PAL shifts to cargo flights amid crisis



29 June 2020

By Othel V. Campos

Flag carrier Philippine Airlines is shifting to more cargo flights to make up for the lull in passenger flights.

“We’ve become more and more of a cargo airline because, as we said, our airplanes could also be used to help preserve the critical supply chains, including carriage of PPEs, medicines, equipment and all the kinds of goods that are needed to keep communities thriving. At the same time, we’ve operated hundreds of charters, and we ration flights to bring not just foreign nationals back to their home countries bit also returning OFWs,” said PAL vice president for corporate communication Jose Enrique Perez de Tagle.

“We may have to operate more cargo flights. We have to repurpose some of our aircraft to fly cargo other than just passenger,” he said.

Perez de Tagle was one of the panelist in a webinar organized by the Asian Institute of Management on Monday. The e-forum presented a survey on Filipino travellers’ sentiment on the new normal.

CEB Cuts Fleet, Crews

Trims Flight and Cabin Crew
CEB carries cargo instead of passengers in its Airbus A330-300 to and from Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Osaka and Tokyo to survive.

24 June 2020

Low cost carrier Cebu Pacific (CEB) is implementing a third wave of job cuts as it fights to survive its business amidst the new coronavirus pandemic.

Charo Logarta Lagamon, Cebu Pacific director for communications, disclosed the layoffs and voluntary separation could affect about 30 percent of the carrier’s 4,000 employees from flight, cabin and ground crew to be implemented by early next month.

“Cebu Pacific is rightsizing. We are fighting to survive,” says Lagamon.

The airline laid off an initial batch of 190 newly hired cabin crew members in March while its ground handling services lets go of more than 1,400 workers.

Lagamon said the airline's projected recovery for this month is far from real conditions on the ground as few passengers take the skies due to quarantine restrictions. Its international flight operations remains suspended until end of July.

“We expect travel recovery to happen over a longer period, with COVID-19 impacting the aviation industry,” she said.

The aviation industry's operations has been hampered by the limitation on the capacity of quarantine and medical facilities across the country. Airlines was also warned that their flight schedule is subject to day to day acceptance by different Local Government Units that has problems with inadequate quarantine facility.

The airline has implemented a sweeping review of its long-term expansion, which includes the acquisition of 61 next-generation planes until 2026. It is also pre-terminating leases on expiring contract to some of its Airbus A320 aircraft to be return to lessor earlier than expected due to excess capacity. Delivery of new aircraft are also put on hold.

The new approach will ensure the long-term sustainability of the business, given the expected changes in travel demand and consumer behavior, according to Lagamon.

PAL Lands in Africa

In Repatriation Flight

22 June 2020


Flag Carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) flew to Algeria and Tunisia yesterday to repatriate stranded Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW) from Libya, Tunisia, and Algiers.

The chartered Boeing 777-300ER (RP-C7776) Flight 8160 carried 120 Algerian, Tunisian and Libyan Nationals to Algiers while Flight 8161 carried 230 Filipinos from Algiers and Tunis to Manila.



According to Charge de Affairs in Libya Elmer G. Cato this is the first repatriation flight of OFWs in North Africa due to Covid19 pandemic. The last time DFA flew OFWs out of Tunis was in 2014 when it evacuated Filipinos who fled Libyan civil war.

Meanwhile, a separate charter flight 8660 was flown to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to fly 344 stranded OFWs on Airbus A330-300 yesterday. It will also bring home remains of 282 OFWs, 50 of which died on Covid19 related illnesses according to the Labor Department.

Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) Secretary Silvestre Bello III disclosed Sunday that decision was made to bring them home as cremation is not allowed in Saudi Arabia.

Billo said they are planning to charter three more A330 flights from Philippine Airlines to bring stranded OFWs and other remains of OFWs home as they cannot be loaded all to the plane.

DOLE said they already appealed to Saudi Authorities to give them more time to bring home the dead.

“We already appealed through the labor attaché to give us more time to bring home the dead, except those who died of COVID-19, they will be transported Sunday” Bello added.

Tawi-Tawi Airport Turns Into Jungle After Months of Inactivity

Cleared for Resumption of Flight

20 June 2020


Tawi- Tawi Airport Runway- A JUNGLE NO MORE ❣️☺️👮

Tawi-Tawi Airport was cleared by personnel of Tawi- Tawi Provincial Police Office (PPO) in partnership with Department of Transportation- Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (DOT- CAAP) Friday.


PNP Provincial Director Pcol. Bonard Briton said the clearing activity was to prepare the airport for the resumption of scheduled flights.

"Clearing operations were made to reduce risks in conducting aircraft landing and take offs specifically where the PAPI Lights (Precision Approach Path Indicator) were located - a navigational aid to guide the aircraft for safe landing," says the PNP Provincial Director.

Cebu Pacific Airbus A320 and Philippine Airlines DHC-400NG fly this route prior to the Covid 19 pandemic.

Participating in the cleanup drive were PNP- Special Action Force, PNP Maritime Group 1st SOU, PNP- RMFB 14, and personnel from Tawi- Tawi Provincial Mobile Force Company, Bongao Mps and Panglima Sugala MPS.



CEB Axes 25% of Ground Crews


As Airline Grapples With Empty Seats


18 June 2020


Low Cost Carrier Cebu Pacific (CEB) is letting go of another batch of its ground handling employees as the airline company subsidiary 1Aviation struggles to bounce back from the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

The ground handling firm disclosed that it will lay off over 1,000 employees at the end of next month due to contraction of Cebu Pacific flights.

“We are left with no other recourse but to let go of 25% of our total workforce,” 1Aviation Ground handling Services Corp. said in a statement.

Cebu Pacific announced earlier that it will fly only 15% of its flight schedules, traveling to and from 20 domestic destinations by the end of June and plans to increase schedule to at least 50% by December as compared to last year's schedules.

The retrenched workers comprises almost 25% of the company’s almost 5,000-strong workforce that will need to be laid off after trimming over 400 probationary employees months earlier.

“Their last day as employees will be on July 20, 2020,” the company said.

“By the end of the month, we intend to be flying to about 20 domestic cities. We’ll start with that first then we’ll see how demand goes, but right now its not good.” JG Summit President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei said.

Currently, Cebu Pacific is reporting only 2% booking out of its seat capacity with most of its passengers coming from repatriation and chartered flights of the government.

Mr Gokongwei said they “have to demonstrate the capability to move with agility and force” to address the changing consumer and channel behaviors caused by the pandemic.

“I do expect that we should begin seeing recovery beginning third and fourth quarter. I don’t expect though [that] we would be back to January 2020 numbers until maybe… 2022,” he said.

“Over the past several months, COVID-19 has caused a decline in demand for travel, and the spread of the disease has prompted the imposition of quarantine and travel restrictions in the Philippines and many other countries worldwide. The travel restrictions in the Philippines caused a virtual halt to all commercial passenger flights for over two months,” 1Aviation said.

Cebu Pacific said their flight schedules remains low and irregular at this time as passenger numbers are still dependent on the capacity of quarantine facilities nationwide.

“We cannot mount the frequency we requested because of that limitation,” says Mr. Gokongwei.

“But even as passenger air travel has resumed with the easing of quarantine and travel restrictions in the country, current operations of all Philippine carriers is a far cry from where it was as of end-2019,” it added.

1Aviation is assuring laid of workers that they will be prioritized for hiring once the situation stabilizes and business picks up again,” the company add.

The ground handling firm was established by Cebu Pacific in 2018 and formed 1Aviation after the Manila International Airport Authority refused to renew the contract of MIASCOR Groundhandling Corp. due to incidents of baggage theft.

CebuPac later sold 60% of 1Aviation to Philippine Airport Ground Support Solutions (PAGSS) of Jefferson Cheng.

Repatriation Flights Make You Proud To Be Filipino

PAL Flies Places You Don't Actually See Them Fly

12 June 2020

A350 flight PR 8102 from Manila-Los Angeles-Barbados

PAL spokesperson Cielo Villaluna said flight PR8102 Manila-Los Angeles-Bridgetown was a flight to pick up Filipino seafarers in Barbados. Another flight PR8117 on B777 will fly Manila-Vancouver-Bridgetown.


Another A350-900 flight to Milan was send by DFA on PR8719 for repatriation flight to Manila.
Meanwhile, flight PR8728 Manila-Goa, India, was a repatriation flight for stranded Indian nationals. Returning flight PR8725 is a repatriation flight for stranded OFWs in India.

Arrival in Goa International Airport




Repatriation flight from Dhaka International Airport

And Airlines You Don't Normally See In PH


Neos and Evelop Airlines from Rome, Milan and Hamburg, respectively

SriLankan Airline flight UL1422 from Colombo to Manila to bring back the stranded Sri Lankan’s in Manila and stranded OFWs in Maldives.

WAMOS Air flight EB9411 from Madrid, Spain and Lisbon, Portugal
Condor Air B767-300ER Flight 8586 from Hamburg to Bangkok to Manila

Air India from New Delhi and Mumbai

Mongolian Airlines from Ulaanbaatar

Woes Continue Amidst Flight Cancellations

As LGU Quarantine Facilities Fills

12 June 2020

A Stranded Passenger bound to Davao shows confirmed Cebu Pacific ticket for 7am flight today but was denied entry by airport security authorities because of flight cancellation.

Cebu Pacific spokesperson Charo L. Lagamon said the airline is not the problem but the receiving LGU which cannot process more passengers to quarantine.

"We are doing our best to mount additional flights and we are working with the national and local government to mount additional flights because its the only way to fly these passengers," Lagamon said.





League of Provinces of the Philippines President Governor Presbitiro Velasco Jr. of Marinduque stated that  some receiving airports are already overwhelmed by arriving passengers that their quarantine facilities are already full.

"These LGUs are already looking for more quarantine facilities to process additional arriving passengers" Velasco said.

Cebu City processes 3,000 passengers a day while Angeles, Davao, Tacloban and Cagayan de Oro Cities processes 1,000 passengers a day. Meanwhile, Butuan and Dumaguete City process 500 passengers a day. However, for some LGUs like Zamboanga, Pagadian and Dipolog Cities processes 1,000 passengers per week. Naga is receiving 500 passengers a week.

Velasco stated that some of the places these passengers are going to are already covid19 free and they don't want them to enter their Cities without proper quarantine protocols.

The Governor said that some arriving passengers in Samar and Davao were found to be covid19 positive despite undergoing quarantine procedures in Manila prior to their respective flights.



Flag carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) earlier announced Tuesday the cancellation of eight international flights from Los Angeles, San Francisco, Vancouver, New York and Toronto originally scheduled for June 10-12, as the carrier was not given the arrival slots at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) because of unavoidable constraints in quarantine processing capacity in Manila.

DOTR Completes Jolo Upgrade

11 June 2020

Department of Transport (DOTr) has completed construction of Jolo airport Passenger Terminal Building. Royal Star Aviation D328 flies to this airport daily from Zamboanga.


Hundreds Remain Stranded

As Confirmed Flights Get Cancelled

9 June 2020


PAL Delivers Baby Again at 35,000ft

9 June 2020



Philippine Airlines disclosed Monday that its cabin crew helped deliver a healthy baby boy on a Manila-bound flight from Dubai above 30,000 feet.

The boy was delivered on board PR 659 on June 6, with the guidance of a doctor through satellite phone, PAL spokesperson Cielo Villaluna said.

"PAL crew is trained to deal with these inflight moments. An extraordinary situation. A celebration of a brand new life, welcomed into this world above 30,000 feet." she added.

Only 13 Airports taking domestic flights

International Traffic Cap At 600 Pax



8 June 2020

Only thirteen airports are open after the General Community Quarantine (GCQ)was announced by covid19 Inter Agency Task Force (IATF) beginning June 1 according to official of the Transport Department.

"Only 13 of the country’s 40 commercial airports were taking scheduled domestic flights," says Capt. Jim Sydiongco, Director General of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines.

The airports open are NAIA in Manila, Clark International Airport in Pampanga, Romblon, Naga, Cauayan, Palanan, Marinduque, Laguindingan, Camiguin, Dipolog, Pagadian and General Santos.

Meanwhile the airports in Davao, Cotabato and Zamboanga are opening Monday on restricted basis, while those in Iloilo and Tacloban will open next Tuesday, Sydiongco said.

Mactan Cebu International airport and Bacolod remains closed together with the rest of the airports across the country which are left un-operational by their respective local government units.

Commercial flights to Bacolod will not resume until June 15 according to CAAP upon request of the provincial government as a precautionary measure against the coronavirus (COVID-19). Only sweeper flights would be allowed to fly overseas Filipino workers and stranded residents.

Air Carriers Association of the Philippines (ACAP) also lament that only 600 passengers per day are allowed by Department of Health (DOH) to be processed due to limited testing and full quarantine facilities in Manila which are still full of OFWs bound to the provinces due to local airport restrictions.

According to Roberto Lim, vice chair of Air Carriers Association of the Philippines, migrants are having difficulty going home because of the limit on passenger accommodations at NAIA.



PAA Retrenches Work Force

6 June 2020


Budget carrier Philippines Air Asia (APG) is laying off 260 of its 2,200 workers by the end of this month as the airline braces to survival mode.

APG which is part of Malaysia-based AirAsia Group, is reducing its fleet to manageable levels by laying off workers from administrative staff, cabin and ground crew, to pilots.

APG senior management earlier went on voluntary unpaid leave in May and April and took pay cuts while the company trim its operating budget for the year by around half.

The company warned that more cuts were on the way if demand for air travel does not rise within the next 3 months.

The airline operates a fleet of 25 Airbus A320-200 aircraft.

APG is the latest Philippine carrier to downsize its workforce due to the virus pandemic. Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific Air have also laid off 450 employees and warns more lay off are coming if things don't go around.

No Foreigners Please!

4 June 2020
If you think the schedules listed on the board is a regular scheduled flight, think again. All of them are repatriation flights. Either before or after this date. No foreigners on board other than spouses and family members of OFWs for incoming flights. Another 300,000 are waiting at different holding centers across the world where you see Filipino workers. And they are waiting for a flight home. Philippine government allows entry of 5,000 workers per week only who will undergo 14 days quarantine in Manila. Not to mention another set of quarantine at local destinations. Outgoing passengers are mostly foreigners also on repatriation flights back home to their respective countries.

LGUs Remain Culprit For Domestic Closure

3 June 2020

Scene of thousands of repatriated overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) under Covid-19 quarantine, many for periods far beyond the mandatory 14 days, are seen at Naia Terminal 2 on Monday before the final leg of their homecoming, on government-funded sweeper flights.

9,959 of the 25,000 stranded overseas Filipino workers who were previously quarantined for 14 days and took test in Manila prior to domestic flight faces another 14 days quarantine at their respective destination where LGUs regulate passengers entry. Ordinary passengers are not yet allowed to fly at domestic airports.

DILG Secretary Eduardo Ano said that while most of the country are now placed in General Community Quarantine (GCQ), LGUs remain to have discretion to require QPs if the local conditions call for it.

Scheduled flight of Cebu Pacific today and tomorrow to Naga, General Santos City and Cagayan de Oro will be treated as repatriation flight subject to LGU quarantine regulations.



DOTC Helpless Against LGU

3 June 2020
“What can we do if we allow planes to fly but local governments reject them?” Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade said during Press Briefing in Malacanang yesterday.

The Caretaker

1 June 2020

By Miguel R. Camus
Philippine Daily Inquirer


The new coronavirus that causes Covid-19 forced millions of travelers to stay home, but airline mechanics and engineers have kept themselves busy in air hubs nationwide. Their primary mission these past two months: ensuring that their sleeping fleets are in tiptop condition.

Their efforts will soon bear fruit. The government is relaxing quarantine rules in their main hub in Metro Manila on Monday, allowing local airlines to resume operations.

Throughout the lockdown, the maintenance staff of carriers such as Philippine Airlines (PAL), Cebu Pacific and AirAsia Philippines are among those at the front lines, performing essential work during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Unseen to most flyers are people like Rico Ugdoracion, maintenance operations director at Cebu Pacific.

“There’s no such thing as work from home for aircraft maintenance,” Ugdoracion said in an email to the Inquirer, adding that the major challenges for many in his team were coming to work and negotiating a number of checkpoints along the way.

Airlines strictly follow step-by-step maintenance procedures laid down by aircraft manufacturers such as Airbus and Boeing, according to Ugdoracion.


Dust, bird’s nests
Planes are made up of millions of parts, and those rendered stationary for lengths of time are just as complex to maintain as those flying regularly.

All sorts of issues can crop up in aircraft sitting idle and exposed to the elements, Ugdoracion said. Dust can get inside sensitive instruments, parts can corrode, and there are fuel leaks, flat tires and even the occasional beehive or bird’s nest.

“During the lockdown, where aircraft are parked for a long period, the regular maintenance tasks are replaced by parking and preservation procedures,” Ugdoracion said.

These preservation checks are done at intervals of seven days, 15 days and one month.

“The longer the planes stay parked, the more extensive the checks become,” an aircraft quality inspector at Philippine Airlines said in a separate interview.

Fuel tanks are loaded to at least 10 percent of their capacity, in order to keep them lubricated, he said.

According to an aircraft maintenance manual for PAL’s fleet of Boeing 777-300ERs, fuel tanks should be regularly drained and checked for corrosion. Biocides, chemical substances that kill microbes, are also put into the fuel tanks.

The batteries of most of their planes under preservation are disconnected, Ugdoracion said. These are reconnected during checks, and engines are switched on and left running for about 15 minutes.

Tire care, parts protection
Tires also need special care. To prevent flat spots from developing when idle for long, the wheel axle is regularly lifted using a jack and the wheels rotated so these do not get “out of round,” Ugdoracion said.

While planes sleep, it’s not just their engines that need to be covered to keep out foreign substances such as dust. Also needing protection are many other parts, such as auxiliary power units, drain valves and pitot tubes, which help pilots measure airspeed.
A MILLION PARTS TO MIND
Aircraft maintenance becomes more crucial, ironically, during the long period of rest for the passenger planes. The coronavirus pandemic and the ensuing lockdown have posed an unprecedented challenge for the aviation industry’s own “front-liners.” —CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS

Deep cleaning
As much care is taken inside the aircraft. PAL planes, for example, have passenger seats with monitors that are regularly checked, along with the overall functionality of the seats.

Emergency lights must always be working, and carpets are inspected for frayed edges.

Cleaning is another matter that is carried out regularly.

“Inside the aircraft, the cleaners use vacuums, cloth to wipe the seats and furnishings, and cleaning agents and disinfectants approved by the aircraft manufacturer. Full aircraft disinfection is a top priority for operational aircraft during this period,” Ugdoracion said.
Planes are also washed through a weekly “deep cleaning.” For an Airbus A320, the process requires two hours and eight people.

It is fortunate that the Philippines does not have an extreme climate, Ugdoracion noted.

Additional maintenance work is necessary in countries with freezing winters or searing temperatures, such as in the Middle East, where, he said, “even holding a tool that is exposed to the sun is a challenge.”

“In the Philippines, where it’s not too hot or cold, the weather is just perfect. But, of course, working at noon under the heat of the sun is a bit difficult, but manageable,” Ugdoracion said, adding:

“If it rains, then mechanics work with their raincoats on. The year-round [rain] is another thing.”

Most of the nearly 200 planes of PAL, Cebu Pacific and AirAsia Philippines are parked at Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) in Manila and important hubs outside the capital such as Clark International Airport in Pampanga and Mactan Cebu International Airport.



Added pressure
Because of limited space and virtually zero demand during the lockdown, some of their narrow-body planes are parked on Naia’s runway 13/31.

Lufthansa Technik Philippines (LTP), an aircraft maintenance company and affiliate of PAL, witnessed the dramatic reduction of activity in the sector.

Daily flights fell to 10 per day from about 250 before the pandemic. Still, maintenance work continued for clients such as PAL, which mounted special flights to repatriate Filipinos overseas and supply crucial cargo such as food and medical equipment.

“Working during a scary pandemic situation has added pressure on us in line maintenance,” said aircraft mechanic Joseph Jemar Villanueva, who is assigned at LTP’s Manila operations.
“As part of LTP’s skeleton workforce, we understand that it is not just about doing a task but a balancing act of responsibly keeping a customer’s aircraft airworthy and released on time, as well as keeping ourselves safe and in good health condition for our family,” he added.

LTP provides its staff with full sets of personal protective gear and vitamins while sanitation booths are located at its facilities.

The maintenance steps being taken today will help the carriers ease into regular operations once the government lifts quarantine restrictions.


Dramatic changes
The flying experience will change dramatically by then.

Added health checks before departure and on disembarkation, physical distancing, mandatory wearing of face masks, health forms, and COVID-19 testing procedures are some changes that could make flying less comfortable.

But the airlines will ensure safety inside the aircraft.

Onboard meals will be handled more stringently, flight crew will wear personal protective gear, and physical distancing will be strictly implemented.

Modern planes are also equipped with so-called Hepa (high-efficiency particulate air) filtration systems that capture almost 100 percent of dust particles and contaminants such as viruses and bacteria. In other words, traveling by plane is a more sterilized experience than traveling by bus or train.

Airline officials said they were raring to restart flights. It will be up to the business managers, cabin crews, support personnel and, ultimately, flyers themselves to ensure that our airlines will keep soaring.