Most of lessor BOC Aviation's aircraft in Russia affected by EU sanctions
Asian aircraft lessor BOC Aviation said on Monday that EU
sanctions requiring the termination of leases to Russian airlines by March 28
would affect most of its aircraft in Russia as the leasing industry began
counting the cost of the rules.
Russian companies have 980 passenger jets in service, of
which 777 are leased, according to analytics firm Cirium. Of these, two-thirds,
or 515 jets, with an estimated market value of about $10 billion, are rented
from foreign firms in the mainly Ireland-based industry.
BOC said it had 18 planes representing 4.5per cent of its
owned fleet based in Russia, placed with Aeroflot subsidiary Pobeda as well as
Ural Airlines, S7 Airlines and AirBridgeCargo Airlines. In addition, it has
another aircraft in its managed fleet on lease to Rossiya Airlines.
"Our policy is to fully comply with all laws applicable
to our business," the lessor said in a statement. "The practical
consequences of the new EU sanctions are complex and at the present time we are
unable to provide further information."
AerCap Holdings, the world's biggest leasing company, has
the largest exposure globally to Russia and Ukraine with 152 planes, according
to aviation consultancy IBA.
AerCap has a total portfolio of more than 2,000 planes and
Russian carriers Aeroflot, S7 Airlines, Rossiya, Azur Air, Ural Airlines, Yamal
Airlines and Yakutia Airlines are among its customers, the lessor's website
says.
Other non-Russian lessors with planes in the countries
include SMBC Aviation Capital, Air Lease Corp and Aviation Capital Group, IBA
said.
Avolon, the world's second-biggest leasing company, has
fewer than 20 airplanes in Russia and one or two in Ukraine out of a total
fleet of more than 550 aircraft, Chief Executive Domhnal Slattery told Reuters
this month.
He said at the time that Avolon was concerned that sanctions
on international payment transfers through SWIFT could be disrupted, making it
hard for airlines to pay their bills.
Group of Seven (G7) leaders said on Sunday that Western
allies had decided to cut off "certain Russian banks" from the SWIFT
a secure messaging system to ensure rapid cross-border payments which has
become the principal mechanism to finance international trade
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