By December 2023, the National Treasury intends to stop providing Kenya Airways with multibillion-dollar bailouts and replace them with a financing strategy that will enable the national airline to become profitable.

Kenya Airways Planes

Treasury CS Njuguna Ndung'u stated in the draft 2023–24 budget policy statement that the government will create a turnaround plan for the cash-strapped carrier that excludes operational support for the aviation sector.

The announcement stated that a finance plan independent of operational support from the exchequer after December 2023 would be a crucial component of the strategy.

Since 2012, Kenya Airways has been in the red and has required multibillion-shilling State bailouts to keep running.

The financial instability of the national carrier was made worse by a decline in travel during the Covid-19 pandemic.

With rising income, the airline could slough off part of the Covid-19 ruins in the first half of 2022, reducing losses from Sh11.5 billion to Sh9.9 billion.

Despite this, it has continued to operate in the red, prompting Treasury to propose a further State bailout of Sh34.9 billion for the airline in the 2022–23 supplementary budget to pay off its debts.


Government plans to salvage KQ from debts

President William Ruto announced the government's plan to sell its 48.9% ownership in Kenya Airways to Delta Air Lines in December of last year, which prompted the decision to reduce government bailouts of KQ.

KQ to get sigh from government over debts

"I'm willing to sell Kenya Airways as a whole."Plc," Ruto told Bloomberg News on the sidelines of the US-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington DC in December. "I don't run an airline with only a Kenyan flag; that's not what I do. That's not my business."

Before now, Delta expressed interest in some of Kenya's air traffic.

In the US, Ruto stated that "discussions with Delta are at a preliminary level."