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NORWEGIAN

Norwegian orders 19 more Dreamliners

Low-cost carrier Norwegian Air Shuttle has ordered 19 more Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft, more than doubling its risky but so far successful bet on long haul budget air travel.

Norwegian orders 19 more Dreamliners
One of Norwegian Air Shuttle's Boeing Dreamliner aircraft flies above the clouds. Photo: Norwegian Air Shuttle

Based on the catalogue price, the planes would be worth around $4.7 billion, but aircraft manufacturers usually offer special deals on large orders like this.

The new orders will bring the carrier's number of Dreamliners to 38 by 2020. Norwegian also signed an option for another 10 planes, it said.

One of the few low-cost carriers to venture into long haul distances, Norwegian is turning a profit in the segment and plans to launch new routes “worldwide”.

It already flies from Northern Europe and Britain to the United States and from Northern Europe to Thailand.

“After two years of operating low cost long haul flights, our load factors have averaged over 90 percent, which proves the demand for affordable flights between Europe and the US and Europe and Asia,” Norwegian's chief executive officer Bjørn Kjos said in a statement. 

Other low cost companies are trying to break into the long haul segment, but are having trouble acquiring modern, energy efficient aircraft such as Boeing's Dreamliner and Airbus' A350.

Norwegian currently has eight Dreamliners in operation and is awaiting 11 others from previous orders.

The airline meanwhile announced a third quarter net profit of 832.8 million kroner (90 million euros, $102 million), more than double from the same period a year ago thanks to “the positive impact” of its long haul operations and international routes.

Deliveries of the new Dreamliners will begin in 2017. The planes will be owned by Arctic Aviation Assets, a subsidiary of Norwegian.

Norwegian's share price was down by 8.03 percent in early morning trading on the Oslo stock exchange, due to lower than expected earnings.

AIRLINE

Airline Norwegian posts 15 billion kroner loss after nightmare 2020

Low cost airline Norwegian has registered a loss of 14.9 billion Norwegian kroner for 2020, a year in which the company saw a drastic reduction in passenger numbers and was on the brink of bankruptcy.

A file photo of a Norwegian Air Shuttle plane in Finland.
A file photo of a Norwegian Air Shuttle plane in Finland. Heikki Saukkomaa / Lehtikuva / AFP

Low cost airline Norwegian has registered a loss of 14.9 billion Norwegian kroner for 2020, a year in which the company saw a drastic reduction in passenger numbers and was on the brink of bankruptcy.

The company published its annual results on Friday, revealing the huge operating loss.

Norwegian’s 2019 result, a loss of around 1.7 billion kroner, had put the company in a difficult position even prior to the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The coronavirus outbreak and its consequent travel restrictions reduced the company’s passenger numbers to 6.9 million in 2020. That is 29 million fewer than in 2019.

Not all of the loss is due to fewer passengers. Around half of the company’s devaluation is attributed to a depreciation of the value of its aircraft fleet, news wire Ritzau reports.

“2020 was an exceptionally demanding year for air travel and for Norwegian,” CEO Jacob Schram said in a statement on the annual results.

“In light of that, the result for the fourth quarter (of 2020) is not surprising. Unfortunately, the majority of our employees are furloughed and many have lost their jobs – in part because of the closure of long distance services,” he added.

The company was already in debt prior to the pandemic and is now under bankruptcy protection in Ireland and is undergoing similar process in Norway.

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