Saturday, September 4, 2021

PAL Files for Bankruptcy, Here's How It Plans to Keep Flying

philippine airlines
PHOTO BY Wikimedia Commons

Flag carrier Philippine Airlines said they filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. on Friday, September 3, with a counterpart filing in Manila, to allow them to restructure its finances and continue operating "business as usual." 

Also read: Cathay Pacific Closing Ticketing Offices in Manila and Cebu, But Keeping Flights Intact

The goal is to pare down the flag carrier's debt by "at least" U.S. $2 billion and returning some aircraft, including wide-body jets, to cut back on costs," they said in a video message on their website. Philippine Airlines (PAL) plans to secure another U.S. $150 million in debt after emerging from Chapter 11.

For passengers, all tickets and travel vouchers will be honored, the airline said. "We will continue to fly and to serve our customers throughout this process:  it is business as usual for us."

Earlier this year, PAL reduced their workforce by 30%, which is equivalent to some 2,300 workers.

The 80-year-old airline, Asia's first, survived this long by "stretching liquidity, extraordinary cost control and deferred CAPEX (capital expenditures)," said President and COO Gilbert Sta. Maria.

Since travel restrictions started in the first quarter of 2020, Sta. Maria said travel volumes collapsed to 7 million from 30 million. 

Sta. Maria said PAL cancelled 80,000 flights total, affecting 1.5 million passengers and strading thousands. As of September, they were flying at 21% of capacity and 70% of destinations pre-pandemic.

The airline deferred U.S. $316 million in loans for aircraft leases and negotiated extended payment terms with suppliers. Its largest shareholder also infused U.S. $130 million in emergency liquidity, he said.

Philippine Airlines earned U.S. $70 million from the sale and a non-strategic asset and U.S. $60 million from pay cuts and leaves without pay. 

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Source: Spot PH

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