HomeAviationNigeria airlines increase fares over rising fuel cost

Nigeria airlines increase fares over rising fuel cost

Date:

Related stories

Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport shut as aircraft skids off runway

An Allied Air Cargo aircraft, registered as 5N-JRT, skidded...

Borno Deputy Gov, over 100 passengers escape Max Air disaster

The deputy governor of Borno State, Umar Kadafur, and...

NNPC confirms ongoing search for missing bodies in Port Harcourt helicopter crash

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Ltd has confirmed...

Helicopter crash claims three lives, rescue operations continue

The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo,...

Five major Nigerian airports set for concession

The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo,...
spot_img

Nigeria airlines have increased fares for domestic flights to at least N80,000 depending on the trip over the rising cost of aviation fuel and foreign exchange (FX) crisis.

Checks by TheCable on Friday showed that Azman Air flight from Lagos to Kano/Kaduna increased from about N60,000 to N100,000.

Air Peace also increased fares to N80,000 for flights to Abuja from Lagos, while a return journey is now N85,000.

Airlines Operators suspend planned services withdrawal

From Port Harcourt to Kano, the flight price is pegged at N85,000 for the same airline.

Ibom Air, on its website, pegged the price at N80,000 for the same routes, while Max Air goes for N84,000 for Lagos to Abuja flights while Port Harcourt to Kano is around N130,000.

The increase in fares may not be unconnected to the multiple challenges in Nigeria’s air travel sector. The aviation industry is faced with a surge in the prices of jet A1 fuel which is significantly affecting operations.

During an emergency meeting with Hadi Sirika, minister of aviation, on Tuesday, the Airline Operators Association of Nigeria (AON) decried that aviation fuel has surged to about N1000 per litre from N180 per litre.

Abdulmunaf Yunusa Sarina, president, AON, said the forex crisis was also a huge burden on the industry.

On his part, Sirika said the variables impacting the crises in the aviation sector were beyond the industry’s control, and as such, “there is no immediate solution”.

He, however, said the federal government is working to end the hike in aviation fuel prices through the revitalisation of refineries and coming on stream of the Dangote refinery.

Culled from TheCable

Subscribe

Latest stories