If true, you must be really well-placed to receive such information. That and the fact that many of your opinions align with higher management begs some questions.In the mean time, in the real world, I am happy to say SN has presented its fleet plan for the next 2 and a half years and I can tell you that the number of addtional turboprops SN is planning to operate alongside that single wetleased Q400 currently operating on behalf of them, is set at 2 and these two Q400s will be wetleased, one starting in FEB next year, the other one in MAY...
Oh, a significant number of A319s and A320s are planned to join the fleet in 2012 and 2013 too, even more than they have added this year, I am afraid.
I don't see where this is going. Money is drying up, the Lufthansa Group has just announced very deep losses in H1 and we're heading into a new recession. SN's continued operations through 2012 is hanging on wide rumors that are denied by LH . LH strongly affirmed that it will make its decision in the spring and that nothing is set.
From LH's perspective, not only does LH have to fork out the money to buy the remaining stake, it would also have to make immediate capital injections. It won't be easy to convince large stakeholders when Germany is struggling, number 2 Air Berlin restructuring, and SN is deeply loss-making. If LH really wanted SN that bad, they would have bought it out this year. Traffic rights are a pretext, it's only a matter of paperwork. Waiting for this year's losses to pay less is also meaningless because whatever LH pays less for SN, they will find less on SN's bank account.
In that perspective, you can also put A380's and some Space Shuttles into SN's 2.5 year fleet plan.
Serious question marks hang over priorities. What's the point of going for market share in loss-making Europe in a high fuel cost environment, full of uncertainties when there's no spare money to invest?
What about investing at the same time into 3000 projects managed in a surreal way with questionable return on investment (Korongo saga, Hangar 41 saga, hard Recaro seats saga, A330 upgrade saga) that have a return on investment time of many years, when the balance sheet at the end of 2010 tells you that the net worth of the company is less than the turn-over of 1 month?
If the positive balance on your bank account is one month of salary, would you buy a bigger newer car, a house, move in, start a small business, play at the casino and buy a big flat screen TV?
If you do, let's hope that your daddy (LH) is waiting with his wallet wide open to pay the bill and not waiting for you (SN) to get a heart attack and to harvest your organs.
3000 and more jobs. This is what we're talking about here.
Your 2.5 year plan is an "if all goes well plan".
If all goes well, A319/A320's to replace B737's aren't an issue. Neither is keeping the Avro's if fuel prices stay low. But if fuel prices stay high (which is the problem we're already seeing with food prices, pointing to potentially lasting stagflation) and traffic drops, then you're going to wish you had a "light" fleet.
Either way, if LH doesn't come on board, Q400's or not, it's too late to make a difference.

