By Allan Olingo
In Summary
Kenya’s national carrier Kenya Airways (KQ) has narrowed its
losses to $47 million in the first six months to September from $117
million reported a similar period last year.
The improvement was attributed to a 3.3 per cent growth in cabin
factor – the rate of flight occupancy – during the period, with an
increase of passenger numbers by 89,000 to 2.2 million, and lower
operating costs made possible by fleet rationalisation.
“We have also seen our gross profit rise by 56.6 per cent to
$9.49 million up from an operating loss of $22 million a year earlier,
as a result of savings and our ability to maintain the operating costs
low,” the airline’s chief executive Mbuvi Ngunze said, adding that KQ
had so far implemented 242 out of the 555 initiatives set out in its
recovery plan.
The airline saw its overheads rise 14.5 percent to $125 million
attributed to the cost of the restructuring plan which it hopes will
drive it out of the red.
“Good things are happening at KQ but if you stood outside and
read the newspapers, you would think we’re not operating. KQ has
continued to be resilient despite these challenges managing to achieve
improved results. We're in a marathon and not a sprint and it is
beginning to bear fruit,” Mr Ngunze said.
In the first half of 2016/17 year, KQ had a one-off cash
injection of $17 million from sale of assets. The airline also saw its
passenger numbers grow by 4.2 per cent to a total of 2.2 million, while
its traffic across Africa grew by 14 per cent.
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