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Thursday, 29 September 2016

PRESIDENT MAGUFULI OFFICIALLY WELCOMES TWO BOMBARDIER Q400NG AIRCRAFT

The president waves to the public who attended the inauguration ceremony.

The arrival of the second Bombardier Q400NG in Dar es Salaam went almost unnoticed, completing the first order for new aircraft Tanzania has placed in decades. A few months ago, after an expeditious review of the national airline’s operations and needs to facilitate a revival, had the Tanzanian government ordered two of the most advanced turboprop aircraft on the market, the Bombardier Q400NextGen.

The two 76 seater aircraft with a single cabin all economy layout will be deployed primarily for domestic services across the sprawling East African nation to allow Air Tanzania not only to increase frequencies on key routes out of Dar es Salaam but also to resume services to a number of other airports to which the airline had to halt operations due to lack of serviceable aircraft.

It is here where Air Tanzania will have to compete with Precision Air which operates a fleet of ATR 42 and ATR 72 turboprops and enjoyed a near monopoly on several domestic routes. However, for destinations like Kilimanjaro, Zanzibar, Mwanza and Mbeya will local rival Fastjet, presently undergoing a restructuring and awaiting a major fleet change, be the one to beat, not just on the level of fares but also vis a vis on time performance and offering multiple daily services to these domestic destinations.

The two Q400NG’s join a Bombardier sister ship of Q300 make, bringing the fleet to three aircraft for the time being. However, government sources have already intimated that a further two aircraft orders are under consideration for the first half of 2017, likely to be larger aircraft and very likely also to be of Bombardier make. The most likely choice for those orders could be the CRJ900NG, even though Bombardier might be keen to sell the more advanced C-Series, an aircraft with the arguably best operating economics in its class.

Yesterday, President John Magufuli officially inaugurated the two new aircraft in a ceremony at the Julius Nyerere International Airport, when the two planes were also expected to be given names.

Meanwhile has the Minister of Transport, when a few days ago introducing the new Board of Directors and the new CEO to the public, given them a stern warning that they will have six months to turn the fortunes of the airline around. In the past were both incompetence as well as corrupt practices by senior management leading to a series of suspensions and sackings, leaving the airline debt ridden and its few remaining assets under constant threat by debt collections action on behalf of creditors. It was probably for that reason that the new aircraft have not been put on the asset registry of the airline but will be owned by another state corporation, leaving the new birds beyond reach of auctioneers.

Will the arrival of the two new aircraft mark a new beginning for Air Tanzania? As always only time will tell how a new team at the helm will perform vis a vis operational quality and financial prudence to secure the long term survival of the previously moribund national airline.

Bombardier has with this delivery also increased its African footprint with over 125 aircraft in service, 40 of which are Q400NG’s flying for among others RwandAir, Ethiopian Airlines and Asky.

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