Arik attributes flight delays to fuel scarcity, suspends Dubai route
ARIK Air, one of the domestic airlines in Nigeria has disclosed that the recent flight delays and cancellations being experienced by the carrier’s passengers in the last few days have been attributed to the general scarcity of aviation fuel (Jet A1) in Lagos.
According to the airline, there has been short supply of the product in Lagos and this has led to rationing by the petroleum product marketers. It added that signs of the scarcity started manifesting on Thursday, April 23, 2015 when marketers were unable to meet the demands of the airlines, especially Arik Air which by volume of its operations requires a daily supply of between 600,000 and 800,000 liters of aviation fuel.
The scarcity has impacted negatively on Arik Air’s operations, as flights have to be delayed or canceled in cases where the destination airport has no airfield lighting, said Arik.
In some other cases, flights were diverted to other airports outside Lagos where the product was readily available. On Friday, it noted that Arik Air’s flight to London Heathrow had to go via Accra to take fuel, Adding that last Saturday, the same London flight had to go to Cotonou, Benin Republic first to fuel the aircraft, before coming back to Lagos for the outbound flight to Heathrow.
In the case of the Johannesburg flight of Friday, the aircraft had to first go to Port Harcourt where fuel was available before proceeding on the journey.
On Monday, the London flight went via Kano to take fuel. Flying via other stations to take fuel has come at a great cost to Arik Air but the airline had to do this to improve the inconvenience the scarcity may cause its guests.
The airline said it sincerely apologise to its esteemed guests over the inconvenience, which is due to circumstances beyond the control of the airline.
The management also appealed to its esteemed guests to bear with the airline at this critical time of fuel scarcity hoping that the situation would be back to normal in a short while. Meanwhile, the airline said it has taken the decision to temporarily suspend its Dubai service operating from Lagos via Abuja with effect from April 28, 2015.
Arik stated that a challenging wider economic environment in Nigeria as well as increasingly stringent travel regulation controls in the United Arabs Emirates (UAE) has contributed to the decision to suspend the service. “Arik Air will continue to focus its attention on developing services in Nigeria and West Africa.
Our present domestic network is fully developed with flights to most parts of the country; however we will continue to review our frequencies and fleet deployment strategy to ensure we continually match growing demand within and outside of Nigeria for air travel and also operate efficiently”.
“Arik Air is committed in its pursuit to meet customer’s expectations through operating and investing in state of the art aircraft and puts great emphasis on safety and reliability”, it added.
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1 Comments
Just pure craziness. How can a major airline in nigeria not have major backup for fuel, especially knowing that fuel scarcity is very common in nigeria. This is same madness that is affecting power generation companies. What can’t any of this companies plan ahead.
We will review and take appropriate action.