airlines were struggling with high fuel prices, the CAAV proposed the Ministry of Transport consider reducing the environmental tax on fuel together with gradually loosening caps on domestic ticket prices so that airlines could be more flexible.
Le Hong Ha, general director of Vietnam Airlines, said that loosening the air ticket ceiling would reflect competition in the air transport market. This would help airlines to collect surcharges on customers who could afford it and be an opportunity for the carriers to widen the price fluctuation range.
Bui Doan Ne, Vice President of the Vietnam Aviation Business Association, said high fuel prices were a real challenge as domestic airlines had just gone through more than two years of difficulty due to the pandemic and had not yet recovered.
It was reported at the conference that in the first half of the year, the number of monthly international air passengers had increased from 103,500 in January to 127,000 in February, 224,600 in March, and 445,700 in April, 650,000 in May and an estimated 826,000 in June.
At the end of June, more than 30 foreign and four Vietnamese airlines were operating 96 international routes between Vietnam and 21 countries and territories. Vietnamese carriers were using 68 international routes to 16 countries and regions.
In the domestic market, six Vietnamese carriers were operating 55-60 routes connecting Hanoi, Da Nang and HCM City with 19 local airports. The lifting of pandemic-related restrictions, along with booming demand, was bringing about a fast recovery of domestic aviation transport, with the number of domestic passengers growing from 10-15% each month in the second quarter.
The number of air passengers going through Vietnamese airports was expected to reach 70-80 million this year, including 8-10 million international travellers.