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Thai Airways: Corruption, slow recovery, and selling planes including 2 A380s

Thai Airways: Corruption, slow recovery, and selling planes including 2 A380s

The pandemic has not been kind to Thai Airways. With international borders closed and the tourist industry devastated, the only consolation is the low rate of COVID-19 infection in the kingdom. Only 4180 infections reported, and 60 deaths reported.

In a lot of ways COVID-19 shows us all the flaws in our societies, whether it be the casualisation of work, or a scatter-gun approach to fleet acquisitions.

a group of women in colorful dresses

Background

Thai Airways is currently in Central Bankruptcy Court supervised administration, having had a recovery plan approved after haemorrhaging money for years and then the pandemic grounding most of its fleet. The airline owes around 332 billion baht (15 billion AU$ if my calculations are correct?), according to the Stock Exchange of Thailand website.

The airline used to be a state business which gave it certain protections, but since the states stake fell below 50% it no longer qualifies

the inside of a plane
Thai A350 Business Class

Corruption

There have been rumours of corruption or at the very least, interference from outside the airline for years.

According to the Bangkok Post new evidence is about to be presented to the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) on Dec 14 by a panel headed by a former commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Bureau, set with the task of examining the factors involved in landing the airline in debt.

The allegations include:

. . . alleged major irregularities were found in various items, including air ticket sales, overtime payments to technicians and the purchase of Airbus A340 planes in 2003-2004.

Bangkok Post
a woman in a purple dress standing in a row of seats

Aircraft Sales

Thai just added 2 of its A380’s to more than 40 other planes it is hoping to sell, including 10 Boeing 747s, 18 Boeing 777s, 9 Airbus A340s (doh!), three Boeing 737s and a single Airbus A330. If you’re in the market for a jet, or just want to gloat (so unfashionable) try here: Thai Aircraft Trading website. Just remember that . . .

Disclaimer: This announcement is a part of a market survey to find potential buyers for the items listed in accordance with THAI’s business plan under the reorganization proceeding. The actual sale will take place under the business reorganization plan and would require approvals of relevant stakeholders and the Bankruptcy Court.’

You could pick up a Boeing 747s, 18 older Boeing 777-series jets, nine Airbus A340s, three Boeing 737s and a solitary Airbus A330.

a white and purple airplane flying in the sky

New 777’s

Thai is re-negotiation the delivery of it new 777-300ER aircraft with Boeing. These aircraft sport new cabins, including a new PriestmanGoode designed first class, something that the older 777s lacked. Incidentaly that’s why Sydney kept getting those old Jumbo’s scheduled on the route, because apparently, someone of influence wanted to have a first class cabin available to them.

Thai’s Australian destinations

The airline is also pulling back on its Australian destinations, abandoning Perth and Brisbane, which cuts it back to just Melbourne and Sydney, to be offered in 2021 when borders re-open.

a room with screens and chairs
First Class suites on Thai

2PAXfly Takeout

This is another timely reminder to wear your seatbelt when seated. Holding you close to your seat will protect you from the sort of injuries sustained on this flight, when unsecured passengers flew to the ceiling of the aircraft, and then came crashing down once the ‘drop’ ceased.

The hope will be that this is an anomaly – a ‘freak accident’ in casual parlance. If it is a systemic error either mechanical or electronic, then this is a larger concern for the airlines that fly Boeing Dreamliner 787 aircraft. Let’s hope it isn’t. If it is, it will pile on the woes to Boeing’s existing stack.

I loved Thai Airways, and back a few decade or so. They were my preferred business class bus to Europe, with their reasonably priced business cabin with its angled lie flat seats. Then they kinda lost the plot, and retained those outdated seats when everyone was providing actual flat seats in business.

Thai also provided my first first class experience – gotta love an upgrade certificate!

I hope that bankruptcy administration, and these corruption hearings will sort Thai out so that it can become the great airline it once was post this god-aweful-pandemic.

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