Virgin Atlantic to axe 3,000 jobs and cease operations at Gatwick Airport

Virgin Atlantic to axe 3,000 jobs and cease operations at Gatwick Airport as it battles for survival amid coronavirus crisis

  • Virgin Atlantic – owned by Sir Richard Branson – will axe a third of its workforce
  • The airline will also cease operations at Britain’s second largest airpot, Gatwick
  • It is being reported that staff and unions are being briefed on the situation 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Virgin Atlantic to axe 3,000 jobs and cease operations at Gatwick Airport as it battles for survival amid coronavirus crisis.

The airline – owned by Sir Richard Branson – will axe a third of its workforce and will cease operations at Britain’s second largest airport. 

It is being reported that staff and trade unions are being briefed on the situation at the moment and that an official statement is expected shortly, as reported by Sky News.  

It follows a dire week for the aviation industry as passenger numbers have plummeted due to travel restrictions put in place to halt the spread of coronavirus.

The airline – owned by Sir Richard Branson – will axe a third of its workforce and will cease operations at Britain’s second largest airport

British Airways has started consulting on 12,000 redundancies, and Ryanair has said it is cutting up to 3,000 jobs. 

Owner Sir Richard Branson previously warned that Virgin Atlantic will collapse unless it receives UK taxpayer support while Virgin Australia is reportedly just hours from going into administration after failing to get a bailout from the Australian government.

The Virgin Group boss, who is estimated to be worth more than £3.5 billion, said Virgin Atlantic needs UK taxpayer support in the form of a commercial loan, with reports indicating that the carrier is asking for up to £500 million of public money.

The billionaire businessman offered his own private Caribbean island of Necker, estimated by Forbes to be worth £80m – less than one fifth of the figure being requested – as collateral for any taxpayer cash used to save the struggling airline.

Sir Richard Branson has previously warned that Virgin Atlantic will collapse unless it receives Government support

Sir Richard Branson has previously warned that Virgin Atlantic will collapse unless it receives Government support

He has previously vowed to plough £215million of his own money into his business empire – which includes an airline, railway franchise and leisure centres – to keep it afloat during the coronavirus pandemic.   

Branson today posted a message on Twitter saying Virgin Atlantic employees had ‘virtually unanimously’ decided to take a wage reduction to save jobs and ‘if the UK government does help Virgin Atlantic to survive, it will not be free money but repaid on commercial terms’.

He said that he lives on Necker, the island he bought aged 28, because he ‘loves the British Virgin Islands’ and his companies ‘all pay tax in the countries they operate in’. 

The tycoon added that his team would ‘raise as much money against the island as possible to save as many jobs as possible’. 

Virgin companies employ more than 70,000 people across 35 countries.

The Virgin Group boss said the airline needs taxpayer support in the form of a commercial loan

The Virgin Group boss said the airline needs taxpayer support in the form of a commercial loan

In an open letter to Virgin Group employees, Sir Richard, 69, wrote: ‘We will do everything we can to keep the airline going – but we will need Government support to achieve that in the face of the severe uncertainty surrounding travel today and not knowing how long the planes will be grounded for. 

‘This would be in the form of a commercial loan – it wouldn’t be free money and the airline would pay it back (as easyJet will do for the £600 million loan the Government recently gave them).

‘The reality of this unprecedented crisis is that many airlines around the world need government support and many have already received it.

‘Without it there won’t be any competition left and hundreds of thousands more jobs will be lost, along with critical connectivity and huge economic value.’

More to follow…