By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
  • Aircraft for Sale
Reading: Pull UP! Pull UP! South African Airways
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
  • Aircraft for Sale
Signin Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2025 | All Rights Reserved
Travel Radar - Aviation News > News > Pull UP! Pull UP! South African Airways

Pull UP! Pull UP! South African Airways

Travel Radar
Last updated: 12 November 2019 12:13
By Travel Radar Staff
5 Min Read
Share
SHARE

African airlines are going through turbulent times. Of the three market leaders in the past decade; Ethiopian, Kenyan and South African, Ethiopian is the biggest airline with over 100 aircraft and while government-owned, has traditionally been left to manage its own affairs. Partial privatisation is due shortly.  Ethiopian suffered from the tragic and infamous crash of its 737 MAX aircraft in March this year and its hub in the capital Addis Ababa, potentially a rival to the Gulf centres, is too small and very, very tired. Kenya Airways suffered a £58m loss in the last financial year and is due to be re-nationalised shortly.

So what of South African Airways? It has just received its first A350-900 and is due to acquire another three by the end of the year. These will be used on the ultra-long-haul routes to the USA, starting with New York and probably including Washington DC shortly. The new aircraft will replace the aging A340-600.  SAA hopes to save 20-25% on fuel costs and offer a much-improved passenger experience. Is it enough?

Image: Sibusiso Nxumalo @FlyingZulu

Not by a long way.                                         

Geographically, South Africa is a terminus. It can-and does-serve as a hub for tourism, family and business travel via Johannesburg to Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe, but it’s a ten-hour flight from European centres and the far East, and longer still from North America. Travelling on to those smaller southern African countries requires a degree of backtracking.  Even so, the geographical situation of New Zealand is similar and ANZ is performing well, even while dominated by its bigger neighbour QANTAS.

Most issues are self-inflicted. Route management is chaotic. The airline owns low cost carrier Mango, the regional and domestic carrier SA Express and has close ties to SA Airlink. As a result several SAA routes have been duplicated although the airline has withdrawn from the smaller domestic routes and now serves only the two high-density sectors to Cape Town and Durban largely for the business traveller. Long haul routes are dominated by European carriers, and by cheaper alternatives to the rest of the world via the Gulf. For example, United is shortly introducing a direct service from New York to Cape Town.

Image: Gianluigi Guerica/AFP

SAA Technical isn’t helping either. Most recently, a lack of proper oversight at the subsidiary SAA Technical caused the grounding of several SAA, Mango and Kulula flights. (Kulula is the LCC subsidiary of BA franchise Comair)

SAA is government-owned and has needed large handouts in the last decade to remain in operation; it last made a profit in 2011 and the loss for 2017/18 was R5.7b. (~£300m) SAA loses money at about £26m a month. In the last decade, it’s suffered from a series of politically appointed CEO’s, none of whom have had any appreciable airline experience and all of whom have had a disastrous impact on profitability.  The most recent CEO resigned in frustration with government inaction. The South African Minister of Finance has supported partial or full privatisation, but no equity partners have emerged.

The solution lies in political will. Unions recognised by SAA have already declared their opposition to any attempt at privatisation for fear of job losses. Losses seem inevitable, but as the Minister has said, SAA can’t continue in its present circumstances. The new CEO will need to accept the challenge of strategically redirecting the airline in the face of fierce competition, an owner politically reluctant to defy the unions and a public who increasingly can (and are) deserting the national carrier.

You Might Also Like

Boeing 737 Max to resume flights in Europe after two years
UK Government Awards £10.8 Million Grant to ZeroAvia
Spirit Airlines Reveals Most Searched Thanksgiving Destinations
U.S. Firm Air T Enters Agreement to acquire Rex Airlines
SAS strengthens WestJet partnership with expanded transatlantic cooperation
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link
What’s your thoughts?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Travel Radar
ByTravel Radar Staff
Follow:
Articles from guest contributors wishing to remain anonymous are credited to this account. Want to contribute to Travel Radar either in-name, or anonymously? Get in touch: [email protected]
Previous Article East Fortune- The Scottish Aviation Museum
Next Article Airlines Snatch Ex Thomas Cook Airport Slots
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe

Trending News

Illustration combining the US flag with a stock market chart, commonly used to represent US airline stocks 2026 and airline stocks in market-related articles.
Why US Airline Stocks Are Being Rewritten In 2026 And Which US Airlines Stand Out
Airline Economics Airlines Aviation
A Far Eastern Air Transport MD-83 in mid flight.
Taiwan’s Administrative Enforcement Agency sells Used MD-83 in Third Auction
Aircraft Airline Economics Airlines Airports Aviation
Ethiopian Airlines branded A350-1000 flies in the sky
Ethiopian Airlines to Launch a New Service to Lyon, France
Airlines Route Development Travel
American Airlines
American Airlines Rebuilds Its Biggest Hub
Airports Aviation Did You Know
ACC Aviation appoints its new vice president - leasing consultant, Luca D'Urso, to its ACMI division. © ACC Aviation
ACC Aviation Appoints New Vice President In ACMI Division
Airline Economics Aviation Careers

Travel Radar is the leading digital hub for all things aviation and air-travel. Discover our latest aviation news, aviation data, insight and analysis.

 

Discover

  • Latest News
  • Subscribe
  • Weekly Digest
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Media Coverage
  • Press & Events
  • Join Our Team
  • Our Brands

Signup to our Newsletter!

And get the latest aviation news via our weekly news digest!

© Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2015-2025 | ISSN #2635-0696 | Trademark #UK00003579704
wpDiscuz
adbanner
Welcome to the TR Community!

Sign in to your account

Not a member? Sign Up