oneworld turns 18

09 February 2017

oneworld®, the world’s most highly prized global airline alliance, has turned 18, after launching services and benefits in February 1999.

To mark this milestone, oneworld CEO Rob Gurney reviewed oneworld’s progress and priorities in a speech at the Aviation Club of the UK today.

When it was born, oneworld had five founding partners - American Airlines, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Qantas and Canadian Airlines International, which was acquired by and merged into Star’s Air Canada after a few years.  Membership now stands at 14 airlines, with the addition, in chronological order, of Finnair, Iberia, LATAM, Japan Airlines, Royal Jordanian, S7, airberlin, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways and SriLankan – plus around 30 “affiliate” members.

At its birth, less than a dozen airlines were members of any global airline group.  Today, all but one of the world’s 20 biggest airlines have signed up to one of the three global alliances, with just nine of the Top 50 airlines unaligned.  Between them, the three global alliances now account for two-thirds of total industry capacity and revenues.  With most of the world’s leading airlines already aligned, opportunities for membership growth had diminished, with the focus now more on adding value.

In its early days, oneworld’s members operated 6,200 flights a day to 632 destinations in 138 countries.  Today, that has risen to 13,800 daily departures – equivalent to a take or landing every three seconds around the clock - serving 1,014 airports in 159 territories.

Their combined fleet now stands at some 3,500 aircraft, with member airlines employing a total workforce of more than 400,000 worldwide.  Passengers boarded by oneworld member airlines have more than tripled – from 177 million a year to 557 million, equivalent to more than the population of the European Union.

oneworld CEO Rob Gurney noted: “Many millions of those passengers fly on multi-sector journeys requiring transfers between two or more oneworld member airlines – and this is really what oneworld, or indeed any global alliance, is all about:  connecting airline networks together to make it as smooth and as easy as possible for customers to reach many, many more places than any one airline can on its own.”

Revenues from those customers connecting between oneworld members have grown twice as fast as member airlines’ combined revenues from overall passenger activities.  Total passenger revenues have grown 275 per cent during oneworld’s lifetime to US$ 108 billion now, while alliance revenues from customers connecting between member airlines have risen more than fivefold to US$ 5.4 billion.  If that alliance interline revenue was an airline in its own right, it would be one the world’s 30 biggest.  Throughout oneworld’s lifetime, those alliance interline revenues have totaled some 50 billion US dollars.

This alliance “interline” revenue now represents 5 per cent of member airlines’ combined total passenger revenues – a higher proportion, by oneworld’s analysis, than either the other two global alliances achieve.

oneworld CEO Rob Gurney put this into context: “That is a significant contribution in an industry where profit margins are not the greatest – IATA predicts an industry average net margin of only 4.1 per cent in 2017.  One of our bigger member airlines considers every dollar of interline revenue worth another dollar of what it calls ‘revenue opportunity’ – with all that interline feed making more routes, frequencies and overall capacity viable for it to sell itself.”

Since the global alliances were established, the industry has seen substantial forms in other types of cooperation - interline, code-share, membership of large alliance groupings, joint ventures and cross equity – but, he pointed out, “only global alliances are truly global in nature and scope”.

Looking to the future, he said global alliances must innovate and adapt if they are to remain relevant, concluding: “Our aim is clear - to position oneworld as the undisputed alliance leader, offering an unmatched combined network by the best collection of travel providers, delivering magnetic alliance services and benefits to customers and that are simple for our carriers to deliver – while creating incremental value that our member airlines simply do not want to be without.”

To download a copy of Rob Gurney’s full speech, click here.