Bankrupt Air Berlin (Europe’s 10th biggest airline) to end all flights by 28th October

Air Berlin has revealed all flights will be grounded by the 28th October. Air Berlin has been in financial crisis for months, culminating in forced insolvency mid-August. It was bailed out by a £137 million loan from the German government, which has kept planes flying until now. Air Berlin’s crisis began when Abu Dhabi-based Etihad, which holds a 29% stake in Air Berlin,  finally withdrew its funding as the airline kept losing money.  Lufthansa and easyJet are in talks with Air Berlin to buy up parts of the company.  Customers who booked Air Berlin flights prior to August 15 will not get their money back from the airline. Monarch ceased trading earlier this month, less than two months after Air Berlin filed for bankruptcy, and in May, Italian airline Alitalia also became insolvent. The demise of 3 major European airlines recently has prompted concerns about the future of the aviation industry. Competition between airlines has become every more intense, and more failures of European airlines are likely. While easyJet, Ryanair and Norwegian may be able to continue, some ‘mid-market’ carriers with relatively high cost bases being continually squeezed to a point of failure.  All this could spell the end of the ultra-low fares people have become accustomed to.
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Major airline cancels ALL flights after October leaving passengers out of pocket

AIR BERLIN has cancelled all flights beyond the end of the month as it prepares to shut down.

By CLAUDIA CUSKELLY (Express)

Oct 11, 2017

Air Berlin has revealed all flights will be grounded by the end of the monthAir Berlin has been in the throes of financial crisis for months, culminating in forced insolvency mid-August.
The airline was bailed out by a £137 million loan from the German government, which has kept planes flying until now.

But after months of uncertainty, the European airline has now revealed all flights will be grounded by the end of the month.

In a letter to employees this week, Air Berlin announced preparations to stop all services by October 28 “at the latest”.

Continuing to fly “according to the current state of things, will no longer be possible”, the correspondence revealed.

Air Berlin’s crisis began when Abu Dhabi-based Etihad, which holds a 29 percent stake in the German company, finally lost patience with the loss-making company and withdrew its funding.

Etihad said it was “extremely disappointing” in lieu of multiple cash injections to keep the company afloat, including £227 million as recently as April.

Lufthansa and easyJet are in talks with Air Berlin to buy up parts of the company.
As negotiations continue, many customers with flights booked beyond October 28 are facing cancellations.

Those customers who booked after August 15 when Air Berlin filed for insolvency will be entitled to full refunds or rebooking on an alternative flight.

Air Berlin news: The airline is one of three major European carriers to collapse this yearAccording to EU legislation, passengers will also be compensated for additional expenses incurred as a result of the cancellations.

But those customers who booked Air Berlin flights prior to August 15 will not get their money back from the airline.

It’s a similar situation faced by Monarch passengers who had flights cancelled as a result of the UK airline’s collapse.

Monarch ceased trading earlier this month, less than two months after Air Berlin filed bankruptcy.

Just a few months prior in May, Italian airline Alitalia also became insolvent.
The demise of three major European airlines in one year has prompted concerns about the future of the aviation industry.

The British Airline Pilots Association (BALPA) has called for an investigation into the BALPA general secretary Brian Strutton said: “There is a lot of understandable anger which, on the basis of recent reports, does seem to have some justification.

“There are hundreds of thousands of Monarch customers who want to know what happened and why they were still being sold flights on October 1 when the company Board had already decided it was going into administration.”

http://www.express.co.uk/travel/articles/864928/Air-Berlin-news-bankruptcy-flights-cancelled#ampshare=http://www.express.co.uk/travel/articles/864928/Air-Berlin-news-bankruptcy-flights-cancelled

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Thousands to be refused refunds as Europe’s 10th biggest airline ceases trading

Air Berlin will cease to operate flights by the end of October 

By Annabel Fenwick Elliott, travel writer (Telegraph)
10 OCTOBER 2017

After months of uncertainty Air Berlin has announced it will be ending all flights in a matter of the weeks.

The bankrupt airline – Germany’s second largest and Europe’s 10th biggest overall – says it’s preparing to stop all services by October 28 “at the latest”.

In a letter to its employees on Monday, the airline said that flights under the airline code AB “according to the current state of things, will no longer be possible.”

Flights operated by its subsidiaries; Niki, an Austrian budget airline, and LG Walter, a German regional airline, will continue.

Air Berlin is currently in talks with Lufthansa (German’s biggest carrier) and UK-based Easyjet about selling parts of its business. The company said in the letter that “in a few days we’ll know more” about this.

Aviation expert John Strickland told the Telegraph: “This has been expected for some time. It’s now a question of how much capacity will be picked up by Lufthansa and most probably easyJet, and how many jobs this will protect.”

Where did it all go wrong?

Air Berlin declared bankruptcy in August following years of losses and the decision of its biggest shareholder, Etihad, to cease bankrolling it.

Etihad said in August that this was “extremely disappointing”, especially as it had provided extensive support to Air Berlin over the last six years, notably with a €250m (£227m) cash injection in April this year, but to no avail.

Air Berlin’s Italian rival Alitalia, also part-owned by Etihad, also filed for bankruptcy this year, with both airlines struggling to fight off competition from low-cost operators such as easyJet and Ryanair.

Air Berlin has also been dogged by delays and cancellations over the past months, which have resulted in it paying millions of euros in compensation to passengers.

In September, nearly 200 pilots called in sick at short notice in a move which forced more than 110 flights to be cancelled in a single day.

All this in turn has hit passenger numbers hard, causing them to fall by 24 per cent year-on-year in July from 3.22m to 2.44m.

Shortly after Etihad withdrew its financial support for Air Berlin, The European Commission approved a €150m loan to allow for the “orderly wind-down” of the airline.

It follows the high-profile collapse of Monarch earlier this month in what amounted to the biggest UK airline failure in history.

Monarch previously served 43 destinations with a fleet of 35 aircraft. It flew 5.43 million passengers last year, making it Europe’s 26th largest airline (it carried more than 7 million in 2014), and employed 3,500 people.

More than 110,000 of its passengers were stranded abroad following the sudden announcement, while a further 750,000 people have paid for flights they will not be able to take.

What is going on in the aviation industry?

Competition between airlines has reached fever pitch – and more failures could be on the cards.

John Grant, an aviation analyst, told the Telegraph: “The competitive environment has become increasingly challenging for many airlines, with many established legacy airlines launching low-cost long-haul services and the continual growth in services from airlines such as easyJet, Ryanair and Norwegian. This has resulted in many ‘mid-market’ carriers with relatively high cost bases being continually squeezed to a point of failure.

“There are perhaps too many airlines in Europe today relative to the size of the market, with too many struggling to keep market share. In the United States, five major airlines provide some 80 per cent plus of scheduled capacity and that may be where the European market will head over time.”

According to Telegraph consumer expert Nick Trend, all this could spell the end of the ultra-low fares we’ve become accustomed to.

He wrote yesterday: “We are certainly entering a new phase in the story of no-frills flying, one where fewer airlines are likely to dominate the market and fares may rise.”

The recent fall of several carriers is a sharp reminder that airlines are fragile constructs. They work on thin margins and are thus highly vulnerable to failure – anything from shifts in the economy to a sudden decline in the demand for certain destinations due to terrorism fears, as we saw with Monarch.

The last decade has seen the collapse of Zoom, XL Airways and Silverjet (all 2008), FlyGlobespan (2009) and Spanair (2012).

Globally, more than 250 have failed since 2007.

Every airline failure in the last decade, world wide (there are 255 in total – see website for the full list 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/news/air-berlin-to-stop-flights-by-end-of-october/

These are the most recent 20:

  1. 2017 Air Berlin
  2. 2017 Monarch Airlines
  3. 2017 GLO Airlines
  4. 2017 Rainbow Airlines
  5. 2017 Mega Maldives Airlines
  6. 2017 Wings of Alaska
  7. 2017 Citywings
  8. 2016 Tiara Air
  9. 2016 TransAsia Airways
  10. 2016 Seaport Airlines
  11. 2016 SAFI Airways
  12. 2016 Aero Contractors
  13. 2016 Fly Lapland
  14. 2016 Air Pegasus
  15. 2016 VLM Airlines
  16. 2016 Fly Salone
  17. 2016 SOL S.A. Líneas Aéreas
  18. 2016 Skywise
  19. 2015 SkyGreece
  20. 2015 Intersky

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/news/air-berlin-to-stop-flights-by-end-of-october/

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