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Eritrean
Airlines Acquired A Second B767 Aircraft
Last
year, on Sunday, June 27, 2003, in an article “Let’s Patronize Our Own National
Airlines” to Asmarino.com, we expressed the following words, “The acquisition
of the B757 (narrow-body 185-seater) or another B767 (wide-body 217-seater) is
intrinsically related to the success of the wide-body already in place.” A year later, today, Sunday, June 27, 2004
at 1:30 AM, the Eritrean people celebrated the arrival of a Wide-body jet
B767-200ER (with passenger configuration of 205 seats) at Asmara International
Airport (ASM). Congratulation! Your patronage has secured our national
airlines for years to come. The addition
of the second aircraft to the fleet signifies that Eritrean Airlines has
survived the first difficult year for any start up business organization and
will continue to provide better services to the traveling public and the nation
at large.
On Friday June 25, 2004, at 9:00 PM (EST),
Eritrean Airlines rolled out its second airplane B767 from Miami Tech line
maintenance facility to runway 9L at Miami International Airport (MIA) for a
16-hour flight to Asmara, Eritrea (in Northeast Africa).
Eritreans
residing in Miami gathered at Miami Tech to watch their airplane pushed back
from the maintenance facility to the taxiway.
About one hundred feet before the entrance to the taxiway, the captain
powered the engines in the direction of the runway where all of us could see
the entire aircraft charging for take off.
It was a historic sight and emotional moment for any concerned
Eritrean. Mr. Fessehaie Beimnet owner
and operator of Juliana Enterprises was standing next to me and said, “This is
the happiest moment of my life, I have never been close to such a wide-body
aircraft that belongs to us. I don’t
know what I own in this aircraft, but I have a strong attachment with this
aircraft and I feel it’s mine.” As soon
as Fessehaie said that, the aircraft entered runway 9L and started the run up
for the final departure. It passed
roaring our sight. I was taken by the
majestic beauty of the aircraft and expressed
“Jet non pareil” (nothing like this jet, in French) in memory of my late
professor Petros Hagos (University of Asmara 1972). It is these and similar memories that connect Eritreans in
diasporas to our national airline.
Eritrean Airlines believed in its ethnic market and successfully
provided competitive services with only one aircraft for a year and made it
well. Hats off to the traveling public,
without their patronage the second aircraft would not have materialized.
Captain
Asress Araia, Chief Executive Officer of Eritrean Airlines (ERT) and Mr. Yemane
Fessehazion co-pilot, commanded the flight.
As expected, it arrived on 1:30 AM (Asmara time) and was welcomed by
about 200 people at ASM. Eritrean
Airline management and staff prepared a cocktail party in the terminal building
for its pilots and Additional technical people on board the flight: Mr. Fesseha
and Mr. Teklai (Maintenance and Engineering), Mr. Bereket (Quality Control),
Mr.Gebremedhen and Mr. Negussie (Civil Aviation Authority of Eritrea). All of these technical people were in the
United States since May 13, 2004 to inspect the aircraft, review maintenance
records, purchased necessary tools and parts for the maintenance shop.
At
3:00 AM, I had the honor to talk to Captain Asress at his residence. During our telephone conversation, he said
that the flight was a great success and the aircraft performed very well. In his own words, “every thing on this
aircraft works well.” He seems to be
very happy with the aircraft and expects it to be the workhorse of the
fleet. At one point he described it as
a flexible machine that will out perform the competition.
In
line with the captain’s description, this airplane reminds me about the “virgin
bee” in the honeybee colony. As we all
know in an average size honeybee colony, there are about 60,000 bees, of which
the majority are females (known as the worker bees). Of the total number, the mail population (the drones) is only few
hundreds. The queen bee is much larger
than the drones and workers and it is the mother for all of them. In the bee colony, every one has a specific
task and they perform their jobs effectively.
The female workers perform most of the required tasks. The drones have only one purpose in life
that is to mate with the queen in order to produce eggs. The queen lays eggs at a rate of about 1,000
per day. Of the thousands of eggs, some
are slightly larger than the rest. When
these larger eggs emerge from their cells, they eat honey and groom themselves
for some time, then proceed to look for rivals of equal size and mortal combat eliminates
all of them except one. The survivor is
the virgin bee. In about a week, the
survivor flies out to mate with the drone (s) in the air and the mated queen
returns to the hive as the new queen mother and life continues the same way in
a new hive and under new leadership.
Since,
the first B767 was named the “Queen Bee” for specific purpose, I thought naming
the second B767 the “Virgin Bee” (“gorzo nhbi”) fits the same philosophy. I believe this will allow continuity in the
bee colony by naming the forthcoming B737-300 as “Busy Bee” (“nTuf nhbi”) due
to its function that covers short routes in the neighboring markets.
I
am sure many compatriots are pleased with the new addition of the “Virgin Bee”
to the colony. We also expect some
concerned nationals to ask questions regarding the status of the aircraft. As in the past, Eritreans want to know if
the aircraft is leased or purchased, new or used, cost price and name of the
previous operator.
There
will be official releases to address the above-indicated issues, but any
concerned person can research for these answers in the US registry and the
Federal Aviation Administration records for details. Just to inform some concerned nationals who have no access to the
Internet, please allow me to share with you some of the available information
on record.
The
“Virgin Bee” is a used aircraft with outstanding maintenance records. It was owned and operated by a world-class
major airline known for its top quality maintenance in the world. The “Virgin Bee” is purchased and paid in
full (what a feeling!). According to
the Purchase Agreement document, Eritrean Airline is the buyer and the
signatory is the Chief Executive Officer of Eritrean Airlines. However, the seller of the aircraft has four
more airplanes of the same on the market and Eritrean Airlines has agreed not
to officially announce the purchase price until the other airplanes are
sold. This implies that the selling
price was so low that it would affect the price of the other airplanes negotiated
in June or thereafter.
Just to get an idea about the current market value of the same aircraft, some published prices are indicated below for reference, that way no one will be misinformed like last year.
Table 1
|
Aircraft
Value B767-200ER HGW as of October 31, 2003 |
|||
|
Year |
Low |
Mid |
High |
|
1984 |
$ 9.5 |
$ 12.6 |
$
14.1 |
|
1986 |
11.0 |
14.7 |
16.4 |
|
1988 |
12.5 |
16.7 |
18.8 |
|
1990 |
14.1 |
18.8 |
21.1 |
|
1992 |
15.6 |
20.9 |
23.4 |
Source: Aircraft Value News,
January 12, 2004

Source: Aircraft
Investor (Sigma)
As
in the past, there will be some critics who would argue why does Eritrean
Airline has to buy the airplane at this time?
How does one justify spending on an airplane when there are other
critical national issues?…etc. We will
receive and discuss constructive criticisms as they come, but as a general
response, the charts below speak louder than thousand words. In our study we observed that aircraft price
was at its lowest in 32 years and it is already on the rise.

Source: Aircraft
Investor (Sigma)
At
present, most aircraft investors owe the banks money on aircraft more than its
market value. In other words, the
actual book value is significantly higher than the market value. In such situation, owners are not willing to
sell at lose unless forced by hard times.
Consequently, aircraft owners would like to lease aircraft now for
better resale value in a year or two.
Naturally, a smart buyer would purchase when the aircraft value is
depressed. Eritrean Airlines’ move to
purchase the aircraft was driven by low aircraft price and outstanding
maintenance status of the aircraft.
Aircraft transaction is a long and tedious process. It takes at least six months to move (sell/lease) an aircraft. Eritrean Airlines started the action in November 2003 when 63 B767 aircraft were available on the world market for sale/lease. This represents about 8% of the B767 fleet in the world. According to industry experts “A level of 3% is considered desirable for equilibrium between supply and demand to exist.” The variance of 5% (8%-3%) indicates surplus aircraft in the market, which was driving prices of B767s down. In June 2004, availability went down to 29 aircraft or less than 4% of the fleet, which is close to equilibrium. It is imperative from the supply bar chart below that aircraft negotiated in November was much cheaper than one in June. I think Eritrean Airlines did the right thing acquiring the aircraft of choice when price was distressed and market for aircraft experienced significant surplus.
