Exclusive: Aeroflot restores Soviet-era routes at home amid closed borders - CEO

Reuters

Published Jun 08, 2021 06:39AM ET

By Gleb Stolyarov and Katya Golubkova

ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) - Russia's top airline Aeroflot is restoring Soviet-era routes hoping that direct flights which bypass traditional hubs help increase traffic amid closed borders, CEO Mikhail Poluboyarinov told Reuters.

Like many other airlines globally, Aeroflot received a cash injection from the government, its controlling shareholder, last year to support it through the pandemic.

The company is now talking to the government about issuing state-guaranteed debt, Poluboyarinov said in an interview, and is adding new domestic routes so people can fly between cities including resorts avoiding hubs such as Moscow.

"We made big steps to adjust our route network. Aeroflot refreshed Soviet practise, its Soviet network... almost all the fleet is now busy," he said.

Over 80% of Aeroflot's seats are now taken while Pobeda, its low-cost unit, has a 98-99% load factor.

Despite starting to recover from last year when Aeroflot lost more than half of its traffic and fell to a 123.2 billion rouble ($1.7 billion) loss, Poluboyarinov does not expect its passenger traffic to return to pre-pandemic levels before 2024.

"Even if we get all permissions, who knows how many people would fly? The pandemic is still there. The re-opening of international flights depends on collective immunity... Vaccines should be mutually approved," he said.