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Emirates airline president steps down

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Tim Clark will be leaving after 35 high-flying years with Dubai carrier

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Dubai: Emirates airline confirmed on Tuesday that its president, Sir Tim Clark, will be stepping down from his position in June 2020. Clark has spent 35 years with Emirates. He had confirmed earlier he would be retiring soon, but did not give details as to when at that time.

Shaikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, chairman and CEO of Emirates airline and Group, had earlier said that the company was looking at a number of possibilities for Clark’s replacement, but did not say who he was eyeing as the new president.

Clark, 70, will will continue to provide consultancy to Emirates after stepping down.

At Emirates’ last large-scale presence - during the Dubai Air Show last month - Shaikh Ahmed described Clark as a “genius” at his job and in his impact on the aviation industry. “Tim has served the company since the start. He’s a genius in what he’s doing in the industry, and how this company did with his involvement over the years - so we have to give him a lot of credit,” Shaikh Ahmad said.

The chairman hinted that Emirates may appoint a new president internally, saying that the carrier already has Emiratis and non-Emiratis who could take on the job. He suggested that there were two names in the forefront for the role, but did not elaborate.

A 1985 entry
Clark had joined in 1985 as head of airline planning, and was part of the founding team. Prior to that, he had built a reputation as a route planner at Gulf Air, which had recruited him from Caledonian Airways. He also held the position of managing director of Sri Lankan Airlines until 2008.

He will be known for his efforts in building the Emirates brand and establishing the carrier as one of the world’s largest. In the industry, he is also known as an exceptional dealmaker.

He received a knighthood in 2014 for services to the aviation industry and for British prosperity.

Clark holds a degree in Economics from London University, according to his bio on the Emirates website. There is also an honourary doctorate from the University of Middlesex and another from the Newcastle Business School at Northumbria.


Profile: Sir Tim Clark, the ‘genius’ heading Emirates since 2003
Clark to step down from role in June 2020, but will still provide consultancy to Emirates


Dubai: Tim Clark is not a man who minces his words.

When plane manufacturers delayed deliveries of aircrafts, Clark, the president of Emirates Airline, made his point clear to a crowd of journalists that he’s run out of patience and that manufacturers need to up their game. When negotiating deliveries of the A380 model with Airbus, Clark was relentless in demanding certain guarantees before ordering the jets, and left the Dubai Air Show, the largest aviation event in the region, without signing a deal.

Clark, an aviation veteran, was even an influence in Airbus’ A380 plane model, considering that Emirates is the largest customer for A380s. And when he vacates his seat as president of the airline in June 2020, there will undoubtedly be large shoes to fill.

Emirates confirmed on Tuesday that Sir Tim Clark, 70, will be stepping down from his role and retiring next year, but no successor has yet been named. Clark has been heading Emirates Airline since 2003, when he became the carrier’s president, but he joined Emirates long before, in 1985, as head of airline planning. He was also part of the team that founded Emirates.

Clark’s boss, Shaikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, the chairman and chief executive officer of Emirates Airline and Group, has described him as “a genius” in what he does.

Retirement
When news came out of his upcoming retirement, experts in the aviation industry started taking guesses at just who might succeed him. John Strickland, director of JLS Consulting in London and an aviation veteran himself, said in a tweet that he sees Clark as the “pre-eminent leader of the contemporary airline world.”

He described him as a “visionary, the brains behind Emirates, and a massive influence on Airbus’ launch of A380s and Boeing’s 777-3000ER.”

That also makes Clark – and Emirates Airline – a key factor in the suspension of Airbus’ A380 line. The European manufacturer said in February this year that it will stop building its A380 superjumbos after Emirates cut its order for the model.

And it’s not just A380s and 777s. Clark has been a key voice in discussions on Boeing’s upcoming 777X model, which is yet to be launched. With Emirates being the launch customer for the 777X, Clark has been commenting on the new model and Emirates’ plans for it, including now-tweaked plans to launch a Premium Economy class on the 777X.

So when Boeing delayed the launch of the 777X, Clark, again, did not mince his words.

When asked by Gulf News in September when he expects to receive the first 777X, Clark said, “That’s a good question! You need to ask Boeing that. We have 150 [aircraft] in contract. The first one should have been arriving in June of next year, but I would suggest quite strongly that it won’t.”

With Boeing facing delays in its 777X line on top of its crisis with the now-grounded 737 Max, an irked Clark told reporters he is not prepared to take delivery of aircraft that don’t meet specifications.

And it’s not just Boeing. Clark said that Emirates won’t take any aircraft without cast-iron guarantees of trouble-free performance, Bloomberg reported.

And as Clark’s time as the Emirates boss comes to an end in six months, the timing may just spare him from what he expects to be a tough few years. Clark earlier said that with diminishing demand and lower economic growth, he doesn’t “see any green shoots.”

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