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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
One on One with Allen B. Graham, CEO Air Transat
Written by Darren Locke   
Air Transat remains an origin/destination non-interlining carrier devoted to serving the leisure/holiday travel market.
164GIVEN AIR TRANSAT’S STRONG INTERNATIONAL FOCUS, COULD YOU DESCRIBE WHAT IMPACT THE WAR IN IRAQ WILL HAVE OVER THE LONGER TERM?
During the last Gulf War in 1991, we recorded a 10% drop in demand that lasted three months. That said, no two situations are identical. We have made plans using various assumptions and it is important to remember that we do not fly to that part of the world.

Fuel costs are already quite significant and we have learned to be opportunistic and hedge ourselves. But I cannot make predictions about the level they could reach. Load factors are a different issue, as we have the option to act on them. At the end of the day, yield is also a function of prices, not just load factors.

IS THE FACT THAT AIR TRANSAT IS PART OF A VERTICALLY INTEGRATED HOLIDAY TRAVEL COMPANY A BENEFIT IN DIFFICULT TIMES?
Yes. Following 9/11, teamwork and synergy played a vital role in us emerging from the crisis. A tour operator with no airline sister company would have had to go through extensive and complex discussions with its partners to reshuffle its destination mix and capacity. In our case, we were dealing with colleagues, working hand-in-hand, knowing that the end result would be mutually acceptable and profitable.

AIR TRANSAT IS DESIGNATED A SCHEDULED CARRIER ON CERTAIN ROUTES. OTHER CANADIAN CHARTER COMPANIES HAVE FOLLOWED A SCHEDULED STRATEGY AND FAILED. WHAT WOULD YOU DO DIFFERENTLY?
I can assure you that we have learned well from the lessons of other failures. Air Transat remains an origin/destination non-interlining carrier devoted to serving the leisure/holiday travel market. This is in stark contrast with Wardair, which essentially tried to build itself into a scheduled network carrier in the mode of Air Canada.

Although Air Transat currently operates under numerous scheduled international authorities, we are essentially maintaining the same business model, and the vast majority of our seats continue to be sold through our tour operator/travel agency network. Our scheduled licences allow us to complement the above sales through GDS and the Internet.

DO YOU SEE OPPORTUNITY IN AIR CANADA SEEKING BANKRUPTCY PROTECTION?
Air Canada’s early CCAA filing came as little surprise. It is our hope that Air Canada will take this opportunity to drastically restructure and focus on their strengths.

IS THERE AN UNEVEN PLAYING FIELD FOR CANADIAN AIRLINES VERSUS YOUR US COUNTERPARTS?
The US Congress has just passed a US$3.5-billion aid package for its airline industry, which President Bush is expected to approve. The US government is proactively helping its industry deal with the current crisis by providing cash and cost relief. As long as our government fails to provide our equally hardhit industry with similar cost-relief measures, we will be at an obvious disadvantage.