Sri Lanka Aviation

Collapse
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • vishwa
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2014
    • 153

    #10786
    Airlines welcome reduction in charges



    The airline industry yesterday welcomed the reduction in charges, noting that the move will boost business climate and tourist arrivals. The Cabinet on Sunday gave approval for a slew of charges, including ground handling, aviation fuel and embarkation levy, to be reduced for six months, to assist the tourism industry to recover after the Easter Sunday attacks. At a special press conference yesterday, the Board of Airline Representatives (BAR) and the Sri Lanka Association of Airline Representatives (SLAAR) assured their full support to Sri Lanka Tourism, by increasing capacity and resuming cancelled frequencies.

    “Immediately after the 21 April attacks, 41 frequencies to Sri Lanka per week were cancelled by airlines, causing a traffic drop.

    With this move, all the airlines will now fully support to increase the capacity and resume those cancelled frequencies. We will make sure that all the airlines will work closely with their Head Offices to increase the frequencies,” BAR Chairman Dimuthu Tennakoon told journalists.

    Noting that reduction in fuel and ground handling costs accounts to a significant percentage of any airline operator, BAR expect that the airlines will also work closely with tour operators in those markets to increase tourist numbers into Sri Lanka with attractive airfares from all markets.

    Sri Lanka is comparatively very expensive in the region and this move will reduce the overall cost of operation for the airlines.

    China Eastern Airlines yesterday confirmed that the airline would resume operation to Colombo from 1 September. The airline cancelled their Sri Lankan summer schedule from 1 May until further notice, following the Easter Sunday terror attacks and after the Chinese Government issued an adverse travel advisory on Sri Lanka.

    China Eastern stopped the four weekly flights operating from Colombo to Shanghai from 1 May.

    “The first flight will be operational from 1 September, followed by the second flight in October. Thereafter we will increase the frequency to our normal four flights per week,” China Eastern Airlines General Sales Agent Dart Aviation Director and General Manger Eustace Silva said.

    He also said with the introduction of new concessions for the airlines operating to Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA), there are possibilities to increase frequencies.

    “We might go for a daily flight,” he added.

    Emirates Area Manager for Sri Lanka and Maldives Chandana de Silva said they are also back on track to four flights a day from this month.

    “Most of the airlines unfortunately had to cancel many flights, including Emirates. We had to ad-hoc cancel our flights for about a month or two as it was not viable. It is on a very positive note I say, we are back on track to four flights a day,” he added.

    It was also pointed that Qatar Airways have also resumed all their flights to Colombo. However, some Indian carriers like Air India and Indigo are yet to resume normal operations to Sri Lanka.

    SLAAR Chairman Gerard Victoria said the move will give some impetus for new airlines to look at coming to Sri Lanka.

    Vistara, a joint venture between Tata and Singapore Airlines, as well as Jetstar, a wholly owned subsidiary of Qantas, were looking at commencing operations to Sri Lanka. “I am aware that some of our members had some airlines that were going to commence operations to Sri Lanka during this year. However, following the 21 April Easter Sunday terror attacks they delayed those plans. It is important to talk to them and encourage them to operate to Sri Lanka, at least from October onwards,” he stressed.

    Noting that cost of operation will be more viable now for the airlines, he however said that the reduction in handling charges would not reflect much on the ticketing prices.

    Following this move by the authorities, BAR Deputy Chairman Chandana De Silva said some of the Indian, Middle Eastern, and Far Eastern carriers now have the confidence to come back and retain. “This is a great step towards positivity. With the introduction of these concessions, all airlines will propagate that to our members, and positively look at this position for us to come back and retain. This will also influence us to get our lost passengers back again,” he added.

    He also said for the month of July, onwards they have not seen any cancellations.

    “We have seen a slight pickup for October, November and December in bookings and I am confident that this momentum would pick up,” de Silva said.

    He also emphasised that this message has to be reached to every mega carrier such as Lufthansa and British Airways to encourage more airlines to look at Colombo as a viable destination to operate.

    Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority (SLTDA) Chairman Johanne Jayaratne said that with ground handling, fuel and embarkation levy reduced, overall airline operations costs would drop to about 20% to 25% at the BIA, making it on par with other Asian airports.

    “This has been an ongoing problem for the past 12 years, and these three components have to come down to encourage tourism to grow. From the response I got over the past 24 hours, the airlines are very positive on the move, and we will definitely see an increase in the frequencies,” he added.

    Jayaratne said each airline has a different agreement in terms of ground handling with SriLankan Airlines, and instead of doing a blanket discount, they have presented with the present tier based on the aircraft that’s coming in as well as the frequency.

    “In terms of fuel, it was decided that we look at the prices in Chennai. We found that it would be the best price for us to follow. With regards to the embarkation levy, which was at $50 and was increased by $10 in Budget 2019, we have now decided to keep it at $50. All of this would relate to about 20% to 25% reduction in overall operational cost of an airline. When all of this is actually put into practice, we will be on par with the Asian region,” he pointed out.

    SLTDA believes that the airlines will do the necessary to have this reduction also reflected in the ticketing, which would further help to attract more tourists into Sri Lanka.

    “This (reduction in airport charges) comes at a very timely moment, because we just rolled out a new campaign in India in collaboration with Master Card and, we are already seeing an increase in those numbers,” he said.

    Jayaratne said the recovery is happening in much faster than they anticipated. “We are very well on the path to reaching the numbers where we were in 2018. On Sunday alone, we recorded over 3,700 tourist arrivals when our median arrival number was about 7,000 last year. As of end of May we exceeded one million tourist arrivals. If we are to look at it from a very conservative standpoint at 60,000 arrivals for a month for the next few months, we will top 2 million tourist arrivals by end of the year,” he pointed out.

    Following the 21 April Easter Sunday attacks, a total of 11 foreign airlines reduced their flight frequencies to Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA). By April 2018, 29 airlines were serving Sri Lanka offering 300 flights per week. However, following the Easter Sunday attacks, the connectivity was reduced to 239 flights per week, resulting in a total of 41 flights cancellations, which amounts to a loss of seat supply by 8,000 per week from six countries – China, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Oman, and Thailand. Rossiya (Russian Airline) withdrew completely (two flights/week), resulting in a complete loss of direct air connectivity with Russia. However, most of the airlines which reduced frequencies are low-cost carriers.
    Last edited by vishwa; 11-07-2019, 07:33 AM.

    Comment

    • ejanson65
      Senior Member
      • Jul 2013
      • 628

      #10787
      Much bigger mess that requires immediate action imho:-

      http://www.dailymirror.lk/news-featu...nce/131-170724
      Always fly a stable approach - it's the only stability you'll find this business

      Comment

      • WDR
        Junior Member
        • Apr 2017
        • 28

        #10788
        Visakhapatnam: Sri Lankan airline company FitsAir will soon ..

        Read more at:
        Visakhapatnam: Sri Lankan airline company FitsAir will soon launch its direct services from Visakhapatnam airport to Bandaranaike international airpor.

        Comment

        • 4R-ALA
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2013
          • 383

          #10789
          seems like A333 4R-ALR is AOG in NRT since 18 July - anyone in here knows why?

          Comment

          • WDR
            Junior Member
            • Apr 2017
            • 28

            #10790
            SriLankan to get new airbuses as per five-year strategic business plan

            COLOMBO (News 1st) – SriLankan Airlines is converting an order for four Airbus A350-900s to Airbus A330-900s as a part of the airline’s new five-year Strategic Business Plan.

            In addition to the conversion, the national carrier of Sri Lanka also plans to expand its fleet with the new narrowbody and widebody planes.

            The Chief Executive Vipula Gunatilleka told Air Transport World, “Our fleet would grow from current twenty-seven to thirty-four and we would end up by 2023-2024 with nineteen widebody and fifteen narrowbody aircraft,”

            The flag carrier currently operates five Airbus A320-200s, two Airbus A320neos, two Airbus A321-200s, four Airbus A321neos, seven Airbus A330-200s and seven Airbus A330-300s.

            SriLankan first signed a Memorandum of Understanding for four Airbus A350-900s in 2013 and then increased the number of ordered aircraft to eight. However, the company later dropped half of the order.

            The Oneworld member company aims to transform itself into a financially viable airline group with a high presence on international routes by extending codeshare partnerships with the other Oneworld member airlines. The airline wants to position itself as a catalyst for the development of Sri Lanka’s tourism.

            Gunatilleka explained the focus of the new Strategic Business Plan as to develop a route network that matches customer demand and which will provide new market opportunities at the same time, including new destinations in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, the Far East, and Australia.

            The airline initially considers launching new routes from Colombo to Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta, Ho Chi Minh City, Frankfurt International, Paris CDG, Sydney Kingsford Smith, and Kathmandu, while making Sri Lanka an intercontinental strategic hub for air travel and freighter operations in the Asia-Africa-Middle East region.

            COLOMBO (News 1st) - SriLankan Airlines is converting an order for four Airbus A350-900s to Airbus A330-900s as a part of the airline's new five-year - Get the latest breaking news and top stories from Sri Lanka, the latest political news, sports news, weather updates, exam results, business news, entertainment news, world news and much more from News 1st, Sri Lanka's leading news network.

            Comment

            • Mach3
              Senior Member
              • Mar 2016
              • 110

              #10791
              Originally posted by WDR
              SriLankan to get new airbuses as per five-year strategic business plan

              COLOMBO (News 1st) – SriLankan Airlines is converting an order for four Airbus A350-900s to Airbus A330-900s as a part of the airline’s new five-year Strategic Business Plan.

              In addition to the conversion, the national carrier of Sri Lanka also plans to expand its fleet with the new narrowbody and widebody planes.

              The Chief Executive Vipula Gunatilleka told Air Transport World, “Our fleet would grow from current twenty-seven to thirty-four and we would end up by 2023-2024 with nineteen widebody and fifteen narrowbody aircraft,”

              The flag carrier currently operates five Airbus A320-200s, two Airbus A320neos, two Airbus A321-200s, four Airbus A321neos, seven Airbus A330-200s and seven Airbus A330-300s.

              SriLankan first signed a Memorandum of Understanding for four Airbus A350-900s in 2013 and then increased the number of ordered aircraft to eight. However, the company later dropped half of the order.

              The Oneworld member company aims to transform itself into a financially viable airline group with a high presence on international routes by extending codeshare partnerships with the other Oneworld member airlines. The airline wants to position itself as a catalyst for the development of Sri Lanka’s tourism.

              Gunatilleka explained the focus of the new Strategic Business Plan as to develop a route network that matches customer demand and which will provide new market opportunities at the same time, including new destinations in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, the Far East, and Australia.

              The airline initially considers launching new routes from Colombo to Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta, Ho Chi Minh City, Frankfurt International, Paris CDG, Sydney Kingsford Smith, and Kathmandu, while making Sri Lanka an intercontinental strategic hub for air travel and freighter operations in the Asia-Africa-Middle East region.

              https://www.newsfirst.lk/2019/07/22/...business-plan/
              Aren't we tired of hearing this, UL will always dream as usual and the country would not see any significant growth in this field. Ordering new aircrafts are alright on a replacement basis for the aging aircraft's such as the A330-200 and a few A320 which feels were dated and tired but on a growth we can be ascertain that it is talk only.

              And I remember even in the recent past that UL operated routes such as CDG and FRA and stopped them claiming that they were not profitable. Why are they considering re flying these routes when already superior airlines such as EK,EY,QR,WY,KU,TK,KL have bloated these routes and are offering competitive rates with unmatched service quality, one advantage i find is that UL will be able to provide a direct flight which saves time. I find the fares offered by foreign airlines much more attractive and even prestigious airlines such as KLM operating on them are a good choice when compared to UL.

              And finally no point of purchasing new aircraft if they are not being flown or if they are torn apart for parts like 4R-ALS. It has been inactive for months and saw it last week at BIA in the maintenance hanger still painted in white but didn't see a missing engine though, wonder why it is not flying maybe the high dense config is the issue. But at least if they are not utilizing the aircraft why dont they try and lease it to someone else although the aircraft does not belong to UL in the first place.

              Though this doesn't relate to this article, i must say that BIA is in a really poor state now, it is reflecting its age pretty badly and arriving at SL now feels like a Monday morning, there isn't anything fascinating about the airport anymore. the GoSL should refurbish or develop the airport so that the passengers can atleast come by a foreign airline and disembark in some comfort and splendour because UL isnt performing well and arriving at BIA now is like travel back in time, I have been travelling for the past 20 years and it still feels the same. No matter what it is the tax-payer who has to ultimately suffer although ironically it is from the tax-payers money the airline operates.

              Comment

              • channa
                Senior Member
                • May 2013
                • 230

                #10792
                Originally posted by Mach3
                Aren't we tired of hearing this, UL will always dream as usual and the country would not see any significant growth in this field. Ordering new aircrafts are alright on a replacement basis for the aging aircraft's such as the A330-200 and a few A320 which feels were dated and tired but on a growth we can be ascertain that it is talk only.

                And I remember even in the recent past that UL operated routes such as CDG and FRA and stopped them claiming that they were not profitable. Why are they considering re flying these routes when already superior airlines such as EK,EY,QR,WY,KU,TK,KL have bloated these routes and are offering competitive rates with unmatched service quality, one advantage i find is that UL will be able to provide a direct flight which saves time. I find the fares offered by foreign airlines much more attractive and even prestigious airlines such as KLM operating on them are a good choice when compared to UL.

                And finally no point of purchasing new aircraft if they are not being flown or if they are torn apart for parts like 4R-ALS. It has been inactive for months and saw it last week at BIA in the maintenance hanger still painted in white but didn't see a missing engine though, wonder why it is not flying maybe the high dense config is the issue. But at least if they are not utilizing the aircraft why dont they try and lease it to someone else although the aircraft does not belong to UL in the first place.

                Though this doesn't relate to this article, i must say that BIA is in a really poor state now, it is reflecting its age pretty badly and arriving at SL now feels like a Monday morning, there isn't anything fascinating about the airport anymore. the GoSL should refurbish or develop the airport so that the passengers can atleast come by a foreign airline and disembark in some comfort and splendour because UL isnt performing well and arriving at BIA now is like travel back in time, I have been travelling for the past 20 years and it still feels the same. No matter what it is the tax-payer who has to ultimately suffer although ironically it is from the tax-payers money the airline operates.
                UL have been using 4R-ALS on CMB-JED route once in a while.

                Comment

                • banuthev
                  Administrator
                  • Dec 2010
                  • 3947

                  #10793
                  Originally posted by WDR
                  Visakhapatnam: Sri Lankan airline company FitsAir will soon ..

                  Read more at:
                  http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/a...campaign=cppst
                  I thought Fitsair have 70 seater ATR?

                  Comment

                  • banuthev
                    Administrator
                    • Dec 2010
                    • 3947

                    #10794
                    Originally posted by channa
                    UL have been using 4R-ALS on CMB-JED route once in a while.
                    Why 4R-ALS less utilised? Will it get Srilankan livery?

                    Comment

                    • banuthev
                      Administrator
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 3947

                      #10795
                      Srilankan CEO said Jet Airways exit has helped us. Do you think UL can exploit Jet Airways exit?

                      Comment

                      • Haleef
                        Senior Member
                        • Nov 2012
                        • 1468

                        #10796
                        Originally posted by banuthev
                        I thought Fitsair have 70 seater ATR?
                        That information is incorrect. FitsAir does have an ATR72-600, and can carry more than "14 people" onboard.
                        Haleef Ismail
                        www.youtube.com/haleef1 | www.instagram.com/cmb_spotter

                        Comment

                        • ejanson65
                          Senior Member
                          • Jul 2013
                          • 628

                          #10797
                          https://www.newsfirst.lk/2019/07/22/...business-plan/[/QUOTE]

                          Another fantasy story by yet another Political appointee whose real job is to enable the Theft/Fraud/Corruption/Nepotism/Incompetence/Treason/Racketeering that represents daily operations at SriLankan.

                          Notice how he doesn't give any facts - just vague generalisations.

                          He also doesn't explain how he intends to pay for all of this.

                          Here's the harsh reality.

                          Debts/losses and forward liabilities are at least U$ 3 Billion in total.

                          Aircraft orders are just a way for Corrupt Politicians and their Cronies to pocket millions in commissions while saddling the people of Sri Lanka with Billions in debt.

                          A one year investigation has just wrapped up. People have been named and Criminal acts have been reported on. Not one person has been charged and the report has not been made public.

                          I don't expect that to change.

                          @mach3

                          It's all very simple - the country and the Airline are both bankrupt. There is no money for anything - it's all been spent or stolen.
                          Always fly a stable approach - it's the only stability you'll find this business

                          Comment

                          • banuthev
                            Administrator
                            • Dec 2010
                            • 3947

                            #10798
                            Singapore Airlines plans A359 service to Colombo effec 1 Oct 19.

                            Comment

                            • shiwankaswe
                              Junior Member
                              • Aug 2017
                              • 26

                              #10799
                              Originally posted by banuthev
                              Singapore Airlines plans A359 service to Colombo effec 1 Oct 19.
                              Means soon i am flying on 359...
                              thanks for the good news

                              Comment

                              • vishwa
                                Senior Member
                                • Feb 2014
                                • 153

                                #10800
                                Is this started recently? i was not aware of this direct connection by UL

                                any reason why UL connecting directly NRT-MLE? shouldn't they touch down operation like any other air lines??

                                Comment

                                Working...