AVIATION NEWS Back
To Index
Page
Oct 2008
British Airways is now effectively
'London Airways'
London:
British Airways has stopped being the UK's national
carrier and effectively become London Airways. Though
the airline still operates flights from Manchester,
Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen, but passengers
choice of destination from these cities is limited:
They can fly to any other city they like - so long
as it is London, The Independent reported. At the
weekend, the airline axed the last international flight
that neither departed from nor arrived at one of the
London airports, the 44-year-old link from New York
to Manchester. The slots at JFK have been redeployed
for a new BA route from Gatwick. "The decision to
withdraw the Manchester-New York service was a business
decision based on the increasingly poor performance
of the route. With increased transatlantic competition,
sadly the passenger yield was diluted and the route
was no longer viable," said a spokesman for BA. The
service flew in competition with Delta and Continental,
both of which have extensive domestic networks offering
hundreds of connecting flights. In addition, the airline
had to crew the service from London, which added further
cost. The Manchester-New York link was opened in May
1964, the first regular intercontinental route in
a network from the North-west's main airport that
would later see BA flying to Dubai, Bangkok, Hong
Kong and Los Angeles. Even when these services were
withdrawn, many European services survived. As recently
as 2006, BA flew from Manchester to Nice, Rome and
Venice. Other UK airports tell a similar story, according
to figures given by the schedules specialist OAG.
In October 2003, BA operated a total of 583 flights
from Bristol and 336 from Inverness. Today, BA has
no links with either airport. After BA Connect failed
to staunch the losses on regional routes, the operation
was sold to its rival, Flybe.
-Oct
28, 2008
|