British Airways boss Alex Cruz defends decision to axe 12,000 jobs
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The boss of British Airways has defended his decision to cut up to 12,000 jobs and said the pandemic has left the national carrier ‘fighting for survival’.
Chief executive Alex Cruz stressed that ‘people need to get flying again’ if the company is to emerge through the winter and weather the ‘worst crisis in its 100 years of history’.
But he told MPs that many would-be customers are still cautious about travelling for fear their holiday destination will suddenly be brought on to the government’s quarantine list.
Passenger numbers have nosedived and last week the airline only flew 187,000 passengers, compared with almost a million the same week last year.
The slump in flights, of which roughly a quarter are operating, is causing BA to burn through £20million a day and has led to a jobs bloodbath.
Mr Cruz said: ‘Fewer passengers means fewer flights, and fewer flights means fewer people required to actually service them.’
The boss of British Airways has defended his decision to cut up to 12,000 jobs and said the pandemic has left the national carrier ‘fighting for survival’
Chief executive Alex Cruz stressed that ‘people need to get flying again’ if the company is to emerge through the winter
In April, British Airways announced plans to axe up to 12,000 jobs, representing nearly 30 per cent of its workforce.
Today, Mr Cruz revealed that 7,200 employees have already left the company, and said the final amount out of redundancies would likely be around 10,000, although this could be greater.
Appearing before the Commons’ Transport Select Committee, he said: ‘As CEO of British Airways, I have to take responsibility. I cannot ignore the situation. I had to act incredibly fast.
‘I deeply, deeply regret that way too many loyal and hardworking colleagues of mine are having to leave our business, and I understand why MPs are concerned.’
He added: ‘This is an impossible situation. We’re having to make incredibly difficult decisions as a consequence of this pandemic and it is really only because of Covid-19 that we have had to go through such deep restructuring.
‘I have to make these difficult decisions at this time but I am completely dedicated and focused on protecting those nearly 30,000 jobs of those British Airways colleagues that will remain within the business.’
Today, Mr Cruz revealed that 7,200 employees have already left the company, and said the final amount out of redundancies would likely be around 10,000, although this could be greater
The chief executive, whose fleet was mostly grounded during the pandemic, said his mission objective was the survival of Britain’s flagship airline.
Not mincing his about the precariousness of BA’s future, he said: ‘The main focus at the moment is to survive.
‘We must make it through, then we must be able to compete effectively and make it through the recovery cycle… people need to get flying again.’
Laying bare the uphill struggle to revive BA’s dire financial fortunes, he said: ‘We ended up last year, British Airways, with £2.6billion in cash.
‘At the end of June we had £2.1 billion in cash. We’ve been burning approximately an average of £20million of cash per day.’
Mr Cruz revealed that he had taken a 33.3 per cent pay cut, and his top team a 25 per cent cut.
Last year, the boss made £805,000 in salary, benefits and pensions, he said.
But Mr Cruz’s efforts could be thwarted by a nervous public who he claimed are avoiding trips abroad for fear of having to quarantine.
He said: ‘People are still afraid of travelling. Of course, we are having weekly changes, as you know, to the quarantine list.
‘We don’t have a testing solution yet. And still our customers are paying APD (air passenger duty) even just to fly on domestic regional flights.
‘So the overall situation is quite challenging, and this is why we are taking every measure possible to make sure that we can actually make it through this winter.’
Mr Cruz called on the government to approach its quarantine list of countries on a regional basis, allowing them still to fly to areas of a nation which has low cases.
In a wide-ranging committee appearance via video-link, he also reaffirmed BA’s commitment to be net zero by 2050.
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