AirBaltic Plans To Wet-Lease Up To Five Aircraft Out To Other Operators

Airbaltic A220-300
Credit: Joe Pries
AirBaltic said the overall GTF engine situation, that has caused groundings in its fleet, was improving and it plans to wet-lease out up to five aircraft to other operators this winter.
 
CEO Martin Gauss told Aviation Week in an interview: “We had a better summer than expected. We had the longest time with no engine removals which is showing that the engine is improving but we knew that there would be an increase of missing engines due to the slots which we have for the repair. What we do now see is that we’re going to go into spring with a higher shortage of engines than we would like to. Unfortunately we only get clarity six months into the future … that makes it a bit difficult to secure wet lease in or adjust your program. But overall it’s much better today than it was.”
 
Referring to the airline’s overall fleet plans, following the conversion of its latest option for ten additional A220-300s in August, Gauss said AirBaltic should receive its 50th Airbus A220 aircraft in February next year.
 
The carrier has an all-A220 fleet which it is steadily growing, but 2025 will be the year with the smallest number of aircraft deliveries expected in the coming years, Gauss said.
 
“When we exercised the options, we had a gap, but we have narrowed that gap. We announced about a month ago that we have ordered another 10 from our purchase and they are coming earlier than our initial plan.”
 
The airline expects to have 54 aircraft by the end of 2025, 66 by the end of 2026, 77 by the end of 2027 and its business plan states it should have 100 in 2029. It has so far secured 97 of those.
 
Air Baltic has ten options for aircraft outstanding but is not under pressure to exercise those, Gauss said. “No stress there at the moment. We have 97 secured and our business plan says 100 so we would have to exercise only three to get to 100 and that could happen at a later stage.”
 
The airline is preparing for an IPO, which could come as early as the end of this year or in 2025, Gauss said, confirming that the airline is in “advanced talks” with a potential pre-IPO investor.
 
He declined to comment on media reports that those talks were with Lufthansa, with which AirBaltic recently signed an expanded wet lease partnership. “The only detail we can give is that we are in advanced stages with a pre-IPO investor and that it is not private equity, not the state and not Coca-Cola,” Gauss said.
 
The airline is also hoping to have connectivity via SpaceX’s Starlink in place in its aircraft by the end of the year, pending EASA approval, Gauss said.
Referring to the recent summer peak season, Gauss said AirBaltic had a good summer but like other airlines, noticed pressure on yields.
 
Note: This story was revised at the request of Air Baltic, which said its CEO misspoke in an interview with Aviation Week.
Helen Massy-Beresford

Based in Paris, Helen Massy-Beresford covers European and Middle Eastern airlines, the European Commission’s air transport policy and the air cargo industry for Aviation Week & Space Technology and Aviation Daily.