Summary
- Travellers took advantage of the reduced fares, nearly half its earlier charges, with the flights recording a 65 percent cabin load or seat capacity.
- KQ, which flies to Kisumu and Mombasa on local destinations, grounded its fleet in April when the government restricted movement in and of Nairobi, Mombasa and Mandera three to curb the spread of Covid-19.
- President Uhuru Kenya announced the easing of the restrictions last week, paving the way for the resumption of domestic flights Wednesday.
- International flights will resume from August 1, offering a further boost to Kenya Airways, which had lost an estimated Sh10.6 billion in revenues in the six months to June.
Kenya Airways resumed domestic flights
yesterday with lower fares of Sh4,815 for a one-way ticket to Mombasa
and Kisumu from Nairobi after being grounded since April due to Covid-19
travel restrictions.
Travellers took advantage of the
reduced fares, nearly half its earlier charges, with the flights
recording a 65 percent cabin load or seat capacity.
KQ,
which flies to Kisumu and Mombasa on local destinations, grounded its
fleet in April when the government restricted movement in and of
Nairobi, Mombasa and Mandera three to curb the spread of Covid-19.
President
Uhuru Kenya announced the easing of the restrictions last week, paving
the way for the resumption of domestic flights Wednesday.
International
flights will resume from August 1, offering a further boost to Kenya
Airways, which had lost an estimated Sh10.6 billion in revenues in the
six months to June.
The Sh4,815 fare is a record low for Kenya Airways on domestic routes and
is
at par with ticket prices of its low-cost subsidiary, Jambojet. Rival
Fly 540, which also resume flights, is charging Sh4,540 on the same
routes.
“We saw about 65 percent of the cabin factor
today (Wenesday) and there are positive signs that demand would rise,”
KQ chief executive officer Allan Kilavuka told the Business Daily Wednesday.
“Kenyans do not typically book in time so it is difficult to tell foreloading (pre-booking.”
The
morning and evening flights to Mombasa were fully booked, Kenya Airways
said, a signal that the Kisumu route had empty seats.
Resumption
of flights, SGR passenger train and long-distance bus travel are
expected to boost Kenya’s tourism sector, which has lost Sh80 billion so
far in revenue, about half of last year’s total, due to the coronavirus
crisis.
The estimated losses include cancelled
bookings for the high season months of July-October, said Mohammed
Hersi, the chairman of the Kenya Tourism Federation, an industry lobby.
Tourism
contributes 10 percent of Kenya’s annual economic output and employs
over two million people, most of who have been laid off.
KQ will operate two flights to Mombasa and one to Kisumu every day as it monitors passenger demand.
Before the Covid-19 restrictions, the carrier would operate more than five flights a day on the Mombasa and Kisumu routes.
The low demand for flying started in March when the country registered the first case of the virus.
Mr Kilavuka said they are ready to start international flights in August 1, adding that flight routes will be based on capacity.
Kenya
Airways said it plans to reduce the number of routes it serves and the
frequency of flights, with passenger demand expected to remain depressed
for at least 18 months.
STRUGGLING OPERATOR
The
airline currently operates 42 aircraft on routes to 56 destinations in
Africa, the Middle East, Asia, Europe and North America.
It
was struggling long before the outbreak, posting 2019 losses of nearly
Sh13 billion compared to Sh7.56 billion the previous year.
The
government has been working on a plan to renationalise the airline in
an attempt to save the business after a 2017 debt restructuring did
little to improve its outlook.
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