Austrian Times RSS FeedsLike the Austrian Times Facebook page!Follow us on Twitter!


Events for May
M T W T F S S
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3
Add your event FREE

Today

Polls

  • What would make you go to a restaurant?
  • show result

    all polls


Club Med


Styrian SPÖ Governor Franz Voves has said he is not considering subsidising struggling carrier AUA after the company warned its domestic flights service was at risk without public funding.

Styria rejects funding AUA's Graz - Vienna service

Styrian government leaders have said they are not considering subsidising struggling carrier Austrian Airlines (AUA) after the company warned its domestic flights service was at risk without public funding.

Styrian Social Democratic (SPÖ) Governor Franz Voves and provincial People’s Party (ÖVP) Financial Issues Councillor Christian Buchmann said today (Thurs) they had not changed their minds after a meeting with AUA co-chief Peter Malanik in Graz.

Voves claimed the former Austrian flagship airline’s Vienna – Graz route was one of its most profitable domestic connections.

"Around 116,000 passengers took an AUA flight in Graz to reach Vienna in 2008," the governor said, adding that statistics had shown Graz Airport had worked as an essential tributary airport for AUA connection flights.

Voves – whose party is seen neck-and-neck with the Styrian ÖVP as provincial elections are set to be held in autumn – said federal political leaders needed to fulfil any promises they had made as far as subsiding AUA was concerned.

AUA, which was founded in 1957, was saved from going bankrupt last September as German company Lufthansa acquired a major stake in the firm after the Austrian SPÖ-ÖVP government contributed 500 million Euros of taxpayers’ money.

Voves claimed today he had appealed to the federal government during last year’s negotiations with Lufthansa to ensure the Vienna – Graz service would not be halted under consideration of the effects this would have on the Styrian economy.

Buchmann argued AUA – whose passenger numbers have drastically slumped for months – would benefit as a whole from offering a service between the federal capital and Graz since the provincial capital’s airport would serve the north-Slovenian area too.

Voves announced Malanik said the company might keep the service running with 80-seat planes instead of 50-seat jets and less connections.

The governor said further meetings would be held over the issue.

This comes just days after AUA said it would continue its Vienna – Klagenfurt route despite its call for subsidies going unheard.

Company co-chief Andreas Bierwirth and Carinthian Freedom Party (FPK) Governor Gerhard Dörfler said after a meeting on Wednesday that the service would not be halted.

Dörfler and Upper Austrian ÖVP Governor Josef Pühringer warned Vienna International Airport (VIA) would suffer most if AUA abandoned the service since passengers would travel using airports in Ljubljana, Slovenia, and Munich, Germany, instead.

Bierwirth said AUA were now working on an "optimisation concept" to ensure a further service between Klagenfurt and the federal capital – while it remains unclear whether services between Vienna and Innsbruck as well as between Vienna and Linz will continue.

Josef Pühringer already last year ruled out any subsidies. He said: "Financial support by the state of Upper Austria [for AUA] is out of the question."

"The world will not fall if AUA stops flying (between Linz and Vienna). People would use Munich Airport in such a case," he claimed.

Tyrolean ÖVP Governor Günther Platter recently also rejected AUA’s public funding suggestions.

AUA officials announced after the takeover by Lufthansa it would be forced to establish a harsh cost-cutting regime to get back in the black.

Hundreds of employees, mostly ground staff and people working at its subsidiary Tyrolean, were sacked over the past few months, and hundreds more are set to follow throughout this year, according to reports.

Meanwhile Lufthansa has finalised the planned squeeze out of AUA minority shareholders today as shares were suspended from trading at the Vienna Stock Exchange (WBAG).

The German aviation giant had resolved to pay AUA’s remaining minority shareholders a squeeze out price of 0.50 Euros a share, excluding costs and provision – a price the company, despite shareholder protests, had deemed "appropriate" considering the poor financial condition of AUA, which had entered the WBAG in 1988.

AUA shares closed at 1.89 Euros yesterday, and the WBAG cancelled AUA's listing this afternoon.

Austrian Times


Are you on Facebook? Like the Austrian Times on Facebook and win great prizes!


Your comment to this article :

(will be approved by an editor before going online)

  • Not for publication:
  • How many vertical lines (write the number in letters please ie four not 4) or which Text (from left to right) do you see in this image:


Related articles: EU

  1. Austrian economy recovers, says OECD

    » Business 2012-05-23

    The Austrian economy will manage to grow by nearly one per cent this year, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

  2. AUA rules out Whitsun travel chaos

    » Business 2012-05-23

    The current conflict with the works committee does not negatively affect Austrian Airlines’ (AUA) booking figures, according to a spokesman.

  3. Weak start for RWR Card

    » Business 2012-05-23

    People’s Party (ÖVP) Economy Minister Reinhold Mitterlehner has admitted difficulties in introducing the Red White Red Card (RWR Card, Rot-Weiß-Rot Card).

more related articles tagged "EU"

Related articles: crisis

  1. Austrian economy recovers, says OECD

    » Business 2012-05-23

    The Austrian economy will manage to grow by nearly one per cent this year, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

  2. AUA rules out Whitsun travel chaos

    » Business 2012-05-23

    The current conflict with the works committee does not negatively affect Austrian Airlines’ (AUA) booking figures, according to a spokesman.

  3. Pröll outpaces friends and foes in capability check

    » General News 2012-05-23

    Austria’s longest-serving governor has been identified as the most capable one in the opinion of citizens.

more related articles tagged "crisis"

Related articles: AUA

  1. AUA rules out Whitsun travel chaos

    » Business 2012-05-23

    The current conflict with the works committee does not negatively affect Austrian Airlines’ (AUA) booking figures, according to a spokesman.

  2. Ambühl at the ready for AUA affiliate

    » Business 2012-05-22

    Gaudenz Ambühl has been named new head of Austrian Airlines (AUA) Group member Tyrolean Airways.

  3. Lauda disapproves cutbacks

    » Business 2012-05-15

    Niki Lauda has warned from making savings at FlyNiki to the expense of customers.

more related articles tagged "AUA"


Tag cloud:
Lufthansa  Vienna  capital  government  Graz  Financial  passengers  WBAG  Voves  Euros  funding  meeting  German  Hundreds  flights  Airport  Styrian  Austrian  Governor  shareholders


Latest News

 

AUA rules out Whitsun travel chaos
The current conflict with the works committee does not negatively affect Austrian Airlines’ (AUA) booking figures, according to a spokesman.

Weak start for RWR Card
People’s Party (ÖVP) Economy Minister Reinhold Mitterlehner has admitted difficulties in introducing the Red White Red Card (RWR Card, Rot-Weiß-Rot Card).

Pröll outpaces friends and foes in capability check
Austria’s longest-serving governor has been identified as the most capable one in the opinion of citizens.

Foul-mouthed MPs might face fines
Fritz Neugebauer has started another attempt to introduce a system of fees for abusive parliament delegates (MPs).

Car sharers should get cheap U-Bahn tickets say greens
People who support the environment by signing up for car sharing initiatives to cut down inner city congestion should get subsidised public transport.

Film festivals in Vienna
There are two film festivals back to back in Vienna this May and June. The "Let's CEE Film Festival" shows films from Central and Eastern Europe, while the "Vienna Independent Shorts" focuses on short films.

Salzburg builds new prison
Salzburg is to get a new prison.

Postwoman killed by express train
An 32-year-old postwoman was killed instantly when she apparently failed to see a stop sign on a train track - and was hit by a 120 kph express train at the Grimmenstein sortage depot in the Lower Austrian region of Neunkirchen.

Dirty water caused by excrement
Health experts are struggling to find the source of excrement that has contaminated water supplies at the town of Köstendorf in Salzburg province.

Man Utd chase Austrian ace
Manchester United have signalised interest in David Alaba.

 


Austrian Times Rieder´s Digests


music-school

Popular in Austria

The most popular stories –
last 7 days


Friends and Partners




Austrian Zimmers