KrasAir explained

Airline:KrasAir
Красноярские авиалинии
Fleet Size:36
Destinations:57
Iata:7B
Icao:KJC
Callsign:KRASNOYARSK AIR
Founded:1993
Ceased:2008
Key People: (CEO), Alexander Misharin (Chairman of the Board)
Frequent Flyer:AiRUnion Premium, AkademStar Premium (for students)
Website:krasair.ru

KrasAir or Krasnoyarsk Airlines (Russian: Красноярские авиалинии) was a Russian airline with its head office on the grounds of Krasnoyarsk Yemelyanovo Airport in Krasnoyarsk.[1] It operated scheduled regional and international passenger services, freight transport, cargo handling and charter services from the main base is Krasnoyarsk Yemelyanovo Airport, as part of AiRUnion alliance.[2] In 2008 Krasair suffered a liquidity crisis, and after a string of operational shutdowns, administrative and strikes, the company ceased operations in October 2008.

History

Privatization

The company traces its roots to the Krasnoyarsk-based Yenisey air wing, established by the Chief Directorate of the Northern Sea Route in May, 1934. The air wing eventually differentiated into traditional airline operations, and was as Krasnoyarsk Civil Aviation Directorate (1946–1982) and Krasnoyarsk Aviation Enterprize (1982–1993). In 1993 it was privatized with the state retaining 51% controlling share.[3]

AiRUnion

KrasAir was managed by Boris Abramovich (CEO, no relation to Roman Abramovich) and his brother Alexander Abramovich (deputy CEO). The Abramovich brothers' aggressive expansion campaign led to the creation of AiRUnion alliance in 2005, the first airline alliance in Russia. It includes KrasAir, Domodedovo Airlines, Samara Airlines, Omskavia and Sibaviatrans and was the third largest domestic carrier in Russia. All of the member airlines were controlled by Krasair management.

In 2005 KrasAir attempted to expand internationally, placing a winning bid in Hungary's national carrier Malév privatisation tender. The tender results were initially annulled by Hungarian authorities[4] before finally being sold in February 2007.[5] During 2006 1,118,543 passengers were transported by KrasAir[6] and AiRUnion transported 3,342,815 passengers[7]

KrasAir managers were part of a venture together with the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development to create a new low-cost airline called Sky Express. This airline was to be based at Vnukovo Airport and fly initially to domestic routes, using as many as 44 Boeing 737-300/500s. The airline's airfares were to be 30-40% cheaper than other carriers.[8]

2008 crisis

In June and August 2008 Krasair and AiRUnion fleets were grounded as the fuel suppliers denied further credit fuel to debt-ridden airlines. In June, Krasair and its principal supplier, Krasnoyarsk-based Sibir Avia Service, reached an agreement to resume fuel supply on condition that Krasair debt did not exceed 100 million roubles.[9] By the middle of August the debt rose to 223 million roubles, and on August 19 Sibir Avia stopped refuelling, leaving thousands of passengers stranded in airports. Krasair blamed the crisis on rising oil prices.[9] In first six months of 2008, fuel accounted for 54% of Krasair costs.[3] Flights were also grounded in Moscow and Omsk airports.[10]

Analysts predicted that the fuel crisis would be resolved through intervention of Rostechhologii, a newly formed state conglomerate that controls substantial shares of AiRUnion companies, including Krasair;[11] alternatively, the state may prefer to complete formal bankruptcy process and restructure AiRUnion assets under a new management. On August 24, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin specifically addressed the problem of the grounded airline, authorizing Sergey Ivanov to issue state funds and enable further operations.[12]

On August 26, media reports appeared to indicate that bankruptcy was inevitable. Russian Technologies, the principal shareholder, refused to pay AiRUnion's bills and its fleet remained grounded. The same day, the Russian Ministry of Transportation negotiated with Aeroflot, Transaero, S7 Airlines and Rossiya about taking over the routes previously operated by Krasair.[13]

On October 27, Krasair was unable to fly most of their aircraft due to a pilots' strike as a refusal by refuelling companies to extend credit to the airline. It was announced that Krasair would cease to exist on November 1, 2008.

Destinations

Fleet

Throughout their history, KrasAir operated the following types of aircraft:[15]

KrasAir Fleet
AircraftPhotoTotal
Antonov An-220
Antonov An-243
Antonov An-268
Boeing 737-3006
Boeing 757-2004
Boeing 767-200ER5
Evektor EV-55 Outback29 orders
Ilyushin Il-6222
Ilyushin Il-7616
Ilyushin Il-8610
Ilyushin Il-96-3005
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-302
Tupolev Tu-13411
Tupolev Tu-15442
Tupolev Tu-2046
Tupolev Tu-2141
Yakovlev Yak-4013
Yakovlev Yak-425

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Авиалинии." KrasAir. 5 September 2002. Retrieved on 28 February 2010. "Красноярск, 663020, Аэропорт "Красноярск"."
  2. News: Directory: World Airlines . . 103 . 2007-04-03.
  3. Krasair. Quarterly report, Q2 2008 http://www.krasair.ru/image.php?id=667&save=1
  4. http://www.budapesttimes.hu/index.php?art=1028 Budapest Times
  5. News: Hungary national airline sold off . BBC News . February 23, 2007 . May 7, 2010.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20070928005154/http://www.krasair.ru/doc.php?id=1498 KrasAir press release
  7. Web site: KrasAir - Авиакомпания Современной России . 2007-01-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928005122/http://www.krasair.ru/doc.php?id=1510 . 2007-09-28 . KrasAir press release
  8. http://www.kommersant.com/p705784/EBRD_to_Fund_Russia’s_First_Budget_Airline/ Kommersant
  9. http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=1013573 KrasAir to Have Fuel at Double Price, Kommersant, June 20, 2008
  10. Most AiRUnion flights still delayed in Moscow. Prime-TASS, August 23, 2008 http://www.prime-tass.com/news/show.asp?topicid=68&id=443222
  11. http://www.finamrus.com/investments/daily0000101C25/default.asp Krasair may face fuel shortage, FINAM, August 12, 2008
  12. AiRUnion won't get far, gazeta.ru, August 25, 2008 http://www.gazeta.ru/business/2008/08/25/2820853.shtml
  13. Competition declare AiRUnion dead. Kommersant, August 26, 2008 http://kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1016453&NodesID=0
  14. Web site: ru:Информация по авиакомпании. Polyot-Sirena . http://www.polets.ru/cgi-bin/sh.pl?Mode=AK&AKIndex=397&AKCode=397. 2007-10-18. ru.
  15. Web site: Карточка оператора: КрасЭйр (AirUnion) ✈ russianplanes.net ✈ наша авиация .