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Qantas struggles with record fuel costs

  • Spanish Market: Oil products
  • 28/08/14

Australian carrier Qantas Airways reported record fuel costs of A$4.5bn ($4.19bn) in its 2013-14 fiscal year ending 30 June 2014, up 6pc or A$253mn from the same period a year earlier. The higher fuel costs contributed to Qantas posting a loss for 2013-14.

Fuel costs accounted for 28pc of the airline's A$15.79bn 2013-14 operating costs. The 6pc increase in fuel costs was largely attributable to an 11pc devaluation of the average Australian dollar during 2013-14, partly offset by fuel hedging and a 3pc improvement in fuel efficiency from new aircraft, cabin reconfigurations and other fuel use initiatives, the airline said.

The majority of its 2014-15 fuel price risk is hedged through fuel and foreign exchange hedging, Qantas said. The airline reported a non-cash write-down of A$2.6bn for the value of its international fleet after putting it into a separate structure.

The fleet write-down, higher fuels costs, as well as higher operating costs and lower revenues, saw Qantas report a loss of A$2.84bn for 2013-14 against a profit of A$2mn in 2012-13.

Revenues fell 3.5pc to A$15.35bn in 2013-14 from A$15.9bn in 2012-13. This reflected lower revenue from its domestic operations, as well as reduced maintenance contract work.

A recovery in Qantas' international operations will continue to be driven by removing costs from the business and the easing back of capacity oversupply, the company said. Qantas has cut 2,500 jobs since February. It aims to cut 4,000 of the planned 5,000 redundancies by the end of 2015.

International competitor capacity growth in Australia is expected to be below 3pc for the first half of 2014-15, compared with average growth of 8pc during the past four years. Overall domestic capacity growth in the first half of 2015 is likely to be around 1pc, Qantas said. It froze its capacity growth for the first quarter of 2014-15, which has now been extended to the second quarter.

Qantas plans to receive 10 new aircraft during 2014-15. Its continuing fleet requirements and simplification will see the group's main fleet reduced from 11 different aircraft types in 2012-13 to seven by 2015-16.

km/rjd

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