Tag Archives: airlines

Galley Talk: Hogan to Depart?

Caught wind of this on a PPRuNe thread!

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Excerpt from the Economist’s ‘Aviation in the Gulf: Ruler of the new silk road’

The new kid is Abu Dhabi’s carrier, Etihad. Set up in 2003 by royal decree, it claims to be the fastest-growing airline in the history of commercial aviation. An $8 billion order for new aircraft in 2004 was followed by the biggest ever at the Farnborough show in 2008. Worth about $43 billion at list prices, it included 100 firm orders, 55 options and 50 “purchase rights”. James Hogan, a bullish Australian who used to be chief operating officer at BMI (a British airline now owned by Lufthansa), ran Gulf Air for four years before being plucked by Abu Dhabi’s government in 2006 to oversee the expansion of Etihad.

Although in many ways Mr Hogan is following the model established by Emirates, there are differences. Abu Dhabi sees the airline as just one part of what it calls its “Plan 2030”, an ambitious attempt to use its huge oil wealth to turn the capital city of the United Arab Emirates into a global hub for transport, financial services and tourism that will be home to 3m people—more than three times its present population. This approach contrasts with the more laissez-faire style that fuelled Dubai’s astonishing boom and subsequent dramatic (if seemingly fairly brief) bust.

Etihad wants to be known for its quality as much as its size. Mr Hogan says: “Although no airline has ever ramped at the same speed as us, my mandate is not to build the largest airline, but the best in class.” He has made impressive strides in a short time. Etihad has won several international awards for the experience it offers its “guests”, as it likes to call its passengers, and it gives every impression of being a well-run airline that understands what it takes to become a leading brand. What Mr Hogan will not say, however, is whether he is meeting the financial targets set for him by his government shareholder. “I have to make money,” he says, “but the financial crisis and the H1N1 pandemic pushed our break-even out beyond this year.”

According to the always active Gulf rumour mill, Etihad lost $1.2 billion last year and Mr Hogan, under pressure to cut costs, may be looking for a dignified exit, perhaps to become the next director-general of IATA, the airline industry’s trade body. He insists that his deep-pocketed owners are in it for the long haul, but the biggest obstacles in the way of Etihad’s ultimate success are sitting on its own doorstep in the shape of mighty Emirates and the new mega-airport at Jebel Ali.

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Pages, Trip Trades & Engagement

So I’m up again at 7am, despite my best efforts. It’s hard to time my sleeping to fit my ‘schedule’! A random girl sent me an sms for my first trip trades.. she actually took my Bahrain on the 27th – now I have an uninterrupted stretch of off days from Xmas to after New Year’s!!! It’s a miracle – and overwhelming just thinking about it. Going to wait until after the SYD standby to commence any planning freak-out.

Kylie is engaged!! I am super happy for her! Now I think about it, I vaguely remember her talking about a ring when I was there. I have to hurry up and meet David already! I think I used next month’s request for Toronto, but I am determined to get another SIN-BNE and stake out regular visiting rights.

In other news.. I checked  iserve.. woooo! Just over AED12000 for the month. That’s $US40,000/year, with food and transport as my only necessary expenses. I’m already anticipating 3 years here – initially I was thinking only 2. Will I be able to leave at all when the time comes?! To be honest, I can kind of see myself moving to another airline when the time comes, as opposed to leaving the airline industry. I can safely assume most of the airlines aren’t hiring now because of the fuel crisis. Who knows what the situation will be by then – it’s impossible to predict. I feel very lucky to be with Etihad.. I’ve often been scornful of certainty in the past. But the security of the airline’s growth and, er, monetary resources is certainly reassuring. Ha. I think it might be the awesome book I bought too. 200 cities, with 2 pages per city, leaves you with the impression 3 years isn’t enough time at all, not even a lifetime is for all that.. 🙂

cities_book

I’m on the last Meyer book in the series now too, Breaking Dawn. Trying to slow down my reading, because in spite of the raving cheesiness, I do really love the story and don’t want to reach the end!

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