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Jet tycoon warns airlines could start going bankrupt amid Iran chaos

A Dubai-based billionaire has warned that airlines could begin going bankrupt within weeks as the Middle East conflict sends shockwaves through the aviation industry, with bookings falling and fuel costs surging.

Gediminas Ziemelis, the founder of Avia Solutions Group, has said that the current crisis feels like a repeat of the Covid pandemic, with grounded planes, collapsing demand and no clear timeline for recovery.

‘We need to be ready for any area, district, jurisdiction and geopolitical risk,’ said Ziemelis in an interview with Bloomberg.

He added: ‘If it lasts more than one month, we may see potential first bankruptcies,’ of airlines around the world.

The warning comes as fuel costs surge, placing intense pressure on airlines already dealing with disrupted routes.

Ziemelis said fuel typically accounts for about 25 per cent of an airline’s operating costs. Since the conflict began, oil prices have jumped nearly 50 per cent to around $100 a barrel.

As a result, some airlines are introducing additional surcharges, while others are cutting routes altogether. 

There are also growing concerns about the availability of jet fuel.

A plane flying through a plume of smoke after a fire broke out at Dubai International Airport

Dubai has been deserted as the war in the Middle East rages on

Gediminas Ziemelis (pictured) said fuel typically accounts for about 25 per cent of an airline's operating costs

At the same time, airlines are being forced to reroute flights to avoid large parts of the Middle East, increasing journey times and costs.

Carriers in Europe and Asia have already raised ticket prices and reduced destinations as the war enters its fifth week.

Airlines based in the Middle East have been hit hardest, with thousands of flights cancelled as missile and drone attacks disrupt the region, forcing carriers to evacuate passengers, crews and aircraft.

Companies such as Qatar Airways, Gulf Air, flydubai and Air Arabia are conducting internal reviews to cut costs and preserve cash as they lose millions of dollars in revenue each day.

However, the billionaire pointed to the aviation sector’s recovery after the pandemic as a reminder that crises can also create opportunities.

‘After Covid all companies which survived made extraordinary record profits. So sometimes crisis is opportunity,’ he told Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, bookings are down 63 per cent, average nightly room rates are down 28 per cent and cancellation rates are up 163 per cent in the region.

Flights to Dubai have been pictured with rows of empty seats, as at least five planes parked at airports in the Middle East have been hit by Iran.

Photos and videos shared on social media show rows of vacant seats on planes headed to Dubai, with one caption reading: ‘I’ve never seen an empty Emirates flight.’

Hotspots like Dubai have been reduced to ghost towns since the conflict intensified, with influencers and expats scrambling to leave as Iran pounds the Gulf. 

Once a tax-free haven attracting social media stars and countless Brits seeking warm weather and crime-free streets, Dubai’s carefully crafted image has been shattered and some residents believe it is ‘finished’.

Thousands have fled the war-torn city, vowing to never return as the Islamic Republic sends barrages of missiles and suicide drones at glitzy skyscrapers and glamorous five-star hotels, even striking the world famous Fairmont hotel on Palm Jumeirah.

Other neighbouring hotspots have also been affected, with hotel bookings in Cyprus down 40 per cent as the war rages on.

The US and Israel launched ‌attacks on Iran just as Cyprus’s tourism industry was reopening after winter.

Then, on March 2, as Iran launched a series of counter-strikes, a drone struck a British naval base on the island, triggering a wave of tourist cancellations.

Daily cancellation rates for short-term rentals in Cyprus ​shot up from around 15 per cent before the conflict to as high as 100 per cent in the days after, ⁠according to data from US-based AirDNA, which tracks such bookings.

That figure has since dropped, but remained around 45 per cent by March 21. ​Greece and Turkey saw slight rises in cancellation rates, too.

Flights to Dubai have been pictured with rows of empty seats, as at least five planes parked at airports in the Middle East have been hit by Iran

And oil prices are soaring, with the latest blow following Donald Trump’s failure to outline a clear path to ending the Iran war during an address on Wednesday.

Trump’s speech provided no certainty as he claimed the war was a resounding success but admitted that the US would remain engaged for at least another two to three weeks.  

Brent crude oil prices jumped nearly 5 per cent to $105 per barrel amid fears the US was no closer to eliminating Iran’s stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz.

Futures tied to the Dow dropped 1 per cent, the S&P 500 fell 1.1 per cent and the Nasdaq slid 1.4 per cent. 

Japan’s Nikkei plummeted 1.9 per cent, the first major index to trade after US markets close and a carefully watched early signal for investors.  

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