Other

Lufthansa making progress with turnaround plan, CEO says – Reuters

By Ilona Wissenbach,Joanna Plucinska

Copyright reuters

Lufthansa making progress with turnaround plan, CEO says - Reuters

SummaryCompaniesLufthansa has struggled to turn around its core airlineSmaller subsidiaries like Eurowings, Discover are helping boost growthCEO promises 2025 will see improvements

FRANKFURT, Sept 10 (Reuters) – Lufthansa (LHAG.DE), opens new tab group is making progress with its turnaround plan, though 2025 and 2026 will be transitional years as it works to stem spiralling costs, Chief Executive Carsten Spohr told reporters in Frankfurt.

The airline group issued two profit warnings in 2024 as its core airline struggled with spiralling costs and labour disruptions while its more successful Eurowings continues to grow.

“One thing is clear: the resulting performance has not been good in recent years. That’s why it was absolutely clear to us that this year would remain another year of transition … But it is a year of transformation toward higher performance,” Spohr said.

Advertisement · Scroll to continue

“I believe I can also say that this turning point in 2025 has been achieved.” Flight operations are more stable, with only one percent of flight cancellations, and customer satisfaction has increased as a result, he said late on Tuesday.

Last year Spohr promised to turn around the flag carrier by 2026 and launched a broad restructuring of the group in an effort to get costs under control.

Spohr said Lufthansa will seek to integrate more closely with other group members, including Swiss, Austrian and Brussels Airlines to help streamline operations.

Cheaper operations at its newer subsidiaries City Airlines and Discover are helping the group grow, he said.

Advertisement · Scroll to continue

Get the key points from this story with Reuters AI

“The cost disadvantage of the classic division, the core of the core, is so great that the group’s growth is currently taking place elsewhere. We would like to be able to reduce these costs,” Spohr said.

Lufthansa’s pilot union is threatening to strike as it calls for adjustments to the airline’s pension scheme.

Upcoming deliveries of new Airbus (AIR.PA), opens new tab and Boeing (BA.N), opens new tab aircraft are also set to help bolster growth, with 60 jets expected by the end of 2026. The first Boeing 787 Dreamliner jet with Lufthansa’s luxury Allegris cabin was delivered this month.

Airlines have lamented how expensive it is to operate in Germany for years, with Ryanair (RYA.I), opens new tab announcing earlier this year that it would pull some of its operations due to high airport charges.

Spohr said the group will have over 50% of its fleet based outside of its core German hubs in Frankfurt and Munich as it continues its takeover of Italian carrier ITA Airways and expands its multi-hub model in places like Vienna and Brussels.

Ad Break Coming Up

NEXT StayNext

OffEnglish

180p288p360p480p540p576p720pHD1080pHDAuto (180p)

About ConnatixV2031362092
About ConnatixV2031362092

Continue watchingafter the adVisit Advertiser websiteGO TO PAGE

That could help the group better balance costs as it continues to look to less expensive markets to grow.

Reporting by Ilona Wissenbach and Joanna Plucinska in Frankfurt, Editing by Elaine Hardcastle

Purchase Licensing Rights

Joanna PlucinskaThomson ReutersJoanna reports on airlines and travel in Europe, including tourism trends, sustainability and policy. She was previously based in Warsaw, where she covered politics and general news. She wrote stories on everything from Chinese spies to migrants stranded in forests along the Belarusian border. In 2022, she spent six weeks covering the war in Ukraine, with a focus on the evacuation of children, war reparations and evidence that Russian commanders knew of sexual violence by their troops. Joanna graduated from the Columbia Journalism School in 2014. Before joining Reuters, she worked in Hong Kong for TIME and later in Brussels reporting on EU tech policy for POLITICO Europe.