SINGAPORE (March 12): AirAsia X will suspend flights to and from New Zealand at the end of May as high jet fuel prices have made the service unprofitable, the long-haul affiliate of Malaysian budget carrier AIRASIA BHD [] said on Monday.
AirAsia Bhd is Asia's largest budget carrier.
"The Christchurch route has been impacted by the spiralling cost of jet fuel," AirAsia X chief executive Azran Osman-Rani said in a statement. "Since the launch of the route, jet fuel prices have increased in excess of 30 percent, and are currently still at very high levels."
Airlines have been struggling to pass on the higher cost of fuel to customers as demand for business and leisure travel dwindles amid a slowing global economy.
In December, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) cut its forecast for airline industry profits by a quarter to $3.5 billion for 2012 and warned the industry could plunge to an $8.3 billion loss if Europe's debt problems trigger another banking crisis.
AirAsia X has stopped flying between Kuala Lumpur and Mumbai and plans to discontinue services to London, Paris and New Delhi as part of a plan to focus on nearer destinations in Australia and East Asia. - Reuters
AirAsia Bhd is Asia's largest budget carrier.
"The Christchurch route has been impacted by the spiralling cost of jet fuel," AirAsia X chief executive Azran Osman-Rani said in a statement. "Since the launch of the route, jet fuel prices have increased in excess of 30 percent, and are currently still at very high levels."
Airlines have been struggling to pass on the higher cost of fuel to customers as demand for business and leisure travel dwindles amid a slowing global economy.
In December, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) cut its forecast for airline industry profits by a quarter to $3.5 billion for 2012 and warned the industry could plunge to an $8.3 billion loss if Europe's debt problems trigger another banking crisis.
AirAsia X has stopped flying between Kuala Lumpur and Mumbai and plans to discontinue services to London, Paris and New Delhi as part of a plan to focus on nearer destinations in Australia and East Asia. - Reuters