Company Perspectives:
We have prided ourselves on our ability to stand alone
without needing subsidies or being a member of a major alliance, in order to
tailor our services to our own customers' needs.
History of The Emirates Group
The Emirates Group is composed of airport services
provider DNATA (the Dubai National Air Transport Association) and Emirates
Airlines. Owned by the government of Dubai and based at the busiest airport in
the Middle East, Emirates has flourished under the sheikdom's 'wide open skies'
policy, in spite of the restrictions placed on it by other countries. The
airline, renowned for its luxurious in-flight service, was unique among
long-haul airlines in that it had not joined a global alliance such as the Star
Alliance or one world by the beginning of the new millennium.
Origins
Dubai, a fishing village at the southern end of the
Arabian Gulf, has grown to become one of the leading trade centers of the
Middle East, fueled at first by pearls, then petroleum. The Beni Yas tribe
assumed control of the town around 1830. The Maktoum family led the tribe
throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Dubai became one of seven sheikdoms in
the United Arab Emirates, which was formed in 1970.
As the British pulled out of Dubai in the late 1950s,
Sheikh Saeed Al Maktoum decreed an open seas, open skies, and open trade
policy, to develop the country into a regional crossroads for trade and
tourism. He also required all government agencies to make a profit. The country
was aiming to eliminate its dependence on its finite oil reserves within 50
years.
The Dubai National Air Transport Association (DNATA)
was formed in 1959. By the mid-1980s, DNATA had grown to 2,500 employees. In
addition to providing support services at Dubai Airport, the company served as
sales agent for 26 airlines. Dubai had been used as a stopover on routes
between Europe and the Far East since the days of Imperial Airways (precursor
to British Airways), which landed its flying boats there en route to Australia.
Its open skies policies kept its airport among the busiest in the region.
Gulf Air began to cut back its service to Dubai in the
mid-1980s. As a result, Emirates Airlines was conceived in March 1985 with
backing from Dubai's royal family, who’s Dubai Air Wing provided two of the
airline's first aircraft, used Boeing 727s. (An Airbus A300 and Boeing 737 were
two others.) Because of Dubai's unique political structure, wrote Douglas Nelms
in Air
Transport World, Emirates could be described as both
government-owned and privately held, though most considered it state-owned. It
was required to operate independent of government subsidies, however, apart
from $10 million in start-up capital.
Maurice Flanagan was named managing director of the new
airline. Formerly of the Royal Air Force, British Airways, and Gulf Air,
Flanagan had been seconded to DNATA in 1978 on a two-year assignment as
assistant general sales manager.
Chairman was Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, nephew of the ruler of Dubai. Only 27 years old in 1985, he had graduated from the University of Colorado just four years earlier (his degree was in political science and economics). Sheik Ahmed also became chairman of Dubai Civil Aviation and DNATA itself. Although he lacked any direct experience in the airline industry, Sheikh Ahmed embraced his new role, learning to fly a variety of aircraft along the way. As Lisa Coleman duly noted in Chief Executive, he was indeed experienced in one area that would be the new airline's defining trait: luxury. From the beginning, Emirates boasted a tradition of providing the best creature comforts available at 40,000 feet.
The first flight, Dubai-Karachi on October 25, 1985, was a Pakistani connection in more ways than one. The airline leased the aircraft, an Airbus 300, from Pakistan International Airlines. Bombay and Delhi were the other two earliest destinations. From the beginning, Emirates flights carried both passengers and cargo.Emirates was profitable within nine months. During its
first year, it carried 260,000 passengers and 10,000 tons of freight. Gulf Air,
part owned by the much wealthier neighboring emirate Abu Dhabi, had previously
dominated air traffic in the region. Its profits fell more than 30 percent
during the first year of its new rival's operations, however, prompting Gulf
Air to drop its privatization plans. The next year, Gulf Air posted a loss.
In its second year, Emirates also posted a loss, before
setting out on decades of profitable growth. One reason for the success of
Emirates was its aggressive marketing. Another was the high level of in-flight
service in its new Airbus aircraft, which it outfitted with generously spaced
seating.
'The Finest in the Sky' in the 1990s
Emirates Sky Cargo, which operated as a separate
entity, carried 25,000 tons of freight in fiscal 1989. In the early 1990s, a
number of Asian firms began using Dubai as a warehousing center for European
deliveries. Emirates expanded its route network into the Far East in 1990,
serving Bangkok, Manila, and Singapore. Hong Kong was added in 1991. Emirates
added Paris, Rome, Zurich, and Jakarta in the summer of 1992.
About the same time as it was extending its reach into
Asia, Emirates was courting long-haul business travelers. Calling itself 'the
finest in the sky,' the airline toned down its Arabic identity for a more
'corporate' feel, positioning itself as a competitor to global carriers such as
British Airways and Singapore Airlines.
Emirates was one of the world's fastest growing
airlines. Revenues increased by about $100 million a year, approaching $500
million in fiscal 1993. It carried 68,000 tons of cargo and 1.6 million
passengers that year. The Gulf War, ironically, had benefited Emirates by
keeping other airlines out of the area. Emirates was the only airline to
continue flying in the last ten days of the war, although it had to cover
increased insurance premiums and higher fuel costs (flying around the war zone
added an extra ten hours to flights).
A partnership agreement with US Airlines entered in the
fall of 1993 allowed Emirates to offer around-the-world service. It had
previously inked cooperation agreements with Cyprus Airways.
By 1994, 60 international airlines were flying to
Dubai. Emirates was connecting 32 destinations with its 15 aircraft. It was the
sixth largest of eight Middle East carriers. Despite its small size, the
airline had accumulated numerous awards by lavishing attention and money on
passenger and cargo service. It was the first airline to install personal video
systems in all seats, for example. Flight attendants celebrated special
occasions with in-flight cakes and Polaroid cameras. Passengers flying first
class were served six-course meals on Royal Doulton china.
Emirates took in $643.4 million in the fiscal year
ending March 30, 1994. Income increased more than eightfold, to $24.4 million.
The young airline had 4,000 employees and carried two million passengers a year
between 34 destinations with a fleet of 18 Airbus aircraft.
Seven state-of-the-art Boeing 777s worth $1 billion
were on order since 1992 to satisfy long-range ambitions. They began to arrive
in the spring of 1996. One of the planes was used on a new service to Australia
(Melbourne) via Singapore. Emirates placed a large order with Airbus later in
the year. In spite of the large capital expenditures, the Dubai government had
laid out only $50 million since the airline's inception.
A total of 92 air carriers were serving Dubai in the
mid-1990s. Emirates was able to flourish, however, in spite of restricted
markets abroad and intense competition at home. The Dubai government had been
promoting the country as an escape from European winters with great success,
much to the benefit of Emirates. (Dubai's summertime weather was grueling, with
Fahrenheit temperatures and relative humidity readings in the 100s.) Abroad,
its route network was expanding in the Pacific and Africa.
In 1997, Emirates was flying a dedicated freighter to Amsterdam, a point not on its network of passenger routes, in cooperation with KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. It carried about three million passengers during the year. The growing cargo business accounted for 16 percent of the airline's revenues.
Emirates opened a unique, $65 million training center
in January 1997. It was built in the shape of an airplane. The airline was then
able to provide advanced simulator training for its crew members--who
represented 50 different nationalities--and flight and maintenance personnel
from around the world. In the fall of 1997, a new air-conditioned maintenance
center allowed the group (which consisted of Emirates Airlines and DNATA) to
solicit third-party contracts in that capacity as well.
A record group profit of AED 371 million was achieved
in 1997-98. Emirates executives planned a slowdown in the airline's growth in
the late 1990s to stabilize its expansive route network.
A new, lighthearted advertising campaign launched in
January 1999 enjoined travelers to 'Be good to yourself. Fly Emirates.' One ad
aired in Britain featured a business class passenger calling his dog with the
on-board phone.
Emirates signed on in May 2000 as the first launch
customer for the Airbus A3XX, designed to be the largest civil aircraft ever
built. Emirates justified purchasing the 481- to 656-passenger super jumbo to
maximize its use of scarce takeoff and landing slots at crowded airports like
London's Heathrow. The airline planned to order up to a dozen of the planes,
with the first to be delivered in 2006.
Toward the end of 2000, Emirates was planning to start
ultra-long-haul service to the East Coast and West Coast of the United States
as well as nonstop flights to Australia and Argentina. Traffic continued to
grow at an impressive clip (20 percent) in 1999-2000, and Emirates executives
planned to sustain that.
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