Hong Kong Airlines Planes Impounded Over Unpaid Parking Fees

Hong Kong Airlines Planes Impounded Over Unpaid Parking Fees

9

While Hong Kong Airlines recently received a cash injection, it doesn’t seem like that’s preventing the airline from having some planes impounded.

Hong Kong Airlines’ Struggles

Hong Kong Airlines has been on the brink of going out of business for a while now, as the airline has been unable to pay staff, has had to shut off inflight entertainment, and has had to axe routes and return planes.

Earlier this month the airline was given a critical deadline by the Air Transport Licensing Authority of Hong Kong. They had looked into Hong Kong Airlines’ finances, and had determined that they “deteriorated rapidly,” to the point that they no longer meet the minimum standards to have a permit.

The airline was informed that they had just days to find new investors or more cash, or else their license could be suspended or revoked. At the last minute the airline received a cash injection from parent company HNA Group.

However, that certainly doesn’t secure the long term future of the airline, and it even apparently leaves the airline in a situation where some of their planes are being impounded.

Why Hong Kong Airlines Planes Were Impounded

Danny Lee at the South China Morning Post writes about how the Airport Authority of Hong Kong (AAHK) has confirmed that seven Hong Kong Airlines planes at the airport have been impounded over unpaid parking fees.

Interestingly this doesn’t actually involve “active” aircraft, but rather involves seven planes that have been parked, as the airline has cut their route network to curb losses. It seems that the airline hasn’t been paying the standard parking fees for these planes. This decision has been made to protect the financial interests of the AAHK and the government.

Hong Kong Airlines confirmed this in a statement:

“Due to network consolidation, some of our aircraft have not been scheduled for operation and are currently suspended from service under the Airport Authority’s arrangement. Our current operation remains normal.”

The seven planes have been stored for anywhere between 56 and 318 days, so they’ve racked up considerable fees. The cheapest parking at the airport is allegedly about 94 HKD (12.05 USD) per 15 minutes, so estimates are that the airline owes somewhere around 11 million to 17.2 million HKD to the airport (1.41 million to 2.21 million USD).

What Exactly Is Hong Kong Airlines Thinking?

I’d be curious to know Hong Kong Airlines’ logic with leaving these planes parked at HKG for so long, which is known to be one of the most expensive airports in the world:

  • Did the airline not know they were going to park the planes for extended periods of time, so decided it didn’t make sense to fly them elsewhere?
  • Did they figure it was better to rack up debt with the airport than to spend the “cash” on flying the plane somewhere else?
  • Did they think the airline wouldn’t be around to have to pay the parking bill?

Bottom Line

I’ll be curious to see how Hong Kong Airlines handles this. It seems like they don’t have any immediate uses for the planes, so I wonder if they’ll let the fees keep accumulating, or if they dig into their cash injection to pay this off.

With the airline only continuing to shrink, it does seem odd that they’ve had some planes parked for nearly a year at Hong Kong Airport. You’d think they’re return some of these planes to the leasing companies, even at a huge loss, because they could at least be making money somewhere else, no?

Conversations (9)
The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.
Type your response here.

If you'd like to participate in the discussion, please adhere to our commenting guidelines. Anyone can comment, and your email address will not be published. Register to save your unique username and earn special OMAAT reputation perks!

  1. Marco Guest

    @Eskimo, you are obviously mentally ill. Greta Thunberg may be ADHD, but has integrity and consistency beyond a level you would never comprehend. And at age 16, no less.

    Going back to HX, I'll be happy to see them disappear. And then hopefully, CX will go under not long after that - the airline that won't hesitate to fire their employees based on political opinions expressed completely outside of the workplace.

  2. Mattej Guest

    What a shame. Really loved being an ID with that airline. So many going bust. Who is next.

  3. vand Member

    @Chris given the number of airlines going bust in the last 18 months, there simply isn't a good reason to risk choosing one that has circling news on it going bankrupt. See it like insurance premium that you just fly another airline that may be more expensive.

    Also agree with Lucky, why on earth have they left these at HKG? So many cheap places they could have parked these on the mainland. Bizarre / indicative management practices.

  4. Ct Guest

    the Planes are owned by chinese companies, hx can’t default on them because it will drive the earnings down for them. The Chinese companies have been using these tricks for years to steal money from investors. I can’t wait for everyone of these chinese companies to go up in flames. Cathay needs to die too.

  5. Daiko Guest

    @Chris HNA group is fine, HK airline may be not. The reason is the rapid route expansion of HNA in recent years and that also reflects on HX strategy. HNA already took the hit and the hardship will continue for a while but it has a good relationship with local gov so it's easier to reduce finance burden. Meanwhile HX is entirely opposite, AAHK hates HX just like recent protesters coz hx is owned by...

    @Chris HNA group is fine, HK airline may be not. The reason is the rapid route expansion of HNA in recent years and that also reflects on HX strategy. HNA already took the hit and the hardship will continue for a while but it has a good relationship with local gov so it's easier to reduce finance burden. Meanwhile HX is entirely opposite, AAHK hates HX just like recent protesters coz hx is owned by mainland company.

    Yea the Time, the WaPo, all the #fakenews along with Commie Nuts Network. Give me a break.

  6. Eskimo Guest

    @buschoi

    You are obviously still under Cold War propaganda by the West.

    No political system is perfect. Look at what our great democracy system bring us, Donald Trump!
    I'm quite sure China is as capitalist as the Western world, just count the number of billionaires there. You don't really have billionaires in North Korea or Cuba.

    In a time where we have to be politically correct, can we start accepting a different political ideology?

    ...

    @buschoi

    You are obviously still under Cold War propaganda by the West.

    No political system is perfect. Look at what our great democracy system bring us, Donald Trump!
    I'm quite sure China is as capitalist as the Western world, just count the number of billionaires there. You don't really have billionaires in North Korea or Cuba.

    In a time where we have to be politically correct, can we start accepting a different political ideology?

    History has already shown, if you successfully throw out a government, it's a coup, if you fail it's a traitor. Same group doing the same stuff, only difference is success or failure. Don't believe everything they teach you in school and on TV. But if it's in the internet it must be true, lol.

  7. buschoi Guest

    Those brave kids are only “dumb” in the eyes of the communists but are heroes in the world arena. They are achieving exactly what they are trying to do six months after what’s happening. Rather than letting the CCP drain the wealth of HK through endless corruptions leaving the kids with no future, they go ahead and destroy everything and drag the communists with them. They are smart to do it that way. Like it...

    Those brave kids are only “dumb” in the eyes of the communists but are heroes in the world arena. They are achieving exactly what they are trying to do six months after what’s happening. Rather than letting the CCP drain the wealth of HK through endless corruptions leaving the kids with no future, they go ahead and destroy everything and drag the communists with them. They are smart to do it that way. Like it or not, the Time, the Washington Post, the US Congress, and many other organizations that value of democracy seem to agree with them. It is not going to end unless communists listen to them.

  8. Eskimo Guest

    Dumb kids destroying local business and jobs indirectly and not realizing it. Those kids are dumb for a reason.

    Another puppet just like Greta. Our 2047 will look back to see how naive those people are.

  9. Chris Guest

    I am planning a trip to China next year, Hainan has the best price, but I'm growing more concerned about HNA group going out of business.

    Any analysis on that?

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Marco Guest

@Eskimo, you are obviously mentally ill. Greta Thunberg may be ADHD, but has integrity and consistency beyond a level you would never comprehend. And at age 16, no less. Going back to HX, I'll be happy to see them disappear. And then hopefully, CX will go under not long after that - the airline that won't hesitate to fire their employees based on political opinions expressed completely outside of the workplace.

0
Mattej Guest

What a shame. Really loved being an ID with that airline. So many going bust. Who is next.

0
vand Member

@Chris given the number of airlines going bust in the last 18 months, there simply isn't a good reason to risk choosing one that has circling news on it going bankrupt. See it like insurance premium that you just fly another airline that may be more expensive. Also agree with Lucky, why on earth have they left these at HKG? So many cheap places they could have parked these on the mainland. Bizarre / indicative management practices.

0
Meet Ben Schlappig, OMAAT Founder
5,163,247 Miles Traveled

32,614,600 Words Written

35,045 Posts Published