The International Air Transport Association, a trade group representing international airlines and headquartered in Geneva, has voiced concerns about the possibility that foreign airlines doing business in Nigeria could lose up to $200 million due to depreciating exchange rates.
According to Kamil Al Awadhi, Regional Vice President of IATA for Africa and the Middle East, the depreciation of the naira against the dollar is making the problem of trapped funds worse. He made these remarks during a CNBC interview that our journalist watched.
The naira has been in a free fall against the dollar in recent weeks.
The IATA Vice President’s remarks were made in light of the alleged $700 million in international airline ticket income that is currently stuck in Nigeria.
The IATA chief also stated that international carriers operating in Nigeria still had over $700 million stuck in the country, despite the Central Bank of Nigeria’s announcement last week that it had paid all verified debts owed to foreign airlines.
Meanwhile, under the auspices of the National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies, local travel brokers have demanded that foreign airlines operating in the nation release discounted fares from their inventory, failing which they risk facing harsh penalties.
This followed the CBN report on the settlement of debts owed to foreign airlines. The CBN, however, was required to collect all unclaimed ticket income that was held in the nation, according to the IATA Vice President.
“Airlines should not be unfairly penalised by the lower exchange rate,” the IATA VP warned in a statement last week.
“You also have to take into consideration the blocked funds and the fair value of the blocked funds. If you have $720 million blocked and then you devalue the naira by 30%, you have wiped out over $200 million of airlines’ money, and they have to compensate that.
He added, “Airlines have lost a lot of money operating in and out of Nigeria, and it continues to be so under the current environment.”
Approximately $2.5 billion of the backlog in sectors such as manufacturing, aviation, and petroleum has been fully paid. Although the CBN has pledged to clear the backlog, investors are gravely concerned about Nigeria’s FX backlog, which is estimated to be worth $7 billion, as the naira continues to fall due to shortages of foreign currency.