Nobody can question the innovative nature of Gulf carrier Emirates Airline, but it is facing a challenging time along with its rival hub carriers in the region as the global aviation industry continues to change. After more than 30 years of growth, taking advantage of the geographical position of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Dubai’s need to diversify its economy away from oil and gas industries, it is fair to say that Emirates has changed the way we fly.
Its success has seen Eithad Airways down the road in Abu Dhabi and Qatar Airways in Doha develop similar, albeit unique, business models while constantly attempting to outperform one another with service offerings, particularly in the premium cabins.
But it is has been Emirates that led the way. With the foresight of industry visionary the late Maurice Flanagan, the airline has built a hub-and-spoke transfer network that provides one-stop connection options via Dubai International Airport, once a small airfield but now the largest international gateway in the world.
Under the current stewardship of Sir Tim Clark, Emirates has grown to become one of the most recognisable travel brands and this model has been based around purely serving air corridors with widebodied aircraft. In fact, since 1987, just two years since its inception, the airline has solely operated more than 300 twin-aisle aircraft, resulting in a fleet today that includes almost 100 Airbus A380 Superjumbos.
Although the European and Asian legacy airlines have failed to react quickly to the emergence of the Gulf hub carriers in the long-haul market, Clark does not plan to watch other airlines steal passengers from his own.
Changing economic conditions are forcing the Gulf airlines to revise their business models and slow their once rampant growth in capacity. Emirates is quickly moving to strip costs from its business as it adapts to weaker markets, a stronger dollar and the rise of low-cost, long-haul rivals after seeing group annual profits fall 64% to AED1.3 billion last year.
“We are subject to market changes like everybody else is. One of the challenges is the rise of lower-cost, long-haul travel, which is a gathering storm,” said Clark at the recent ITB travel event in Berlin, Germany.