Chinese carriers target Cathay as demand for pilots ramps up

Mega-salaries on offer as world's second-largest economy sees aviation sector booming

FILE PHOTO: Pilots look out from the cockpit of a Cathay Pacific Airways Airbus A350 as the airlines hold a ceremony to mark the first of their 48 Airbus A350 arriving at Hong Kong Airport, Hong Kong, China May 30, 2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
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Chinese airlines are circling disaffected pilots at Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways, offering sky-high salaries to fill a shortage of experienced captains in a rapidly expanding aviation industry.

Chinese carriers, including China Southern Airlines , Hainan Airlines and Juneyao Airlines alone will need more than 100,000 new pilots over the next two decades, according to forecasts by plane maker Boeing, as air travel takes off with increased prosperity in the world's second-largest economy.

China trains around 4,700 new pilots a year at home and abroad, according to the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), but the industry's sharp growth has left it short of captains with several thousand hours flying experience.

"Chinese airlines are growing so quickly, and ... it takes a lot of time to become a captain," says Xu Dandi, the head of recruitment at Yu Feng Consulting, whose clients include China Southern and Loong Air. "Pilots hired in Hong Kong have likely passed strict assessments ... and have experience flying in Asia."

Pilot recruitment firms have flocked to Hong Kong hoping to attract established pilots from loss-making Cathay, which has this year axed 600 jobs in its biggest round of staff cuts in almost 20 years.

While Cathay is not firing any of its 2,500 Hong Kong-based pilots, it has warned of cuts next month to their housing allowances, which for some veteran captains can be worth up to HK$100,000 (Dh46,996) a month.

Some Cathay pilots - who are widely regarded as among the industry's best-qualified and highest-paid - say cuts could price them out of living in one of the world's most expensive cities. Many are expatriate Australians, Americans and Britons.

"Most expat pilots will have a serious re-think ... if the [housing] allowance is cut too drastically," says one of nine Cathay captains interviewed by Reuters - none of whom wanted to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Some Chinese airlines are offering tax-free pay packages of up to US$314,000 a year, according to job ads. That is about in line with what Cathay captains can earn now, before any allowance cuts. The airline is also looking to reduce pensions and increase productivity.

Chinese airlines use recruitment agencies to scout globally for pilots. Hong Kong was not previously a major target, but has come into focus as Cathay has struggled.

Longreach Aviation Resources told Hong Kong media it received inquiries from 200 Cathay pilots before it abruptly cancelled a roadshow last month, citing legal advice. It declined further comment.

Another recruiter, Wasinc International, attracted nine Cathay pilots on the first day of a Hong Kong roadshow last week, and Yu Feng Consulting says it plans a similar event based on interest from mainland Chinese airlines.

"We watch for airlines that are having difficulties. Cathay has always been very strong and now they're downgrading their pay a little, a lot of their pilots are worried," says the Wasinc chief executive Dave Ross. "[Cathay pilots] have a reputation for being high-quality pilots, so a lot of airlines are interested in them."

Thee Cathay Pacific chief operations and service delivery officer Greg Hughes says the airline was used to having its pilots courted by rival carriers.

"For 30 to 40 years, people have targeted our pilots and we don't expect that to let up," he says. "People like working for us, and our [staff] turnover rates are low."

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But the South Asia region is not the only area where a potential dearth of pilots is causing ructions.

Over the next two decades, 87 new pilots will need to be trained and ready to fly a commercial airliner every day in order to meet our insatiable demand to travel by air, according to a recent report by Cowen & Company. That is one every 15 minutes.

Passenger and cargo airlines around the world are expected to buy 41,000 new airliners between 2017 and 2036. And they will need 637,000 new pilots to fly them, according to Boeing. That staggering figure is matched only by how many will leave the profession in the next decade - particularly in the US.

Retirements at US airlines will start to rise precipitously starting in 2021 as the current crop of pilots turns 65, the mandated age of retirement. More than 42 per cent of active US airline pilots at the biggest carriers will retire over the next 10 years, about 22,000.

In the next 20 years, airlines in North America are going to need 117,000 new pilots, Boeing estimates. And the farm team for training and recruitment in the US - the military and regional carriers - are already struggling to find and keep aviators.

Meanwhile, airlines in Australia and Europe are again recruiting after several quiet years, and could prove an attractive alternative for some - although the seniority system used by most western carriers, where new joiners enter on the bottom rank and salary rungs, whatever their prior experience - would probably deter Cathay's senior captains.

Back in China, as the airline sector has ballooned it has had to import foreign experience, with the number of foreign pilots flying with Chinese airlines doubling to more than 1,000 between 2010 and last year.

In September, the CAAC relaxed some of the industry's strictest medical requirements - seen as a sign of how serious the pilot shortage is.

While Chinese carriers may offer top-dollar packages, some foreign pilots who have moved to China warn of trade-offs, according to Bloomberg.

Four expatriate pilots told Reuters the downsides include a long hiring process; short, three-year contracts, with no union protection; gruelling flight rosters handed to pilots at late notice; and a system geared towards penalising pilots for mistakes rather than using these to learn safety lessons.

"The money's definitely good, but people considering the job - if that's their primary motivation - I don't think they'll last long," says Mike Edelman, an American pilot who has flown for Juneyao Airlines for nearly eight years.

"You've got to devote a lot more hours to work and ... if you want to last in China you've got to be willing to adapt to the culture."

The cultural challenge was acknowledged by one of the Cathay pilots attending the Wasinc recruitment session.

"In Hong Kong, you know what's going on ... but working in China, it's a foreign country. There are issues like moving money out, financial security and pollution. Those aside, China is now better placed in terms of contracts than 10 years ago."

Of the nine Cathay captains Reuters spoke to, some named non-Chinese carriers including Vietnam Airlines and Korean Air Lines as potential options, while others said they would consider non-flying jobs.

Three captains said joining China Southern could be an option as it has bases in countries such as Australia, where pilots can return home and fly to and from the carrier's Guangzhou hub, although the pay would be less than if they moved to China.

"The money isn't everything," one says.

"The attraction of living in their home country, having family away from the pollution and children growing up back home means most are willing to be on less pay."