While the
initial activity will focus on the carrier’s Milan operations, the first
long-haul Air Italy flight from Rome is due to begin next year.
September will
see the launch of a four-times-weekly Milan-Bangkok service operated by
an Airbus A330-200, and the carrier plans to open three more
long-haul routes by the end of the year, with a long-term plan to serve
50 destinations by 2022.
That mirrors the
transatlantic push of recent years from European carriers, with International
Airlines Group launching new destinations through its legacy airline and
its new low-cost, long-haul carrier Level; Air France-KLM signing a major
partnership with Delta Air Lines and Virgin Atlantic to help it grow in
that region; and Norwegian Air Shuttle continuing its advance.
Will Air Italy
be able to offer prices and service that compete in the already
crowded—and getting more so—transatlantic sphere?
Wresting back
business from LCCs, which have grown so fast in Italy that they now
control about half the market, will be vital if Air Italy is to be
successful, not least for the connecting potential of domestic flights.
Dublin-based Ryanair,
which now boasts 28% of the Italian market, chose Italy to launch its
connecting flight services, first at Milan Bergamo Airport and then at
Rome Fiumicino, and was a contender to bid
for Alitalia until its own flight cancellations crisis threw a
wrench in the works.
Setting out its
winter 2018 schedule for Italy, which includes 37 new routes and increased
frequencies on 18 existing ones, Ryanair says it expects 39
million passengers and 5% growth in Italy this year.
British LCC EasyJet has
a market share of 12% and is Italy’s third-largest airline, flying from
19 Italian airports, with more than 17 million passengers carried in
2017. It has 21 aircraft based at Milan Malpensa, five in Naples and
seven in Venice.
Well aware of
the potential for domestic routes to feed these long-haul services—if it
can lure passengers away from Ryanair and EasyJet—Air Italy
is putting in place a network of new domestic routes from Rome, Naples,
Palermo, Catania and Lamezia Terme, as of May 1. But whether it
can compete with the strength of the LCCs remains to be seen.
|
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.