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Czech Republic Freight Transport Report Q1 2008Product Type: Market Research ReportPublished by: Business Monitor International Published: November 2007 Product Code: R302-1512 Description The government announced that in June it would sell its full stake in Prague International Airport (LetistePraha) during the course of 2008. Local media quoted deputy transport minister Jiri Hodac as saying that the sale of the profitable airport operation could generate as much as CZK70bn (US$3.49bn) for the treasury, which could be reinvested in highway construction and maintenance. Separately, Letiste Praha CEO Miroslav Dvorak said the airport was to be transformed into a joint stock company as a necessary step before privatisation. Dvorak said that the number of passengers using the airport had soared as a result of growing tourism and the Czech Republic’s economic boom. Letiste Praha reported CZK1.33bn (US$66.4mn) in pre-tax profits in 2006. Revenues were up by 14.3% to over CZK5bn. Meanwhile, Ceské Aerolinie AS, or CSA Czech Airlines, is also in line for potential privatisation. CSA, the smallest member of the SkyTeam alliance led by Air France-KLM, posted a net loss of CZK397mn (US$19.3mn) last year, reduced from a CZK496mn loss in 2005. The Czech government, which controls the state’s 91.5% stake in the airline, aims to return the company to profit by 2008, at which point it is likely to privatise it. The airline says it expected to get back into the black ahead of schedule, posting a net profit of CZK42mn in 2007. It has operated in the red since 2005. Even taking into account the squeeze on margins and tougher competition, BMI believes the Czech aviation sector is facing reasonably strong growth. In our latest Czech Republic Freight Transport report, BMI concludes that air cargo traffic will grow by 9.3% per annum on average over the next five years. Our optimistic outlook is based on a number of factors. The Czech Republic is set for continued strong economic growth (4.8% per annum on average to 2011, according to our forecasts). European Union (EU) membership has placed the country near the centre of gravity of Eastern European logistics. Although we earlier trimmed back our airfreight forecast, in view of CSA’s financial difficulties, the outlook remains for strong growth in this sector, based on solid fundamentals such as the low-cost carrier (LCC) boom. In fact, BMI is bullish on freight across most modes in the Czech Republic. We expect freight carried by road to be one of the most dynamic sectors over the next few years, with annual growth averaging 6.4% in 2007-2011. This incorporates the negative effect of high petrol prices in 2006 and a small downwards ‘blip’ in the road haulage growth rate in 2007-2008, when the electronic tolling system is being introduced. Oil shipped by pipeline should grow at around 5.5% a year, ahead of GDP. However, we expect rail freight to lag as investment in the rail system takes time to have an effect; the average growth for 2007-2011 will come out at a more modest 3.0% per annum. Freight carried by inland waterways will grow slowly at 2.1% per annum. The result is that we now forecast total freight carried across all modes, measured in million tonne-km (mntkm), to rise by an annual average of 5.6% per annum in 2007-2011. Under our freight transport business environment ranking the Czech Republic earns a composite score of 46, out of a theoretical maximum of 70. This places it at the upper end of its European peer group (and above the average of just over 41). The total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to US$25.9bn in nominal terms by 2011, representing 11.5% of the Czech Republic’s GDP. The transport and communications sector employed 368,000 people, or 7.8% of the labour force, in 2006. We see that figure falling slightly to 361,000 by 2011, although it will remain unchanged as a proportion of the total labour force. Table of Contents
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