The United Arab Emiratesinfo-icon' flagship carrier Etihad said Thursday it lost $1.87 billion in 2016, blaming "one-off impairment charges and fuel hedging losses" for the massive loss.

The Abu Dhabiinfo-icon-based airline's loss comes during a tough time for the Gulf's long-haul carriers, as a diplomatic crisis with Qatarinfo-icon upended regional air routes and Trump administration's travelinfo-icon ban on six majority Musliminfo-icon nations also hurt their businessinfo-icon.

Etihad's loss also comes as it re-evaluates its business plans following the January departure of CEO James Hogan. He led an aggressive multi-year buying spree that saw the Mideast carrier snap up stakes in airlines from Europe to Australiainfo-icon.

Etihad said the loss included a $1.06 billion charge on aircraft reflecting lower marketinfo-icon values and a $808 million charge on certain assets and financial exposures to equity partners, mainly related to Alitalia and Air Berlin. It also blamed a slowdown in the cargo market and legacy fuel hedging costs for the loss.

"A culmination of factors contributed to the disappointing results for 2016," said Mohamed Mubarak Fadhel al-Mazrouei, chairman of the Etihad Aviation Group.

Peter Baumgartner, Etihad's new CEO, offered a grim outlook.

"We are in an industry characterized by overcapacity, declining market sizes on key routes and changing customer behavior as a weak global economyinfo-icon affects spending appetite," Baumgartner said in a statement.

Etihad has more than 110 passenger and cargo destinations around the worldinfo-icon and flies a fleet of over 120 Airbus and Boeing aircraft.