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Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways Q3 revenue jumps by 29%

Revenue from code-share and equity partners was up 44% in the third quarter
Revenue from code-share and equity partners was up 44% in the third quarter

Abu Dhabi's state-owned Etihad Airways, which plans to buy a 49% stake in struggling Alitalia, said third-quarter revenue rose 29% thanks to passenger and cargo growth. 

The airline earned revenue of $1.8 billion in the three months ending September, it said in a statement. Etihad does not report profit. 

Revenue from code-share and equity partners was $352m in the third quarter, up 44% over the previous year period. 

Etihad has stakes in Aer Lingus, Airberlin, Air Seychelles, Virgin Australia, Air Serbia and Jet Airways and is in the process of buying stakes in Alitalia and Swiss-based Etihad Regional. 

"Our focus on organic growth, code share partnerships and minority investments in other airlines has continued to produce strong results, despite the prevalence of industry challenges such as volatile oil prices, economic and political instability, overcapacity in the market, and access constraints,” James Hogan, Etihad President and chief executive said.

Etihad carried 3.9 million passengers in the third quarter, up 30% on the year. 

Cargo volumes touched 144,498 tonnes in the third quarter, an increase of 9%, bringing in revenues totaling $284m, a 16% increase on the year.