BEIJING, Jan. 12 -- An array of 256 measures are
being formulated by China Eastern Airlines to stem further losses during the
global economic recession, confirmed Luo Zhuping, board secretary with the
country's third-largest carrier on Friday.
Luo said that the efficiency-oriented policies
include cutting salaries across the executive suite, urging employees to take
unpaid vacations and making other operating adjustments.
"These new policies will be designed to control
costs," Luo said.
According to Luo, the pay cuts won't reach low-level
employees. Management teams will see a 10 to 30 percent salary reduction,
depending on their posts.
Some unprofitable flights (mostly international) will
be closed down, said Luo.
Sources said China Eastern will pull out of several
investment plans made during the first half of 2008. Luo declined to comment on
those rumors. Public information shows China Eastern joined plans of
establishing China Joy Air Co with China National Aviation Holding Company, and
invested in Tibet Airlines.
In its third-quarter report, the Shanghai-based
airline posted a loss of 2.334 billion yuan, with a 98.49 percent debt-to-equity
ratio. Its passenger numbers fell 5.4 percent to 37.1 million throughout 2008.
As the worst-performing Chinese airline, China
Eastern announced on Dec. 29 it would raise 7 billion yuan by selling shares to
its State-owned parent company, which will help ease the pressure of the
company's mounting debts.
"At this stage, any decision made is to keep the
business afloat. The overall airline industry was wracked hard by losing up to
$5 billion last year, and domestic airlines might account for 10 billion yuan,"
said Xia Fulu, an analyst with Industrial Securities.
According to Xia, the sprawling financial crunch has
greatly dented flight demand. Across the globe, nearly all airlines are
marketing discounted tickets.
Suffering from last year's snowstorms in January,
Wenchuan earthquake in May and Olympic restrictions, China Eastern's seat
kilometer utilization dropped to 71 percent.
(Source: China Daily)