Home / Business / Lynx Air to cease operations Monday, obtains creditor protection

Lynx Air to cease operations Monday, obtains creditor protection

The low-cost airline, based in Calgary, says it will cease operations at 12:01 a.m. on Feb. 26, though flights will continue until that time. 

Calgary-based, ultra low-cost airline launched in 2022 but faced ‘significant headwinds,’ company says.

a plane takes off from a runway.

Lynx Air, a Calgary-based airline that launched less than two years ago with a promise to make air travel more affordable for Canadians, says it will cease operations on Monday.

The news came as the low-cost airline announced it had sought and obtained an initial order for creditor protection from the Court of King’s Bench of Alberta.

“Over the past year, Lynx Air has faced a number of significant headwinds including rising operating costs, high fuel prices, exchange rates, increasing airport charges and a difficult economic and regulatory environment,” said the company in a news release.

“Despite substantial growth in the business, ongoing operational improvements, cost reductions and efforts to explore a sale or merger, the challenges facing the company’s business have become too significant to overcome.”

 

A flight booking web page shows red bars that read: Lynx Air's operations will end Feb. 26, 2024.

 

The airline said it will cease operations at 12:01 a.m. MT on Monday, “with flights continuing to operate until that time.”

Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP are acting as legal advisers to Lynx Air. FTI Consulting Canada Inc. was appointed as the monitor under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act.

In an email statement to CBC News, a spokesperson with the airline said that “growing financial pressures have made it impossible” to continue operations.

“We are focused on working with passengers currently in transit to find alternative arrangements to reach their destination,” the statement reads.

The company said passengers with existing bookings are advised to contact their credit card company to secure refunds for pre-booked travel. It also directed customers to its website.

Flight cancelled, passengers scrambling

But Lynx Air customer, Kara Brereton-Cooke, says her flight home to Winnipeg, which was scheduled for Saturday, has already been cancelled.

Brereton-Cooke said she received an email from Lynx Thursday evening following the announcement, advising that her flight from Vancouver to Winnipeg was cancelled. She and a group of seven friends have been left scrambling to find a way home.

“Seeing this email, we’re now all just frantic.”

The friends travelled to Vancouver for a bachelorette party, and were originally slated to fly home Friday. Brereton-Cooke says Lynx Air then rescheduled the original return flight to depart at 11 a.m. on Saturday, but then cancelled it entirely.

a screenshot of an email.

The group booked an extra night of hotel accommodations for Friday night after their flight was rescheduled. Now, they’ve booked last-minute flights through Air Canada for Saturday. The trip has become more expensive than anyone expected, she told CBC News.

“We just want our compensation back from them,” Brereton-Cooke said. “We shouldn’t have to go through our credit card companies to get a refund.”

CBC News contacted Lynx Air for a comment on the Saturday flight cancellation but have not yet received a response.

WestJet — another Calgary-based airline — has since responded to the news of Lynx Air’s halt to operations.

WestJet offers discounts

“We recognize the immediate impact this information has on passengers and employees of Lynx, and we are committed to assisting where we can through a number of actions,” reads the statement posted to their website on Thursday night.

The airline is offering deals to those impacted by Lynx’s announcement, namely a 25 per cent discount for all economy fares between Feb. 22 and Oct. 26 on WestJet routes which were previously served by Lynx Air.

Lynx Air’s flight attendants had just joined the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) earlier this month.

“We’re devastated for our members at Lynx Air and all employees who lost their jobs today,” Lou Arab, communications representative for CUPE, told CBC News.

“We will represent them and defend their rights in these times and we’ll fight to ensure that employees get everything they’re legally entitled to.

“The company was clear that it’s losing investors and doesn’t have the capital to support continued operations.”

Airline industry is ‘notoriously difficult’

Deborah Yedlin, president and CEO of the Calgary Chamber of Commerce, said she suspects airport charges played a major role in Lynx’s decision.

“I think the airport fees as they’re structured makes it hard for discount airlines to be successful in Canada long term,” she said.

“There’s been a confluence of events that’s really put a lot of downward pressure on the airline business… So when you’re a discount player and your margins are even tighter, you’re going to feel the economic headwinds that much more acutely.”

a plan takes off of a runway in the city of calgary. the city skyline is visible.

Yedlin calls the industry “notoriously difficult,” citing various post-pandemic challenges such as labour shortages and increased fuel costs.

She says Lynx Air’s announcement is unfortunate for Calgarian consumers hoping to save on travel costs.

“I think the question is, what do we need to do in Canada to ensure the viability of discount airlines?”

Ultra-affordable services promised

Privately-owned Lynx Air, which was formerly Enerjet, launched in April 2022, with a promise to bring ultra-affordable services to travellers. Lynx Air’s inaugural flight was in April, 2022, jetting from Calgary to Vancouver.

When it announced its plans in 2021, the company’s CEO at the time said the goal was to link Canadians to people and places.

“Airfares have traditionally been high here in Canada, and we at Lynx believe in meeting Canadians’ needs who can’t afford to travel or can’t afford to travel as often as they’d like,” said Merren McArthur, who stepped down last year for personal reasons.

When the company announced its launch, it said it had leased 46 new Boeing 737 aircraft. Last June, McArthur told the Calgary Herald it employed about 420 people.

Lynx began flying to several Canadian cities in 2022, including Calgary, Edmonton, Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver and Victoria, B.C.

Later that year, it announced a major expansion into the United States and followed that with the launch of a series of international flights in 2023, including Montreal to Las Vegas, and Toronto to Los Angeles, among others.

Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez addressed the news via social media on Thursday evening.

In a statement posted to X, formerly known as Twitter, Rodriguez said he is following the announcement closely.

“For any travellers that had a return flight booked with Lynx, I expect Lynx to help you get back home as soon as possible. I expect Lynx to fully refund you if your fare won’t be honoured,” the statement reads.

“My office has been in touch with Lynx, we will continue to communicate with all parties, and we’ve convened calls with other airlines to see how they can help, to ensure that passengers are put first.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lily Dupuis

Reporter

Lily Dupuis joined CBC News as a researcher for the 2023 Alberta provincial election. She can be reached at lily.dupuis@cbc.ca.

With files from Tony Seskus and Tom Ross

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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