Published: 11:20, March 31, 2026 | Updated: 11:41, March 31, 2026
CEO: Cathay Pacific to maintain capacity despite rising jet fuel costs
By Reuters
In this photo taken on Jan 14, 2026, a Cathay Pacific aircraft takes off from the Hong Kong International Airport. (SHAMIM ASHRAF / CHINA DAILY)

SEATTLE – Cathay Pacific Airways CEO Ronald Lam has said that the airline's short-term priority was to maintain flight capacity, adding that any cutbacks would be a "last resort" even as the conflict in the Middle East drives jet fuel prices higher.

So far, the Hong Kong-based ⁠airline has seen higher demand for its long-haul flights to North America, Europe and Australia since the US-Israeli conflict with Iran began last month and significantly reduced traffic through the Middle East, Lam told Reuters on Monday.

"We do see some slight surge in demand on certain routes," he said at an event in Seattle ⁠celebrating the airline's new Seattle-Hong Kong service. "But I think the cost, the jet fuel cost situation is also concerning."

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Lam said passenger and cargo demand was not going to be ⁠in a "sustainable situation" if the jet fuel price remained double its pre-conflict levels for too long.

Like many airlines, Cathay ⁠Pacific has introduced large fuel surcharges to manage the higher costs, but it has not cut capacity, ⁠unlike carriers including United Airlines, Scandinavia's SAS and Air New Zealand.