Sean Duffy, US secretary of transportation, throughout a information convention in Terminal A at Newark Liberty Worldwide Airport (EWR) in Newark, New Jersey, US, on Monday, Nov. 24, 2025.
Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Pictures
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy mentioned on Saturday he doesn’t assume the federal government must bail out low-cost airways which have sought $2.5 billion in authorities aid due to excessive jet gas costs, following the collapse of Spirit Airways.
“At this level, I do not assume it’s a necessity. They do have entry to money. In the event that they wish to come to the U.S. authorities, we might be a lender of final resort. If they will discover {dollars} within the non-public markets — I feel that is higher for them,” Duffy mentioned at a press convention at Newark Liberty Worldwide Airport in New Jersey.
He mentioned the prospect of a Spirit bailout was seen by another airways as a possibility to get cash “not essentially primarily based on want, however primarily based on alternative.”
On Monday, a bunch of U.S. funds airways, together with Frontier and Avelo, mentioned it had proposed exchanging warrants convertible into fairness stakes for $2.5 billion in U.S. authorities help.
The Affiliation of Worth Airways confirmed it requested President Donald Trump’s administration to create a $2.5 billion liquidity pool, used solely to offset incremental gas prices, “as a mandatory and focused measure to stabilize operations and maintain airfares inexpensive throughout this era of volatility.”
They’ve additionally requested Congress to droop the 7.5% federal excise tax on airline tickets and the $5.30 per phase tax. Waiving the charges would offset about one-third of the incremental price of upper jet gas.
Jet gas surge doubles prices
The pitch highlights one of many unintended penalties of the U.S.-Israeli struggle with Iran: a surge in jet gas costs that has roughly doubled prices, squeezing margins and pushing weaker airways nearer to the brink.
The chief executives of a number of low-cost carriers met with Duffy and Federal Aviation Administration chief Bryan Bedford in Washington final week to debate the proposal.
The group arrived on the $2.5 billion determine by estimating how rather more it expects to spend on jet gas this 12 months than beforehand forecast.
Airways for America, which represents main U.S. passenger airways, opposed a bailout for funds carriers, saying “authorities intervention on behalf of these airways would punish different airways which have engaged in self-help so as to cope with elevated prices and reward airways who have not made these powerful selections. That is not a degree enjoying discipline.”
The group added that in the long run, sustaining companies unable to earn their price of capital harmed competitors and customers by making it tougher for different airways to compete and appeal to private-sector capital.
The Affiliation of Worth Airways rejected the criticism from Airways for America, saying authorities coverage had favored main carriers and “the present surge in jet gas costs shouldn’t be the results of poor decision-making or an absence of self-discipline by worth airways. It’s an uncontrollable, extraordinary exterior shock that disproportionately impacts enterprise fashions constructed on providing persistently inexpensive fares to price-sensitive vacationers.”
