Good morning and welcome to the quarterly presentation from Norse Atlantic ASA. Today we are presenting from our headquarters here in Arendal, and with me I have our CFO, Aloisio Matos, and I'm the CEO, Bjørn Tore Larsen. Just a quick look on the headlines for this quarter. It has been a quarter of great improvements in many fields, and we can start off with a load factor that is record high. We have a 95% load factor across the quarter, and that goes for both our scheduled flying and our charters. We have an increase in number of passengers from 304,000 to, correction, from 201,000 to 304,000, so it's a 51% increase year on year. We have an average revenue increase by 23% in terms of our own network, and that excludes the gain of $28 million, but includes the charters.
Great increase on charters, and we do have good sales and good forward outlooks for our upcoming summer. All the parameters have been positive for us this quarter. We achieved a revenue of $125.3 million. That includes $28.7 million of one-offs from redelivery of three Dash 8s we had, so it's up from $78 million last year. We have an EBITDA of positive $15 million, a net profit which is a loss of $14.9 million versus a $62.8 million loss same quarter last year. All in all, it's a very good quarter for Norse Atlantic and in line with our previous outlook. We have executed on our commercial strategy, which is to shift part of our business into a charter operation during the next few years. It's a strong charter market, and we wanted to secure revenues for a significant portion of the fleet.
We have successfully completed now the signing of six leases, long-term leases to the Indian airline IndiGo, which is one of the leading airlines in the world, and we have started that contract with the first aircraft delivered in March. That secures the profitability for 50% of our fleet for a foreseeable future. It also reduces our market risk as we have sold more than 50% of our seats, and it is a fuel hedge efficiently since we are not paying for the fuel on the ACMI charters. It also allows us to concentrate on the best performing part of our network. In other words, when 50% of our fleet is now going into a charter operation, we're going to keep the 50% of the business of our own scheduled network that is performing the best. In a way, it's a win-win.
That is also part of our commercial overhaul where we have, which is contributing greatly to the load factors and generally the numbers we have seen in Q1. We have a much better network than we had last year, and also we have a better way of approaching revenue management and sales with much more focus on technology. That has proven well. Now the focus will be to reduce costs. We have started a process, as we communicated to the market last year, where we aim to reduce costs by about $40 million in addition to our continuous strive for improved unit costs. This is also going to pay off. We do not see the effect of that in Q1, but we are going to see it starting Q2 and onwards. The long-term charters, as I said, they improve our financial predictability.
It's a profitable business and a part of the IndiGo contract, which has commenced 1st of March and which is going to be increased, ramped up as we get into the fall with the number of aircraft, aircraft number two from September, and then it's going to be increased until the aircraft number six, which is going to be around January 26. Apart from that, we have also reason to believe that we will secure some additional charter business for both next winter and the winter beyond. Actually more than 50% of our seats are considered sold for the next two years. We do see good bookings going forward. There has been a lot of volatility in the market lately.
Fares to U.S. in particular have dropped a bit, and we see a capacity, what should I say, a supply side that has been perhaps a bit excessive, but we have still been able to not only fill our aircraft, but also at prices that have been higher than what we achieved last year. Also going forward, we see some of the same. We are focusing more on markets going to Asia and Africa in the winter, which has been very promising. In the summer, the core market for us is still America, and the majority of our customers are American. For all practical purposes during winter, sorry, during summer, we are a New York-based or a Los Angeles-based airline flying to big cities in Europe.
You can see those numbers that both in Q2, Q3, and Q4, we will be at least so far hitting numbers that are way better than we were able to do last year at the same time. I said we are reducing costs, and we have a plan to reduce costs by approximately $40 million in addition to the day-to-day cost savings. We have not seen the result of those cost savings yet, and the reason for that is that we are building, what should I say, we are building new functions that will replace old ones. For a period of time, there has been a double cost base, but we are seeing that coming down quite quickly as we go into Q2 and forward.
The two reasons why we are taking down costs mainly is SG&A, which is reduced or which will be reduced by about 50% when we have completed, and also the crew basis, which is in the future going to be better aligned with the network we're going to fly. We can utilize our crew, a more crew efficiency than we had been able to in the past. Those two combined will contribute significantly to a reduced cost. We are obviously an airline that has a great value product, but we know that we are in a very competitive market and we need the lowest cost in order to be able to have the lowest fares to fill our aircraft. Cost over time is extremely important for us to focus on.
Even before these cost reduction programs, we see a good decrease on the last 12-month basis in our CASK or cost per available seat kilometer, going from 4.65 Q1 last year to 4 now, and our aim is to get that to a level of about 3 on the long-term basis. Also other metrics are pointing in the right direction. Last 12 months we see revenues on the last 12-month revenue basis, we see them going from last year $478 million to $635 million this year. Significant improvement that even without the redelivery gains of $28.7 million is a significant rise in revenues. We think we have not, you know, we still have quite some potential on the revenue side, but it is very much a step, a great step forward.
EBITDA, same thing, much better than last year, about $64, sorry, $54 million, and also the free cash flow from operations is much improved. Now it's easy for me to talk about all these things, but we do have a great machinery behind the people flying the aircraft up in the cockpit, the great crew we have in the cabin who is our trademark and who our passengers love, but also which most people don't see, our technicians and mechanics who work 24/7 to ensure that we have probably the best completion rate in the world. We completed 100% of our flights in Q1, and you can't do better than that, obviously. It is not an easy task. These aircraft are very complex. They are state-of-the-art, and it's not a typical sledgehammer aircraft.
You really need great competence among the technical team, a passion and a determination to keep all the aircraft in mint condition at any given time, ready to fly. I think also we have, honestly speaking, the best technical team in the world. They are superb, and they are contributing to the performance that we have seen as well. Punctuality has been hampered quite a bit by air traffic control and also to some extent by airport congestions and some weather in Q1. We expect improvement as we go on, and our target is 85% departure 15 minutes on time, which we think in the big airports we are flying is pretty good. We are mainly flying to very big airports only, and whether we like it or not, there is always a queue to get out there.
It is something that we are seeing is improving as we go. The load factor of 95% I think is also world-leading. I have been able to, or I haven't been able to see anybody who has a better load factor for Q1 than we have, so I'll be happy to hear if somebody has it, but it's a really good number. Also, the number of passengers that we carried in Q1 is considerably up. The revenues, despite having increased load factors, we didn't have to sacrifice ticket prices, so we have actually a 5% higher ticket price in Q1 than we had last year if you combine the regular fare and the ancillary revenues. The ticket fare alone was up by $20. The ancillary revenue was down by five. The reason being that we have started to include hand-carry luggage as a standard feature for all our customers.
Initially we were charging for hand-carried luggage. We decided, and we, you know, we did pockets of money on that. We decided to decrease or to take that away to include hand-carry, and we saw the conversion rate in our sales went up. It is an all positive development, but that is the reason why the ancillary goes a little bit down, but the full fare goes up. Another way of looking into this is seeing our CASK versus the PRASK. PRASK is passenger revenue per available seat kilometer, and CASK is cost per available seat kilometer. You can see we are 27% up on the revenues on the PRASK, and we are 10% down on the CASK. I'll leave it to Anders. Thank you, Bjørn Tore Larsen. Good morning, everybody.
On behalf of Norse Atlantic ASA, it's very positive to be able to report revenues in this quarter of $125.3 million. Even when you disregard the one-time gain on the redelivery of the Dash 8 aircraft of $28.7 million, this is an improvement of $18 million or up 23%. This is mainly driven by both an increased number of passengers carried, increased fares, but also a significant growth in the charter and ACMI segment. Costs increased marginally by 4%, mainly driven by increased volume, but also we've had some tailwinds by a lower fuel price during the quarter, which has led us to a positive EBITDA of $15 million, comparing to $27.4 million same quarter last year, a massive improvement. Bottom line, we report a loss of $14.9 million comparing to $62.8 million in the same quarter last year.
Again, a massive improvement, which we are happy to report, massive improvement of $48 million compared to the same quarter last year. In the cash flow statement, I think the most important note is the operating cash flow, which is positive of $30 million in this quarter compared to $3 million in the same quarter last year. Again, an improvement of $27 million. Liquidity, available cash at the end of the quarter was $31.3 million. This is including an undrawn revolving credit facility of $6.3 million, which remains undrawn until today's date. In the balance sheet, the most important item to look out for is the credit card receivables. This is basically what the credit card companies are holding back of our money in relation to tickets sold.
We have seen very good sales during this winter, and therefore the credit card receivables have increased from $100 million at the end of the year to $139 million, a very large amount at the end of Q1. The book equity is negative $225 million. I want to point out, which I have done on previous presentations before as well, keep in mind that the book equity reflects $168 million of accumulated non-cash lease accounting cost since the inception of the company. That was a very quick run-through of the key financial metrics of Norse for Q1. Bjørn Tore Larsen, by that, I leave some concluding remarks to you. Thank you very much, Anders. Just to be clear, we are also happy to take questions from online, from anybody who is watching. The conclusion is very simple and quite pleasant.
We do have a great fill of our aircraft with a world-leading load factor and a strong growth in Q1. We are executing on our strategy to ensure that we secure revenue for a long-term period of time for a big portion of our fleet and thereby reduce risks and also our costs. We are aiming to deliver a full year 2025 profitable year. I think, you know, there are a lot of uncertainties in this business, and we shall not underplay them because macroeconomic environment, there are, you know, some disruptions here and there in the world, certain uncertainties, there's capacity issues, etc. We do not want to underplay that part of the picture. This is definitely a volatile market, but I think we have never seen such a strong outlook from our side as we are doing now, despite seeing pressure on prices.
We are seeing that compensated by higher load factors. We think we are on a good track. We still have to deliver. One thing is having a plan and even seeing a good trend, but we need to execute. We are every single day focusing on executing and making sure that we both fill our aircraft and that we're able to take off and get our cost down. By that, I'll be happy to take questions. Yep, maybe you'll take the question, Anders. We have had an incoming question here, and the question is, is the IndiGo contract reported in charter revenue and charter flights? We did not have many flights for IndiGo. We just started the contract 1st of March, and we've been flying actually, and the IndiGo flights will be long haul. They will be flying from India to Europe to various destinations in Europe.
For the first four months, we are just flying one aircraft between Delhi and Bangkok on a daily basis. Those income, those are for one aircraft reported for one month. Exactly. As we gradually deliver aircraft to IndiGo, this will then increase as part of the revenue. The answer is yes, it is included in the revenue. That's correct. That was it. All right. Thank you very much for joining our presentation, and our investor relation team is happy also to take questions that come after this presentation. Thank you very much.