CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Al Baker hits back at Delta, says no state subsidy for QA

Published: 17 Mar 2015 - 03:00 am | Last Updated: 17 Jan 2022 - 12:11 am

Doha: The chief of Qatar Airways yesterday denied his company receives subsidies and accused rivals Delta Air Lines of flying “crap” older planes, escalating hostilities between Gulf and American carriers.
Speaking at an arts conference in Doha, Akbar Al Baker said any money his airline receives from the state is in the form of “legitimate” equity and added his company’s fleet of aircraft were much cleaner for the environment in comparison to Delta.
“I think Mr Anderson (CEO of Delta, Richard Anderson) doesn’t know the difference between equity and subsidy. We never receive any subsidy,” Baker said.
“The state of Qatar is the owner of Qatar Airways and whatever funds are put into the airline is as equity, which is quite legitimate.
“The unfortunate thing is that because they are so inefficient they want to blame us — while we are very efficient — for their failures and drawbacks. “The issue is that they cannot stand the progress the Gulf carriers are making.”
Baker was responding to claims made earlier this month by three US airlines — Delta, American and United — that Qatar, along with Etihad Airways and Emirates, received $42bn in “unfair” subsidies to wrest business away from competitors.
The US carriers issued a 55-page report claiming this has allowed the Gulf airlines to wrest market share from the American airlines. These “multi-billion dollar subsidies” had distorted the marketplace, “to the severe detriment of US employment,” the American carriers claimed.
They called on Washington to raise the issue with the UAE and Qatari governments and urged changes to bilateral commercial aviation agreements with them.
Al Baker also defended Qatar Airway’s record when it comes to CO2 emissions and unflatteringly compared Delta’s aircraft to those of his company when asked about aviation pollution. “I am delighted that Richard Anderson of Delta is not here. First of all, we don’t fly crap airplanes that are 35 years old. The Qatar Airways average fleet (age) is only fours years and one month,” he said. AFP