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SriLankan Airlines is currently managed post-COVID, under the directions of a professional Board of Directors. Despite the collective capabilities of the new Board, in reality will they be empowered to make courageous and meaningful turnaround decisions in the best long term interests of the airline and the nation by those with power and purse strings?
This is a response to the question ‘Will SriLankan Airlines as a smaller carrier retain a sustainable competitive advantage post-COVID-19?’ raised by a recognised academic deeply committed to the socio-economic wellbeing of the nation and its people. This op-ed is also an opportunity to recognise and pay a tribute to a civil society activist, late Rajeewa Jayaweera, an expert on airline industry issues, who was a person with whom the writer debated many issues connected to SriLankan Airlines.
In answering the question it is an important priority, to review the current external environment and also asses the current state of affairs of the airline industry globally and locally.
Industry issues post COVID
“By the end of May, most world airlines will be bankrupt states a posting in CAPA, the Centre for Aviation. Coordinated government and industry action is needed – now – if catastrophe is to be avoided. As the impact of the coronavirus and multiple government travel reactions sweep through our world, many airlines have probably already been driven into technical bankruptcy, or are at least substantially in breach of debt covenants. Cash reserves are running down quickly as fleets are grounded and what flights there are operate much less than half full. Forward bookings are far outweighed by cancellations and each time there is a new government recommendation it is to discourage flying. Demand is drying up in ways that are completely unprecedented.
Normality is not yet on the horizon”.1
A large number of global airlines have begun restructuring, with significant layoffs based job cuts. Virgin Australia has filed for bankruptcy, several others have gone in to administration, airline leasing companies are in severe stress with several plane returns, and business models with long haul activity is being examined under microscopes. A significant number of aircrafts on order have been cancelled. Some of the more profitable state-assisted airlines, especially of Middle Eastern origin, are investing heavily to meet the new normal health and safety requirements. They stand ready to commit to both capital expenditure and added costs under the ‘new normal’, despite having to fill the planes with passengers of lesser capacity than before. The aircraft bone yard in the Mojave Desert is filling up and new additions to this yard include the British Airways, the world’s largest operator of Boeing 747, with its entire jumbo jet fleet retired due to the downturn in travel industry caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
Annex 1 makes reference to airlines devastated by COVID. It is a sad case study of the severe challenges facing a high profile global industry. It signals a ‘Red Light’ warning and all stakeholders of the industry need to worry about the future and take strategic and courageous decisions before it is too late.
Airline casualties due to coronavirus includes Chile’s LATAM, the second-largest carrier in South America – Avianca, the British regional airline Flybe, Miami Air International, Alaska’s largest regional air carrier RavnAir, St. Louis-based Trans States Airlines, regional carrier Compass Airlines, Air Deccan—a regional airline that used to be India’s largest low-cost carrier, Swedish airline BRA, Air Mauritius and SunExpress Deutschland, A Turkish airline jointly owned by Lufthansa and Turkish Airlines, whilst South African Airways was shut down by the Government.
Some of these airlines have been shut down, whilst some have filed for bankruptcy, and others have applied for administration or chapter 11 restructure, at times yet whilst flying. The United States’ five largest airlines Delta, American Airlines, United, Southwest and Alaska – are now pushing for a $ 50 b-plus bailout to help them survive the COVID-19 crisis. It is believed that these five giants of the industry had previously handed out more than $ 45 b to shareholders and executives over the last five years2. There has even been talk of ‘American Airlines’ demise.
An article titled ‘An early assessment of the impact of COVID-19 on air transport: Just another crisis or the end of aviation as we know it?’ quotes: “Along with other sectors of the economy, air traffic is vulnerable to external factors, such as oil crises, natural disasters, armed conflicts, terrorist attacks, economic recessions and disease outbreaks. These outside influences seem to have a more severe and more rapid impact on air traffic numbers as sudden increases in flight cancellations, aircraft groundings, travel bans and border closures which are quickly felt in lower load factors and yields for airlines, while airports lose non- aeronautical revenues3.
“Before COVID-19, the most important disease outbreak in terms of impact on air traffic was SARS in 2003. According to IATA (IATA, 2020a), in May 2003, at the height of the SARS outbreak, monthly revenue passenger kilometres (RPKs) of Asia-Pacific airlines were 35% lower than their pre-crisis levels. Covid-19 has gone well beyond these levels and is currently taking the aviation industry into uncharted territory. As of 24 March 2020, 98% of global passenger revenues were accounted for by air transport markets with severe restrictions (i.e., quarantine for arriving passengers, partial travel bans, and border closures), many airlines have been brought to a complete stop and, to make matters worse, the provisionally-observed recovery pattern for Covid-19 is turning out to be slower than the short-sharp V-shaped pattern observed in 2003. The significance of air cargo has been vindicated by the Covid-19 crisis. Shipments of food and medical supplies have been protected by governments to ensure the supply of basic necessities. Thus, even though air freight tons quickly dropped in Asia Pacific in late January, a partial V-shaped recovery pattern was observed soon after. Later, freight tonnage progressively decreased from the beginning of March in Europe, North America and the Middle East4.”
“Sustaining the low-cost model, however, will likely be a big challenge. The model is built on optimising and maximising aircraft utilisation: Keep the seats filled and the planes in the air. But in the recovery phase, a certain number of jetliners will remain grounded, and cabin cleaning procedures will keep the airplanes that are flying on the tarmac longer. The International Air Travel Association last month projected that global demand for air travel would regain its 2019 level only by 2024, slower than the previous projection of 2023. This year’s global passenger numbers are expected to decline 55% compared to 2019, it said5.”
Will the external environment spelt above resonate as a fundamental core medium term background realism of the airline industry in the minds of the key political leadership of the day in Sri Lanka?
SriLankan Airlines post COVID
It was heartening to read the recent press coverage, where the SriLankan Airlines Chairman in an interview with Bloomberg Markets Asia, discussed how the National Carrier was coping with the impact of the COVID pandemic and highlighted the following key points:
Can SriLankan realise its dream?
SriLankan Airlines is currently managed post-COVID, under the directions of a professional Board of Directors. Despite the collective capabilities of the new Board, in reality will they be empowered to make courageous and meaningful turnaround decisions in the best long term interests of the airline and the nation by those with power and purse strings? Will they also be able to convince the political leadership to recognise the medium term realism of the airline industry? With ‘coordinated Government and industry action is needed – now – if catastrophe is to be avoided’ being a pre-requisite as noted earlier, can we expect such an environment with SriLankan Airlines?
Those in political and executive authority and those representing the key shareholders of SriLankan Airlines in the past gave unacceptable and ego driven directives to the then Board; and set objectives impossible to achieve, especially without required capital infusions. They yet remain in such positions and the top management team too possibly yet comprises persons who misdirected, misrepresented and supported blindly corporate decisions and aided and abated committing the costly mistakes, gross violations and avoidance of best practice standards in the past. It is hard to imagine that strategic change management leadership actions will emerge in the short to medium term from the capable new Board of Directors who will remain arm twisted; and thus restricted in making courageous change management decisions.
With the present fleet not being fit to leverage and focus on expanding significantly cargo handling and the inability to accommodate present costs and overhead structures in exploiting short haul regional flight options, important turnaround opportunities are not open for implementation. SriLankan Airline’s human resource management policies and practices do not encourage a work ethic matching its regional competitors. Its overhead structure, long haul routes and sales and administration structures are challenges in converting to a low cost carrier with competitive advantage.
It is most unlikely that the key shareholder of SriLankan Airlines will have deep pockets matching the Middle Eastern airline shareholders. With a looming debt crisis, both at a national and airline level, with the airline’s ‘going concern’6 status challenges alongside the national exchequer most likely in a negative ‘fiscal gap’7 status and unable meet its future debt obligations, a deep pocket lifeline to the airline in the longer term is very doubtful.
It is therefore very unlikely that a turnaround promise built on SriLankan Airlines achieving at least a break-even level post-COVID and thereafter turning into profitability in two years will be deliverable.
Strategic million dollar question and lessons from history
In order to critique the question ‘Will SriLankan Airlines as a smaller carrier retain post COVID a sustainable competitive advantage?’ it is essential to look back and learn from missed opportunities and unprofessional management case study of the airline in the past.
The professional Board of Directors now in charge of the destiny of SriLankan Airlines must remember and even frame at the entrance door of the Boardroom the quote attributed to both writer and philosopher George Santayana and Winston Churchill: “Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”
Unless the future of SriLankan Airlines is based on professional management, with Directors, officers and auditors, exercising transparent good governance and adopting global best practices, with integrity, in good faith and solely in the interests of the airline; and they are ring fenced from political and executive interference, pressure and unprofessional direction by those representing the key shareholders, there will be no future for SriLankan Airlines, either under the present business model or any other business model specifically designed to meet the ‘new normal’.
In addition the Government must be committed to and be able to provide continuous funding of liquidity shortfalls expected in the longer term. This commitment can be supported only if the State itself has deep pockets and its own solvency and fiscal gap red light signals are under stringent control and its future net cash flows can meet its present and future debt obligations.
Strategic next steps for the attention of the leadership team
Looking back at the history of the more recent past, the missed opportunities of SriLankan Airlines are many; its present dire financial state is regrettably due to unprofessional and non-transparent management and corrupt practices condoned by the Board, aggravated by unacceptable State directed policy prescriptions and significant failures in the exercise of effective Boardroom governance, including failures in oversight by Directors. From these instances there are many generic lessons to be learnt and specific action steps to be pursued by the present Board and these include the following:
Core commitments for improved boardroom governance
Operational/financial management and compliance commitments of the Board
Footnotes
https://centreforaviation.com/analysis/reports/covid-19-by-the-end-of-may-most-world-airlines-will-be-bankrupt-517512
2 Guardian Research
3 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7269949
4 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7269949/
5 https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Transportation/AirAsia-and-its-LCC-rivals-seek-post-COVID-rebirth
6 Financially stable enough to meet its obligations and continue its business for the foreseeable future
7 as the difference between the present value of all of government’s projected financial obligations, including future expenditures, including servicing outstanding official federal debt, and the present value of all projected future tax and other receipts, including income accruing from the government’s current ownership of financial assets.
Action steps in recovery and resolution planning
Non-compliance with rule of law, regulatory and good governance commitments