Thursday, November 22, 2012

Ethiopian Airlines CEO wins African CEO of the Year award

Tewolde Gebremariam, CEO of Ethiopian Airlines, was given the African CEO of the Year on Tuesday on November 20, 2012 at a meeting of African CEOs in Geneva.

He was given the award for the stellar performance that Ethiopian Airlines had registered over the year.�

Ethiopian made an operating profit of 55 million US dollars and a net profit 40 million US dollars. It now has flights to 43 African countries and a growing international network including 28 flights a week to China.

Despite reduced demand overall in the airline industry due to the economic recession in Europe, Ethiopian managed to produce a 25 per cent increase in passenger numbers.

Its expansion is continuing in accordance with its 15 year development plan.  In a speech at the meeting, Tewolde attributed the success of the airline to good cost management, efficient aircraft utilization, good route network, good corporate governance and institutional independence.

In particular, he emphasized managerial autonomy as a key to success, noting that “the fallacy is that whatever government owns is a failure. It is not.”

In fact, he underlined that it was the full managerial autonomy of Ethiopian that had made it successful while the airline was still fully owned by the state.