This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C5B584.25357CA0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit US airline losses could hit $10 billion <http://money.excite.com/img/bus.gif> Friday September 9, 5:31 PM EDT WASHINGTON, Sept 9 - U.S. airline losses in 2005 could reach $10 billion, due mainly to soaring fuel prices made worse by Hurricane Katrina, the industry's chief trade group estimated on Friday. To try and stem the red ink, major carriers plan to ask Congress next week for a one-year holiday from the federal tax on jet fuel to save $600 million, the Air Transport Association said. "There simply is no rational business plan we can continue to operate under with fuel at the price it is today," Jim May, the association's chief executive, said in an interview with CNBC. Estimated losses for the year rose from $7 billion to between $9 billion and $10 billion, the association said. Industry executives plan to make their tax relief request at a Senate hearing next week, a trade group spokesman said. Key lawmakers have already pledged to explore rolling back the jet fuel tax of 4.3 cents per gallon. Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta said earlier this week the idea was worth looking at but stressed the Bush administration had not formulated a policy on tax breaks for airlines. Jet fuel traded at $1.99 per gallon on Friday compared to a high of $2.36 on August 31, two days after Katrina's winds and floodwaters ravaged Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. On the Wednesday before the storm, jet fuel was trading at $1.91 per gallon. The biggest airlines burn the most fuel, but they have struggled to raise fares in the face of fierce competition from low-cost rivals. The big airlines have long complained about taxes and fees that can account for more than a quarter of the price of a ticket. Mike Boyd, a Colorado-based industry consultant, said fuel and fuel alone is driving substantial industry losses just as traffic returned this spring and summer to levels not seen since before the September 11, 2001, hijacked aircraft attacks. "If oil prices had stayed where they were in 2004 we would be talking about how profitable the airlines are," Boyd said. Two carriers, United Airlines (UALAQ <http://money.excite.com/jsp/qt/full.jsp?symbol_search_text=UALAQ> ) and US Airways (UAIRQ <http://money.excite.com/jsp/qt/full.jsp?symbol_search_text=UAIRQ> ), are in bankruptcy while Delta Air Lines (DAL <http://money.excite.com/jsp/qt/full.jsp?symbol_search_text=DAL> ) and Northwest Airlines (NWAC <http://money.excite.com/jsp/qt/full.jsp?symbol_search_text=NWAC> ) are weighing Chapter 11 filings. All have cited high fuel prices for their woes. Battered by fuel increases, low fare carrier Independence Air, a unit of FLYi Inc. (FLYI <http://money.excite.com/jsp/qt/full.jsp?symbol_search_text=FLYI> ), could also seek court protection. Since the hurricane struck, big airlines are loading extra fuel on some flights rather than risking their operations to potential supply shortages or slowdowns at certain airports in the Northeast and Southeast. Rising oil prices also prompted national passenger railroad Amtrak on Friday to announce fare increases of between 5 percent and 7 percent for most service. The average fare nationally will increase $3 while the average will go up $4 in the Northeast, where Amtrak runs its flagship service. ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C5B584.25357CA0 Content-Type: image/gif; name="bus.gif" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Location: http://money.excite.com/img/bus.gif R0lGODlhZAARALP/AP/////Xwf+MOcrK6p+f3GZmwjU1rQMDlwAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAACwAAAAAZAARAEAE/xDISau9OOvNNSEDVxxkeRjhYJKFpB4EZRzt9IbTuOL6auQmQ60SCACM PdOww2w6nx1CAbRJkgwxwMunJeEks9ZsdQVYWWYydkIgf4kCQaEwGNMuo59EF2urXXYlWTZeFGd3 eUAwAH47GAFxc3UlS1CWl5iPaZQZiS4kMTcWL4MAYRSiQHoVnl13fm8WkAKzkkKTpXsnYLufB7Gu g7iohap4vTOrFq0Ss7V0tzO5mdTVTUhBwNbb3J1X06gf4rHi5TgfFQNU6uXjWu0fKe3a5RrPk73L LAV2KVdzAIPJQDRnjJA5mwDOiaEDYAl/JwpWakbxjDJVAzL6CcXCncAJp3QI/TJ0op4uFBpBuaKT 8YKzSNCg3WF1ZcyQFwfp+HoTcifJnEN0GLCZTgpRCi/lxJw00ZOfGi+mmGz4YcybVLpgmEujZyNI qQR6TjByZFM2C1KELdSiUKEhfrfw6GTTdm1aG2sZwZ2irRlMfBe7CR68SciFCAA7 ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C5B584.25357CA0--