Air fare rises ‘inevitable’ as airlines face extra $100bn jet fuel bill this year

The Guardian Business ·

Air fare rises ‘inevitable’ as airlines face extra $100bn jet fuel bill this year

Airlines will have to spend an extra $100bn on jet fuel this year, with fares “inevitably” rising to cover the bill after the war with Iran choked off oil supplies. …

Airlines will have to spend an extra $100bn on jet fuel this year, with fares “inevitably” rising to cover the bill after the war with Iran choked off oil supplies. With jet fuel prices expected to be 70% higher across 2026, airlines body Iata said that collective industry profits worldwide would halve to $23bn. Some carriers would struggle to survive the fuel price shock caused by the closure of strait of Hormuz in March, it said. “High oil prices which will inevitably mean higher ticket prices,” said Willie Walsh , Iata’s director general. “There’s just no way to avoid that.” Walsh said that industry polling showed passengers were now braced for higher fares and prepared to spend more, but added: “The big unknown is how long travellers and shippers can tolerate the higher costs of connectivity.” Speaking at Iata’s summit in Rio de Janeiro, Walsh said it was a “challenging and unpredictable time”, with “wafer-thin margins”. “It’s going to be very challenging and for a lot of airlines the increase in the fuel bill is potentially existential.” But Walsh said that concerns about possible fuel shortages were now over, despite the soaring costs, and that compared with Covid it was not a crisis. “You’re looking at an industry that is still profitable and still forecasting growth,” said Walsh. “Traffic is up 2%. …

Original source: The Guardian Business

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COVID-19 · Greece · Hormuz · Middle East · Rio de Janeiro