- Nigeria, Brazil hold talks, initiate direct flight operations
- Delta, United, Emirates get exemption to sell tickets in dollars
- Delta to increase capacity, begins NY-Lagos route Dec
- NAMA' s move to complete Surface Movement Radar for Lagos, Abuja airports 'll curb airside, ground incidents, others
- African airlines demand up by 10.1% in Aug
DOMESTIC AIRLINES RECURRING DEBTS AND THE WAY OUT OF THE IMPASSE
By JOHN O. OJIKUTU
The indebtedness of the Nigeria Domestic Airlines grew up to the present level today because, most of the operators are sponsored by or are sponsors of political office holders in government. With the ‘attitude of we own the government’ most of these operators had no intention of paying for the services rendered to them by the government services providers, despite the Economic Regulation Provisions in the National Civil Aviation Regulations (NCARs) Part 12 Sections 18.10.1-5, but thanks to the ‘change attitude’ brought about by the administration of President Mohamadu Buhari.
The NCARs Part 12 Section 18.10.1 empowers the NCAA to regularly oversee the Financial Balance Sheets of all airlines and government operators. Specifically, NCAA is to ensure the “continuous monitoring of the operations of the Nigeria Licensed Airlines for the purpose of ensuring their financial capability for safe operations and sustainable services”. Similarly, Section 18.10.3 provides that all Nigerian Airlines “shall submit to the Authority on monthly basis, all financial data, records of their operations in forms and manners as may be prescribed by the Authority”. Unfortunately, the fraternity attitude between these airlines and political officials had made it impossible for the NCAA to enforce the provision of this NCAR section.
The airlines indebtedness was not peculiar to the NCAA, FAAN and NAMA alone; these airlines were also indebted to the airport ground services providers such as Bi-Courtney, NAHCO, SAHCOL and Fuel Marketers etc. They were indebted to Federal Inland Revenue Services, Insurance Companies, Banks, and Caterer and were many months in debt arrears on staff salaries. When put together, the indebtedness cannot ensure the airlines “Safe Operations and Sustainable Support Services”.
Over the years, there had been some kind of conspiracy among the airlines and their promoters in government who provide the avenue for reliefs or concessions on debts owed to government agencies. At some other times, there were government intervention funds given to some of the airlines at a cheap interest rate of 2 to 6 % to settle their operational debts and bank loans at a time bank’s loans were attracting interest of 23- 25%. The Intervention Funds were given to these airlines without investigating their debts portfolios in the banks and the debts owed to the government agencies. These are greed that are hidden under government official secret act and are protected with government force. These are the greed that have caused the impasse and are now open to the public.
Recall that in 2010, Mrs. Cordelia Njeze, the then minister of aviation, gave some of these airline operators reliefs on the debts they owed the government operators. They all then got the concession to spread the payment over a period of four years. That was two years to the end of the first term of the last administration. It was a game of chance she knew had a lifespan within her watch in the ministry. The cycle of the debts continued after her watch. The succeeding officer in the ministry took similar game of chance to introduce the policy of intervention funds, using public money to fund the debts of private operators in order to “sustain the industry”. Can the industry be sustained with a debt of over N20 billion hanging on these airlines?
It is evident that under the Buhari administration, there would be no free or cheap meals for the operators in the industry, especially for the major players that should be generating about N500 – N800 billion annually. Above all, none of the domestic airlines was known for selling tickets on credit but, generally on cash and carry. The least among the airlines, with a minimum of two aircrafts, makes minimum of six flights of an hour each per day; carrying minimum of 300 passengers, and at an average of N20, 000 per passenger, makes about N6 million daily; at an average of N500, 000.00 per hour as operating cost, expended N3 million per day and makes a net profit of about N3 million per day. This profit does not include foreign exchange which some of them are making regionally, continentally and intercontinental and are probably not returning home
For a typical Nigerian businessman, N3 million per day is a huge profit. Unfortunately in aviation, a single C-Check on any of the operator’s aircraft could clean up 80-90% of the airline profit in 2 years, and that could run down the airline if not well managed. This of course is the nature of commercial aviation which an average Nigerian investor has not been able to learn about or understand.
Commercial aviation industry is where you invest in dollars and make profit in cents or invest in Naira and make profit in Kobo. To sustain a Nigerian airlines therefore, a Nigerian businessman who wants profit returns in Dollars and Naira needs government patronage that would provide reliefs, concessions or free services from government services providers and government intervention funds. The alternative to these is to cut corners or make quick exit from the industry.
The smart ones among them who could easily identify the challenges but could not navigate their ways through the business divert or disinvest their profit to other businesses and make quick exit. Others remain and survive only on government patronage and go underground through one or two air mishaps, or through bankruptcy, while some others make efforts to grow and would not depend on cheap intervention funds. These ones need help to surmount the ‘multiple charges’ which they all believe are reasons for the ‘reoccurring debts’. How does the government help this category of operators?
Aside from the fuel charges which they all believe accounts for about 40% of their operating cost, others charges that were always in contention between the airlines and the government services providers in the sector are mainly: Landing and Parking Charges, Air Navigational Charges. Ticket Sales Charges, Fuel Sales Charges etc. These are the major sources of revenue earnings for the government and they are the main areas causing the impasse between the airlines and the government agencies. What then are the solutions?
Government should recognize that the domestic airline operators cannot sufficiently enjoy the benefits of the market if more than one airport out of four international airports are opened to some foreign airlines with a single BASA for multiple landings and frequencies. Aside Abuja and Lagos, both of which accounts for about 80 to 90% of the national passengers and air traffic, the domestic airlines would not make profit flights on the route to other airports including Kano and Portharcourt. The followings are therefore suggested solutions.
- Government should stop the multiple landing approved for some foreign airlines to all international airports and limit each foreign airline whose country has BASA with Nigeria to operate into only one airport. For instance, British Airways should decide between Lagos and Abuja which is best suited for its operation. So also should Virgin Atlantic, Emirate, Air France, KLM, Etihad, Qatar, Lufthansa, Ethiopian, Delta South Africa, Kenya Air etc. decides between Lagos, Abuja, Kano Port Harcourt and Enugu. Government should not shy away from taking difficult decisions that would reverse some benefits that are being enjoyed by some foreign airlines on our Domestic Routes through multiple landings to the disadvantages of the Domestic Airlines
- Government should not limit the frequencies of these foreign airlines flights to the airport of their choice. The aim is to create sufficient internal market for the domestic airlines. While the foreign airlines would be collecting and dropping international passengers at their choice airports, the domestic airlines would be supplying and collecting international passengers to these airports as well as collecting and dropping these passengers to and from other airports. Allowing any of the foreign airlines to extend its services beyond Lagos, Abuja, Kano , Portharcourt or Enugu is to take benefits of the domestic market away from the domestic airlines
- Government should classify the nation’s airports into Classes A, B and C with a view to reducing the overhead and operating cost of the Domestic Airlines. Each Domestic Airline should choose which of the categorized airports it would operate to and which it would choose as a base station for overnight parking in order to lower its cost of operations. The suggested standards for the classification into the 3 Categories should be as follows:
- Lagos and Abuja with high volume of passenger and air traffic should be classified as Class A. Government should make the Landing and Parking charges and the Air Traffic Services and En-route Navigational charges at these airports to be relatively higher than those at other airports because of the higher quality of infrastructure, and services available at these airports.
- Similar Services Charges airports classified as Class B should be relatively less than those of Class A, depending on the quality of the services available at these airports.
- The Charges for Services into at those classified as Class C should be made free initially for a period not more than 5 years from the date of the classification and operation.
- Government should stop all forms or means of providing intervention funds from public funds to private airline operators who have less than 10 years of operations and have no regular clean financial data or records that has been certified by the NCAA in compliance with Nigeria Civil Aviation Regulations Part 12, Sections 18.10.1-5. The option is for the government to encourage airline operators to sell their company shares to new investors or go to the capital market for fund. Furthermore, government should curtail the excesses of political office holders who keep tabs on the contracts and revenue of the departments and agencies as well as discourage the manipulation of the technocrats of the agencies by these officials.
- It is not sufficient for NCAA alone to have a Settlement Meeting with the Domestic Airlines and they too pledging to pay the unremitted funds within a time frame, in the manner they did in 2010 and yet did not pay. It would be necessarily sufficient for the NCAA to comply with the NCAR Part 12 Section 18.10.1-5 by ensuring that the Government Safety Services Providers such as FAAN, NAMA and Bicoutney and other Ground Services Providers are fully paid to avoid a total collapse of the industry.
Group Capt (rtd) Ojikutu who was former Command, Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos writes from Lagos
Google+