Air Berlin chief blames delays to new airport for insolvency

epa06147118 An aircraft of German carrier Air Berlin with logo of shareholder VAE carrier Etihad at Duesseldorf Airport in Duesseldorf, Germany, 16 August 2017. Airberlin, Germany's second largest airline, has filed for insolvency proceedings on 15 August 2017, after key shareholder Etihad Airways withdrew funding. According to reports, Lufthansa has said in a statement that it is 'already in negotiations with airberlin to take over parts of air berlin Group and is exploring the possibility of hiring additional staff'. Reports on 16 August 2017 state the Irish low-cost airline has sent a complaint to German Federal Cartel Authority and EU competion authority, accusing Germany's biggest airline Lufthansa, Air Berlin and German government of a plot aimed at making it possible for Lufthansa to take over bankrupt Air Berlin without its liabilities and debt. Air Berlin filed for insolvency proceedings on 15 August 2017.  EPA/FRIEDEMANN VOGEL

Reuters

Air Berlin’s chief executive blamed long delays in the opening of a new Berlin airport for the German airline’s insolvency in an interview published by Germany’s Die Zeit.
“Air Berlin is also a victim of the constant postponements of the new airport,” the weekly newspaper quoted Thomas Winkelmann as saying. Winkelmann’s comments came a day after Air Berlin, Germany’s second-largest airline, filed for bankruptcy protection after key shareholder Etihad Airways
withdrew funding following years’
of losses.
The German capital’s new airport was meant to open in 2011, replacing Air Berlin’s home airport Tegel and Schoenefeld.
“We have Berlin in our name, are the prime carrier here and have designed our whole concept based on transfer traffic at this new airport. That is not possible at Tegel, my predecessors made that painful experience,” he added.
Several opening dates for the planned new airport have been postponed as the project faced red tape and technical problems with smoke ventilation systems, cabling and doors.
Winkelmann told Die Zeit that he believed he could save most of the Air Berlin jobs through a restructuring.
The German government has granted a bridging loan of $176 million to allow Air Berlin to keep its planes in the air for three months and secure the jobs of its 7,200 workers in Germany while negotiations continue.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend