Garuda programma il ritorno in Europa su AMS, FCO, FRA e LHR


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Dopo il ban dai cieli europei la compagnia di bandiera indonesiana programma il ritorno in Europa, forse già dal prossimo anno. Oltre ad Amsterdam considera anche Francoforte, Londra e Roma, rotte già coperte regolarmente in passato. Su FCO ha operato fino a fine anni '90. Garuda sta ricevendo nuovi 332 e 777.

Revitalizing Garuda Indonesia


Garuda Indonesia, the Indonesia’s flagship carrier, unveils today at Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta International Airport concrete evidence of a meticulous major revitalisation programme.
Even the country’s president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who has been dealing with the unexpected terrorist attack to two of Jakarta’s major hotels, is coming to see the new-look Garuda at ceremonies that kick off at 10am.
The 60-year-old carrier showed off its new, glass-oriented headquarters and two aircraft, an Airbus A330-200 and Boeing B737-800NG, representing several more that will be arriving by year end until 2014, effectively doubling its present fleet.
Garuda Indonesia’s medium-term strategic plan put in place in 2006 – designed to ensure taking the state-owned airline through various stages such as survival, consolidation, improving operations, products and services and growth through IPO and debt restructuring – was generally on track. The global financial recession, however, has rescheduled the IPO to 2010, barring any fresh assault on the world economy.
The airline is planning to restart services to Amsterdam next year, using the A330-200, with a stopover in Dubai. In 2011, the service will convert to non-stop, using a B777 extended range aircraft. Other European cities being considered include Frankfurt, Rome and London and in the US, Los Angeles in the West Coast.
With the promise of new aircraft, Garuda management is keen on building up Jakarta as a business hub, “while keeping Denpasar (Bali) as our leisure hub”.Their Jakarta services to Sydney, Melbourne and Seoul will start up in quick succession on August 1, 2 and 3 respectively. A Jakarta-Shanghai service started on July 2.
Garuda’s cabin service has been refreshed as the “Garuda Indonesia Experience”, which encapsulates all that conjures Indonesia from the design and colours on the livery (palm trees, bamboo, rivers) to the music and cuisine associated with the country’s various regions. “Coming into Garuda Indonesia’s cabin will be like being welcomed into an Indonesian home. Indonesia’s is hospitality unique.” New uniforms will be introduced at a later date.
Service on the ground will complement the service in the air. A new executive lounge in Terminal 2 at Soekarno-Hatta Airport will open in October. But starting today, online check in will be available for all flights as well as the ability to print boarding passes at home or office. A self check-in kiosk has also been made available at the airport. Check in by mobile phone will also be in use in the coming months. © 2009 Good News From Indonesia
 
Lunga intervista al CEO di Garuda su ATWonline di oggi.
Obiettivo, rientrare tra le più prestigiose compagnie aeree nei prossimi anni attraverso un rinnovamento totale della flotta (focalizzandosi in particolare su 738NG, 77W, 332). Nel 2010 tornerà ad operare in Europa, inizialmente su AMS via Dubai e a seguire Londra, Francoforte, Roma e Parigi. In futuro potrebbe anche rientrare in qualche alleanza globale, si parla di SkyTeam.


Return to Glory for Garuda?

CEO Emirsyah Satar aims to bring the Indonesian airline back to the top of industry by 2014.

By Geoffrey Thomas
Air Transport World, October 2009, p.24


THE EARLY 1960s are considered to have been the glory days of Garuda Indonesia Airlines, with a fleet of new Electras and the hotrod of the skies, the Convair 990A, taking the carrier to Hong Kong, Rome, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Paris and even Canton (Guangzhou) via Phnom Penh. It was considered among the best airlines in the region.

Fast-forward to 2009 and CEO Emirsyah Satar reflects on that era with a promise: "We will be one of the world's best airlines by 2014 with a five-star Skytrax rating and maybe even an Air Transport World award." With the backing of the government, which continues to own 100% of Garuda, he appears to have the airline on the flight path toward this goal. Profits are flowing, as are new aircraft, while the incident rate is trending downward.

Satar replaced Indra Setiawan in March 2005 and immediately implemented a business transformation program that contributed to a financial turnaround from a loss of $81 million in 2004 to a net profit of $67 million in 2008. Today the carrier serves 33 domestic and 26 international cities from its major hubs of Jakarta and the Bali capital of Denpasar and also uses Singapore as a hub from various Indonesian cities into north Asia. In 2008 it operated some 1,350 domestic and 384 international flights per week. With approximately 30% of its traffic being holiday-makers and honeymooners to the storied tropical paradise, Bali is a key component of its business. Ten international and four domestic routes are operated from Denpasar and it's growing, with passenger numbers lifting 8.6% last year.

Garuda's problems have been complex and many were beyond its control. For decades it has been the personal plaything of the government, rife with cronyism and nepotism. Recognizing that the carrier was not delivering but not admitting its significant role in that situation, the government deregulated Indonesia's airline system in 2001 in an effort to stimulate improvements. Chaos ensued and the country's infrastructure and regulatory oversight were overwhelmed. More recently, terrorist attacks in Bali have damaged the vital tourism trade, most notably in 2002 and 2005. In July, terrorists believed to be linked to Jemaah Islamiyah bombed two hotels in Jakarta.

Safety First

Satar, who is chairman of the Indonesian National Air Carriers Assn., warns that "it is critical for the nation to have a safe and reliable airline industry. That is why at INACA we are looking at ways to instill a safety culture across the industry." That includes Garuda, which has had five fatal accidents in the past 25 years, according to Flight Safety Foundation's Aviation Safety Network. It appears that the most recent, the March 7, 2007, runway overrun accident at Yogyakarta that killed 21, may have been a turning point for the airline.

The comprehensive crash report by the National Transport Safety Committee, while faulting the captain's performance, was critical of Garuda for its lack of training and the country's Directorate General of Civil Aviation for its lack of oversight (ATW, 5/09, p. 21). Disturbingly, the investigators found that at the time of the crash the regulator had carried out only one safety and security audit on the carrier since 1998 and had not shared the results with Garuda. Those findings reflected the cozy and entrenched legacy relationship between the airline and previous governments that Satar is determined to eradicate.

Fortunately, he has the ear of Indonesia's no-nonsense president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The government finally has poured resources into its regulator and engaged the Australian Transport Safety Bureau and that country's Civil Aviation Safety Authority to train staff and help with oversight.

To carry through change within the airline, Satar brought in safety expert George Snyder to oversee both pilot training and maintenance. Snyder, who led Korean Air's remarkable operational turnaround from 2000, works with Garuda staff for two weeks of every month. Although it is still early in the process, the airline has seen a decline in reported incidents since a 2004 peak of 1.11 per 1,000 departures to just to 0.04 last year. It is on track to halve that in 2009.

Its reporting system actually may understate the airline's progress because it records passenger disturbances as safety incidents. Satar explains that "there are no worldwide, generally accepted criteria for what level of incident constitutes a safety hazard. If we are being too broad in classifying 'safety incidents,' so be it. I would rather err on being overly cautious about this, and be as transparent as possible. This is part of the nonpunitive safety culture we are building at Garuda Indonesia that emphasizes transparency and openness."

According to the CEO, Garuda has beefed up its pilot training to "internationally recognized aviation standards to address all conceivable emergency situations" and passed an IATA Operational Safety Audit, the only airline in Indonesia to do so, paving the way for it to be allowed back into Europe after the EU banned all Indonesian carriers two years ago following a spate of accidents.

Blue Financial Skies

In tandem with the renewed focus on safety, Garuda is in the midst of a financial turnaround. Satar has an extensive background in banking and finance, having begun his career as an auditor at PricewaterhouseCoopers in 1983. He held senior positions within Citigroup, PT Bank Indonesia and Niaga Finance Hong Kong before joining the airline in 1998 as executive VP-finance. He briefly returned to the financial sector in 2003 to become deputy CEO of Bank Danamon before rejoining Garuda two years later as president and CEO.

When he took the reins, he launched a far-reaching strategic plan that entered the turnaround phase in 2008 underpinned by its Main Corporate Program called Power 8, which reflects the eight major areas of operations, "not the Airbus program" of the same name. He says Garuda was able to book significant improvements in each of the three main target areas last year: Net income, service level and ontime performance.

Profit jumped to IDR669.47 billion ($66 million) in 2008 from IDR60.18 billion in 2007 as a 36.6% lift in operating revenues to IDR19.4 trillion outpaced a 30.3% rise in operating expenses to IDR18.21 trillion. The carrier was not immune to the global challenges, with fuel expenses climbing 52% to 41% of total operating costs while the rupiah depreciated 21% against the US dollar.

Offsetting those problems was a 6.1% growth in the country's economy and a 13.2% hike in international tourist arrivals to 6.2 million. Other numbers were in positive territory as well. Passenger yield increased from 7.5 cents to 9.5 cents even though load factor slipped 1 point to 76.5% due to ASKs rising 11% to 20.1 billion while RPKs grew 9.7% to 15.39 billion.

"Our financial performance in 2008 surpassed all targets and the positive financial performance was also supported by increased performance in services and operations. Improvements to our services resulted in a rise in our Skytrax rating from three-star to three-star-plus while the OTP in 2008 surged to 84.1% compared to 76.7% the previous year," Satar says.

And that is just the start, he adds. He is bullish on Garuda's financial future, declaring in July at the opening of its new offices that "we have set a target in 2014 to get a net profit of $370 million." It is off to a good start this year with a net profit in the first four months of $32.9 million compared to $5.3 million in the same period of 2008, according to the Sydney-based Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation.

Rising international traffic has underpinned the airline's success, as domestic boardings grew just 2.4% to 31.9 million in 2008, with weak third and fourth quarters due to an increase in ticket prices related to fuel surcharges. The only dark cloud is its debt of $670 million, which Satar indicates he hopes to have agreed by October. The major creditor is the European Credit Agency, to which Garuda owes $369 million, and it is understood it has signed off on a seven-year extension. Once the debt position is resolved, the carrier will move to an IPO for about 20% of the company in the middle of next year.

Great Expectations

Satar says that despite the problems, deregulation of aviation has had "a positive overall impact for the country." He points out that as an archipelago state with more than 17,000 islands and a population of more than 230 million, Indonesia has huge market potential. At the same time, the air transport sector is fractured, with some 50 certificated airlines although not all are currently operating.

In 2008 Garuda had a 32.5% share of domestic passengers from Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatto International, an increase of 1.8 points over 2007. It enjoyed an overall 26.5% share of international passengers to Jakarta and Ngurah Rai Airport at Denpasar, down 1.2 points due to increased international competition. Its overall domestic market share was 23.5%, up 1.2 points, while international share was 16.5%, virtually unchanged.

The major competitor is Lion Air, Indonesia's largest private airline with 42 aircraft including the first 25 of 178 737-900ERs it has ordered. It also acquired four 747-400s used by defunct Oasis Airlines to compete for hajj flights. Last year Garuda carried 259,000 hajj passengers, up 10.4%. For the hajj it uses or leases four 747-400s, seven 767s and three A330s.

Garuda's market share of the total Indonesian air travel market, including routes it does not serve, is still low, Satar concedes. "This proves a huge potential on other routes, domestic or international that has not been taken by Garuda Indonesia."

He says the carrier has looked at a couple of airlines as acquisition candidates but turned away because the business case did not stack up. He does not rule out mergers in the future "if they make financial, operational and commercial sense." But Garuda also is pursuing organic growth. He tells ATW he has big plans for the Citilink operation, which was established in 2000 as a regional lower-cost airline with a fleet of F28s and re-launched last September as a "true low-cost carrier." He confides that "the operational and financial performance of Citilink has not been up to expectations. However, we are planning to add more aircraft to the current fleet of three 737 Classic series and this added capacity should improve performance." An order for up to 25 A320s, 737NGs or E-190s is to be placed shortly.

Garuda is rebuilding its fleet around three types: A330s, 737-800s and 777-300ERs to be delivered from 2011. The program was launched at the Singapore Air Show in 2008 with an order for 50 737-800s and 10 777-300ERs that started arriving this July and will all be delivered by 2014. In addition, it has leased 12 737-800s and ordered four A330s and Satar is on the lookout for more.

New Image

In July the carrier unveiled its passenger makeover with a redesigned livery and a new inflight and ground service product called Garuda Indonesia Experience. It covers 24 passenger touch points involving pre-flight, inflight and post-flight. Inflight includes signature Indonesian food and beverages and in a first for the country the airline will be introducing AVOD progressively on domestic flights in all classes on its 737-800s.

"We see the Garuda Indonesia Experience as a key product for the future as it will deliver a service experience that is unique to Indonesia and Garuda," says Satar. Now that the EU ban has been lifted, he is focused on taking the new Garuda to the world as quickly as possible, with plans to launch Jakarta-Dubai-Amsterdam service in mid-2010 using A330-200s. Service to Frankfurt, Paris, London and Rome will follow, he says. The A330s are smaller than he would like but he is keen to get the brand into the European arena as rapidly as possible. They will be replaced with nonstop services when the 777-300ERs are delivered in 2011.

More immediately, the airline is adding 18 new domestic and international routes this year and boosting frequencies to markets such as Australia that are its most profitable. "We have just added new nonstop services to and from Jakarta to Sydney, Melbourne, Shanghai and Seoul. We hope to announce Brisbane and Auckland soon," he notes.

Satar has grand plans for the airline in five years' time: Bigger profits, more aircraft and routes and a greater role in the region including eventual membership in SkyTeam. The Quantum Leap plan launched this year calls for the fleet to grow from 61 aircraft to 116 to support a rise in weekly frequencies from 1,700 to 3,000, with net profits nudging $350 million by 2014.

Of course such goals have a familiar ring to them, similar targets having been voiced by many of his predecessors. In the past they have not borne fruit and Garuda has been bypassed by nearby rivals like Malaysia Airlines and Singapore Airlines and even upstarts like AirAsia. Yet Satar gives every impression that this time things will be different and that Garuda soon may reprise the glory days of the Swinging Sixties.

http://atwonline.com/magazine/article.html?articleID=3014
 
Sono contento per Garuda e Roma ! E' una compagnia così bella,seria e grande ! Peccato che adesso a quanto ho capito il lungo raggio si concentri sui 332 e i 773ER ! I 744 e i 340 ?
 
Garuda to launch Amsterdam service in June 2010
By Greg Waldron



Garuda Indonesia plans to launch a service on the Jakarta-Dubai-Amsterdam Schiphol route on 1 June next year, marking its long-awaited return to Europe.

The carrier will operate Airbus A330-200s on the route, says Garuda.

Garuda formerly flew to Amsterdam Schiphol and other points in Europe using McDonnell Douglas DC-10s, but it ceased flights in 2004 as part of broader cost cutting measures. The airline has said longer-term it hopes to have non-stop services to Amsterdam and other points in Europe using the Boeing 777s it has on order.

The airline's return to Europe is significant because in 2007 the EU banned all Indonesian carriers over safety concerns. But this year the EU lifted the ban against Garuda, Mandala Airlines, Airfast Indonesia and Premiair.

www.flightglobal.com
 
i voli dovrebbero cominciare l'1/6/10:

Garuda Indonesia will reinstate daily Jakarta-Amsterdam service via Dubai June 1 aboard an A330-200 following "much improved business and economic relations between Indonesia and the Netherlands," it said. Garuda was removed from the EU's list of banned airlines in July

atwonline.com
 
Non e' comprando aerei nuovi che ci si riscatta da una LISTA NERA.
Bisognera' vedere la manutenzione , professionalita' ecc ecc.......
Svecchiare il parco va bene, e' una buona partenza.

In bocca al lupo....

Tiz
 
Garuda to resume more flights to Europe in 2011

21/12/2009: Garuda Indonesia plans to resume more flights to Europe in 2011, after it receives the first of its Boeing 777-300ERs.

It will start non-stop flights from Jakarta to Frankfurt, Rome, Paris and London, says an airline spokesman.

Garuda already plans to begin a daily service from Jakarta to Amsterdam via Dubai from 1 June 2010.

"We will operate this route on an Airbus A330, but when we get our Boeing 777-300ERs, we will fly non-stop to Amsterdam," says the spokesman.

Services to the other European cities will also be operated on the 777s, he adds. Garuda has 10 777-300ERs on order.

The airline suspended services to Frankfurt and London in 2002 and suspended service to Amsterdam in 2004 owing to weak demand.

However, Garuda now wants to expand its network as part of a plan to raise its profile as an international carrier.


http://www.flightglobal.com/article...to-resume-more-flights-to-europe-in-2011.html
 
Ennesimo rumor:

Garuda Plans IPO This Year


Garuda plans to increase its fleet size to 116 from 67 currently over the next five years. The company will take delivery of 24 aircraft this year.

SINGAPORE — PT Garuda Indonesia Wednesday said it plans to go public by mid-2010 and aims to raise US$300 million through a listing in Indonesia.

Garuda Chief Executive Emirsyah Satar said in a statement that airline is close to completing its debt restructuring.

The move to clean up the national carrier’s balance sheet is aimed at giving its public offering a better chance at success following several previous failed attempts by the Indonesian government to offload its stake. Garuda said earlier this month that it has reached an agreement with investors to restructure notes that were due in 2007.

The proceeds from the initial public offering will be used to fund Garuda’s “long-term growth plans,” Mr. Satar said.

“We have yet to determine the underwriters [for the IPO]. The IPO will either be in late second quarter or early third quarter of this year,” he added.

Garuda plans to increase its fleet size to 116 from 67 currently over the next five years. The company will take delivery of 24 aircraft this year.

The fleet size will be based mainly on Boeing 737-800s and Airbus A330-300/20s, which are operated on medium- and long-haul routes.

Mr. Satar said that Garuda has converted the 10 Boeing 787 jets it ordered two years ago into Boeing 777-300E aircraft as the Indonesian carrier wasn’t willing to wait out the delays in the production of the 787 plane.

“The airline will introduce the 10 Boeing 777 on new ultra long-range flights starting 2011 as it expands its international network,” he said.


Garuda also said it plans to add 10 domestic routes this year and start a daily non-stop service to Amsterdam June 1.

Besides, Amsterdam, the airline is also looking to fly other European destinations such as Frankfurt, Paris, London and Rome.

“This [new international series of routes] will be launched over the next few years,” he said.

Mr. Satar said that Garuda is also planning to create a separate low-cost carrier by the end of this year to meet the growing demand of domestic and short-duration travel.

“We are in the process to get regulatory approvals to establish the entity,” Mr. Satar said, adding that the low-cost carrier will operate a fleet of about 20 aircraft.

Garuda currently has a low-cost carrier subsidiary called Citilink.

http://thejakartaherald.com/garuda-plans-ipo-this-year/
 
Il volo per AMS che dovrebbe partire a giugno è stato messo in vendita o siamo ancora ai rumors?
 
Sono contento per Garuda e Roma ! E' una compagnia così bella,seria e grande ! Peccato che adesso a quanto ho capito il lungo raggio si concentri sui 332 e i 773ER ! I 744 e i 340 ?

Scusa se mi permetto, ma non è un po' azzardato usare queste lusinghe per una compagnia alla quale fino a pochissimo fa era proibito lo spazio aereo UE?

capisco la simpatia per carità... :)
 
:) Certo che si! Mica ho detto il contrario...

dico solo che magari chiamarla seria o con altri vezzeggiativi è un po' "azzardato"...

PS: io comunque per un po' sopra non ci monto... :)
 
Ero a Bali e avevo un Denpasar Francoforte, mi chiamarono all´hotel per dirmi che il volo avrebbe avuto 2 ore di ritardo, al c in ci diedero un buono pasto e se volevamo pure una telefonata a loro spese per avvisare del ritardo
In quello furono seri!
 
Scusa se mi permetto, ma non è un po' azzardato usare queste lusinghe per una compagnia alla quale fino a pochissimo fa era proibito lo spazio aereo UE?

capisco la simpatia per carità... :)

Erano veramente bannati tutti i vettori indonesiani in maniera indiscriminata, in quanto sott'accusa era la serietà della CAA indonesiana e non il singolo vettore..

Diciamo le cose come stanno!!
 
Erano veramente bannati tutti i vettori indonesiani in maniera indiscriminata, in quanto sott'accusa era la serietà della CAA indonesiana e non il singolo vettore..

Diciamo le cose come stanno!!

Adesso le cose sono cambiate? La CAA indonesiana è piu' attendibile?
 
Partito oggi il volo inaugurale JKT-DXB-AMS che segna il ritorno della compagnia indonesiana in Europa.

Garuda to Resume Europe Flights After EU Ban Ends

June 1 (Bloomberg) -- PT Garuda Indonesia, rated the world’s most-improved airline, will fly to Europe for the first time in six years today after the European Union eased a ban on the nation’s airlines following a series of fatal crashes.

Indonesia’s biggest carrier will start flights to Amsterdam via Dubai and plans to add direct services to Frankfurt, London, Paris and Rome, Chief Executive Officer Emirsyah Satar said in a phone interview yesterday. Garuda will use Airbus SAS A330s, to be replaced by Boeing Co. 777-300ERs starting next year.

The resumption of flights to Europe may spur revenue and help attract investors to a $300 million initial public offering Garuda is targeting by the end of September. Satar forecast profit will increase 20 percent this year at Garuda, ranked the world’s most-improved airline in a survey by research company Skytrax last month.

“Garuda is well placed for expansion,” said David Chang, a director of UOB Kay Hian Securities Indonesia. “The EU move is a stamp of approval because in the past, one worry was that Garuda may be cutting corners on repairs and maintenance when they had financial difficulties.”

Garuda, Indonesia’s biggest carrier, posted net income of 1 trillion rupiah ($109 million) last year, its third consecutive year of profit. The carrier has bought new aircraft and improved services, earning it the title in a survey of more than 17.9 million travelers by London-based Skytrax.

Four-Star Ranking

Garuda has a four-star ranking, on a par with British Airways Plc and Emirates Airline.

“We are coming back with a premium product, new aircraft and great services,” Satar said. “The market is big enough because there are people wanting to visit Indonesia and Indonesians traveling to Europe.”

The airline expects to appoint underwriters soon and to hold the sale by the end of the third quarter, Satar said. The proceeds will be used to make payments for aircraft purchases.

Garuda has firm orders for 10 Boeing 777 twin-aisle aircraft and 25 Boeing single-aisle 737s. It has options for another 25 of the single-aisle planes. By 2014, the carrier will have a fleet of 116 aircraft, Satar said.

Garuda’s European flights were halted at the end of 2004 after the carrier posted losses on the route. Satar, who took the helm in March 2005, was tasked to turn around a carrier that had 811.3 billion rupiah of losses in 2004.

Crashes

Indonesian carriers were blacklisted by the EU after accidents including a Mandala Airlines crash in September 2005, which killed 149, and an Adam Air crash in January 2007, which caused 102 fatalities, according to the Aviation Safety Network website.

Garuda last suffered a fatal incident in March 2007, when a plane crashed on landing in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, killing 21. In 2009, Garuda and three other Indonesian carriers obtained the EU’s approval to start services.

To commemorate the resumption of services, the 222 passengers will receive special boarding passes and enjoy Indonesian delicacies such as the “Martebe,” a mixture of Tamarillo and passion fruit juice, and cone-shaped yellow rice called the “mini Tumpeng.” State Enterprises Minister Mustafa Abubakar will be among the passengers, Satar said.

Named after a mythical bird that carries the Hindu god Vishnu, the airline took to the skies in 1949, according to its website. It has a fleet of 70 planes and flies to 46 destinations, said Pujobroto, a spokesman for the carrier.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chan Sue Ling in Singapore slchan@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: June 1, 2010 00:18 EDT