WishUWereHere wrote: » Thanks for sharing this. On opening the page, I saw the following on the scroll bar on the RH side:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4_t7a0gXRQ On 1m23, there is a TU 134 belonging to Aeroflot taking off. Did Aeroflot fly regularly then between Dublin & ( I guess ) Moscow?
HTCOne wrote: » Shannon seems to elicit unusually emotive responses from people in our industry. Facts are because of the large number of US multinationals based operating in the Shannon Free Zone, Limerick and Galway, there has always been a decent amount of premium traffic to the States, certainly more than you would expect for such a small airport. The inbound US demand is also high but very seasonal. On the other hand, routes to Paris and Barcelona have been tried and failed numerous times. The DLH FRA route mentioned above was 1 x weekly, to a major hub....1 x weekly. It’s my local airport, I work in the town. My fellow locals will moan and moan about how policy wise it is neglected, great airport, Dublin is too big, and then they’ll happily drive up to Dublin because the flight was cheaper, or there were more options, or the direct flight wasn’t operating from Shannon. The Shannon group made a profit last year, but it was all from property they own / manage / let out across the country, the airport itself.....I don’t think it could survive without Government help it receives.
Jack1985 wrote: » Nothing regarding the schedule is confirmed, any referrals to 2 based aircraft are guesses. It would be my opinion that it will be a few more months if not in 2021 before US services resume however and that is purely based on the situation over there. Fact is both JFK/BOS enjoy very high yields in J - If they weren't those routes wouldn't previously have been daily during the Summer with EI's latest single aisle aircraft increasing J seats by 4 on each flight (from 12 to 16). Plenty of tour group agreements in eco from some of the wealthiest regions in the tri-state east coast area too. It's very unfortunate BCN/CDG didn't get a chance to give real data on how they would perform, I would point out it was the first attempt at giving the routes the option to perform through US connections as well as locally and inbound.
knockon wrote: » 330-200’s getting ready to go to Spain for parking. GEY and LAX (scrapping I believe). What did the cabin crew do on west coast US operations for rest seeing as there is no pod fitted on EY?
billy few mates wrote: » Do you honestly believe that the hundreds of posts bitching about the BC seats on GEY was one of the deciding factors in this...?
BZ wrote: » I agree about our fellow locals moaning about price etc but not using the services its a complete pain as they are the first to pipe up when a service fails. I would rather pay the bit extra and be home in 20mins from SNN than travel to DUB and back any day.
TPMP wrote: » I agree with what you're saying but sometimes it's unavoidable, and nothing to do with money. The Tenerife flight in Winter flies out on a Thursday morning. That's no good for people who work. No choice but to go to Dublin. Often the various other flights to the UK/Europe are once a week or have dodgy flight times that just don't make any sense for a mid week/weekend away. I'm all for supporting my local airport, but if the flights don't suit me then I have no choice but to look elsewhere.
goingnowhere wrote: » IAG's position is strong, cash in bank, good management, strong profits and with the exception of BA has already restructured heavily to deliver savings, everyone else has either been in trouble or were not delivering profitability levels so were exposed badly. IAG success depends on dealing with BA cost and its reliance on LHR is going to hurt it as its 20-30 euro a passenger more to operate there vs most other airports. IAG has already shutdown its Austrian Level operation. Its not free money and any government bailout comes with a cost, Lufthansa is being forced to continue its fleet replacement, why A320 and A350 are built in Hamburg... Lufthansa (group) €9bn - wasn't a strong performer and wasn't delivering the profitability it should, profits dropped by 44% in 2019 (IAG reported 3 times the profit of Lufthansa group for same period) AF €6bn - basket union case KLM €3.4bn - dragged down as its part of AF, as a global airline badly impacted due reliance on AMS TAP €1.4bn - wasn't a strong performer and wasn't delivering the profitability it should Iberia +Vueling €1.1bn - access to an overdraft basically Alitalia - seriously stop putting money into it Comm SAS £1.08bn - almost went to the wall a few years back Norwegian £230m - seriously stop putting money into it Any bailout needs an assessment of going concern, is the business viable? Alitalia needs to be put out of its misery
WishUWereHere wrote: » Purely from a layman's perspective, very informative and interesting post. Can I ask, just what is wrong with Alitalia? They seem to be permanently in the sh*t.
goingnowhere wrote: » IAG's position is strong, cash in bank, good management, strong profits and with the exception of BA has already restructured heavily to deliver savings, everyone else has either been in trouble or were not delivering profitability levels so were exposed badly. IAG success depends on dealing with BA cost and its reliance on LHR is going to hurt it as its 20-30 euro a passenger more to operate there vs most other airports. IAG has already shutdown its Austrian Level operation. Its not free money and any government bailout comes with a cost, Lufthansa is being forced to continue its fleet replacement, why A320 and A350 are built in Hamburg... Lufthansa (group) €9bn - wasn't a strong performer and wasn't delivering the profitability it should, profits dropped by 44% in 2019 (IAG reported 3 times the profit of Lufthansa group for same period) AF €6bn - basket union case KLM €3.4bn - dragged down as its part of AF, as a global airline badly impacted due reliance on AMS TAP €1.4bn - wasn't a strong performer and wasn't delivering the profitability it should Iberia +Vueling €1.1bn - access to an overdraft basically Alitalia - seriously stop putting money into it SAS £1.08bn - almost went to the wall a few years back Norwegian £230m - seriously stop putting money into it Any bailout needs an assessment of going concern, is the business viable? Alitalia needs to be put out of its misery
Kcormahs wrote: » I’d easily see Aer Lingus being cut in 25% at least (routes/frequencies you name it) than the Government intervening to keep its size.
Graham wrote: » I think that's pretty much a foregone conclusion. It would make no sense for EI to maintain pre-covid capacity in the current market.
Kcormahs wrote: » Abroad the bailouts have conditions on protecting jobs and links.
Kcormahs wrote: » And what about all that staff, either 20% 30% etc surplus. All made redundant as a consequence? Abroad the bailouts have conditions on protecting jobs and links.
vicwatson wrote: » Haven’t the German government taken shares in Lufthansa though?
Munsterbhoy wrote: » Any idea if AL Dub - Copenhagen will be back soon.