Southwest Airlines CEO sees industry-wide pilot shortage persisting for three years

By Rajesh Kumar Singh

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Southwest Airlines Co CEO Bob Jordan said on Thursday that an industry-wide shortage of pilots is expected to last for three years due to the challenges carriers face in training new aviators.

Jordan, speaking at the Bernstein Conference, said the Dallas-based airline has about 40 planes that it currently cannot fly because of pilot constraints.

“The constraint is really the ability to put them through the training center because it’s full,” he said.

Analysts at Jefferies estimate the United States is 10,000 pilots short.

American Airlines has said it has as much as 50 underused mainline jets and about 150 regional aircraft grounded as the company does not have enough trained pilots.

Jordan expects the supply of pilots to improve by the end of the year, allowing the airline to get the planes off the ground.

The company is also grappling with Boeing’s aircraft delivery delays, forcing it to rein in capacity growth plans.

Southwest, one of the biggest customers of Boeing’s MAX planes, expects 70 deliveries of the 737-8 jet this year instead of the planned 90 after the U.S. planemaker disclosed a manufacturing issue with some of the workhorse aircraft.

Jordan said Southwest needs a “stable” jet delivery schedule to plan its capacity.

“The biggest thing that we’re working on is reflowing the order book with Boeing, so that the deliveries are steady, measured, known, we can count on them,” he said.

(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Bill Berkrot)