Domestic airlines are to take delivery of
relatively new aircraft on dry lease arrangement this year, following
ratification of the Cape Town Convention.
Current operators Starbow and Africa World
Airlines (AWA) and returning Fly GH are both in the process of acquiring a new
fleet.
Starbow is to acquire two Q400 planes on
dry lease, while AWA has indicated that it is to acquire two A319s as it looks
to expand its regional operations.
Royal Fly GH, successor to the
defunct FLY 540 which suspended domestic operation in May 2014, is expected to
operate flights from Accra to Kumasi, Tamale and later Takoradi on an ATR72-600
aircraft, based on a dry lease arrangement.
Eric James Antwi, Chief Executive Officer
of Starbow, told the B&FT that: “The Cape Town Convention has now been
ratified, which has made it easier for us to go for a dry lease.
Starbow is now
planning to go for a dry lease on two Q400s to operate some internal and regional
flights. The aircraft is coming directly from the Bombardier Company, and it
will be a dry lease. A dry lease will give us more flexibility, and it is more
manageable.
“Domestic operations are not very good
because of the drop in passenger numbers. We believe that we will have to start
doing regional flights to stay in business. Our losses are colossal. We will
start with daily flights to Liberia then Freetown, and then we will add
Burkina, Niger, Benin and Cote D’Ivoire.”
Prior to ratification of the Cape
Town Convention, airlines (lessees) have had to pay about US$500,000 per month
to their lessors for the use of their equipment on wet lease.
The cost of aircraft leasing is
expected to reduce by some 20-30 percent following ratification of the Convention,
given that operators can now acquire aircraft on dry lease agreement more
easily.
Wet lease arrangements constrain
operators in term of foreign crew and pilots supplied by the aircraft owners.
Dry lease, however, gives operators a free hand to engage locals as cabin crew
and pilots.
Jessica Haizel, Business Development
Manager of Royal Fly GHm told the B&FT in an earlier interview that: “Fly 540 ceased operations because it wanted to undergo
management restructuring, and we have taken over from it. We believe in having
a wholly Ghanaian-owned airline.
“For starters we are looking at
focusing on our domestic market, doing Accra-Kumasi, Accra-Tamale and later
Takoradi. Possibly in the near-future, after we have operated for a while, we
will consider the west coast and even the intercontinental routes.
“We are back in Ghana because we
believe that the Ghanaian market is still available, and we also want to give
travellers opportunity to have other options besides the existing ones,” she
said.
This notwithstanding, there are various
issue that need to be addressed if the domestic airlines sector is to grow.
These include revision of the 17.5 percent VAT and granting waivers to airlines
for imported spare-parts.Source:B&FT
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