SFGate: Airline group forecasts global industry loss in 2008

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Monday, June 2, 2008 (AP)
Airline group forecasts global industry loss in 2008



   (06-02) 05:53 PDT GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) --
   The airline industry will lose $2.3 billion this year because of hikes in
oil prices, the world airlines group said Monday, revising its earlier
forecast of a collective industry profit.
   The loss forecast by the International Air Transport Association, which
represents more than 240 airlines around the world, contrasted with a
projected profit of $4.5 billion announced in March.
   It was the second time IATA has lowered its forecast this year.
   The forecast uses a consensus oil price of $106.50 per barrel of crude, =
up
from the $86 per barrel used in the March forecast, IATA said.
   "For every dollar that the price of fuel increases, our costs go up by
$1.6 billion," said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA director general and chief
executive.
   The front-month contract for oil was trading at about $126 a barrel in
electronic trading Monday, down from a record $135.09 set May 22 on the
New York Mercantile Exchange.
   Bisignani spoke at the group's annual meeting and World Air Transport
Summit which opened in Istanbul, Turkey.
   The total fuel cost for the airline industry this year is expected to be
$176 billion — 34 percent of the operating cost, IATA said. This is
a $40 billion increase compared with the 2006 bill.
   "The situation has changed dramatically in recent weeks," Bisignani said.
"Oil skyrocketing above $130 per barrel has brought us into uncharted
territory."
   On another topic, Bisignani slammed airport services in Britain as
overpriced and poorly performing.
   "This year's Worst Regulator Award goes to the U.K. Civil Aviation
Authority," he said. "Look at Heathrow. Service levels are a national
embarrassment but still the CAA increased charges by 50 percent over the
last five years and plan 86 percent for the next five."
   Governments should get serious about the crisis, Bisignani said.
   "Effective regulation means delivering results on cost-efficiency and go=
od
service, not a license to print money and abuse monopoly powers," he
added. --------------------------------------------------------------------=
--
Copyright 2008 AP

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