The new Italia Trasporto Aereo begins operations
After the end for the traditional Italian airline Alitalia, the new Italia Trasporto Aereo (Ita) begins operations. The state-owned airline says it plans to operate 191 flights on the first day. 24 of them are national, 56 international. "Born in 2021" - this "celebratory" lettering is worn among other things by one of the planes, as Ita called it.
The last Alitalia flight landed late Thursday evening, according to the airport, at 11:23 p.m. in Rome. The airline had been in a crisis for years. In 2017, the state had to step in when the company went bankrupt. Hundreds of millions of euros in aid could not save the airline, which is considered symbolic of Italy. The conditions for the establishment of the Ita were agreed with the EU. It is considered to be the successor to Alitalia, but according to the EU Commission it is not its economic successor.
The new airline plans to operate with 52 planes and a workforce of around 2,800 this year. Tickets have been on sale on a provisional website since August. The company wants to focus on business and leisure
customers. In the coming years, the fleet is expected to grow, so that Ita will be flying 105 planes by 2025 and employing up to 5700 people.
At its hubs in Rome-Fiumicino and Milan-Linate, however, it had to surrender part of the take-off and landing rights of the old Alitalia. Some are critical of the start. The Cub Trasporti union wants to gather today, Friday, at the capital's Fiumicino airport for a demonstration on the occasion of the Ita launch, as Cub secretary Antonio Amoroso told the foreign press in
Rome. The company's plan has no perspective. It is unclear how Ita intends to use the aircraft it has bought without essential market shares. The union expects heavy economic losses in the next two years.
In recent years, Alitalia has come under pressure from low-cost airlines on the Italian and European markets, as aviation expert Ugo Arrigo described in a presentation. Ita faces the same problem. On the long-haul route, the airline is also weakly positioned with only seven instead of 26 planes like Alitalia. Arrigo concluded that Alitalia was the Italian airline that no longer existed and Ita was the one that would no longer exist.