Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,486
The BITRE figures out today for January 2016 give every indication that QF's occasional Boeing 744 flights between SYD and YVR have been successful.
We don't know the all important yield per seat but what is shown is that southbound from Canada to Australia, the load factor was 95 per cent (3750 passengers, 3948 seats, 11 total number of flights) and northbound a very healthy 84.1 per cent given that in January with school holidays ending one would normally expect northbound loadings to be quite a deal lighter.
Maybe the Oz- Canada nonstop flight 'market' is underserved with Air Canada receiving rather mixed reviews on various websites. Flying via LAX is an unattractive alternative to many, and time consuming to boot.
I don't know enough about WestJet to speculate as to whether it would ever take the risk of purchasing planes to commit to the lengthy sector to and from Oz from Canada's west coast. VA strikes me as fairly similar to my limited knowledge of WestJet: VA already flies between the Oz east coast and LAX, so it has taken the transpacific route risk.
Perhaps in time QF may inject more resources into this SYD - YVR - SYD route. I assume that since the Great Circle Sydney, Australia to Toronto, Canada distance is 15555 kilometres that is just too far for a nonstop flight in 2016 even if an airline was able to obtain the necessary slots and inter-governmental agreements, and perceived that between Canada's largest city and Sydney, Australia there was the demand for such an initiative and that it could be financially attractive for an airline, bearing in mind that for instance SQ struck trouble with its all-business class configuration between SIN and the USA east coast: it withdrew the monoclass offering due to losses or insufficient returns on shareholders' funds.
Conversely some airlines do very well across the Pacific from various locations: NZ is one and from MNL and now CEB PR is another, while JL, KE and OZ also carry many passengers from further north to the good ol' USA.
We don't know the all important yield per seat but what is shown is that southbound from Canada to Australia, the load factor was 95 per cent (3750 passengers, 3948 seats, 11 total number of flights) and northbound a very healthy 84.1 per cent given that in January with school holidays ending one would normally expect northbound loadings to be quite a deal lighter.
Maybe the Oz- Canada nonstop flight 'market' is underserved with Air Canada receiving rather mixed reviews on various websites. Flying via LAX is an unattractive alternative to many, and time consuming to boot.
I don't know enough about WestJet to speculate as to whether it would ever take the risk of purchasing planes to commit to the lengthy sector to and from Oz from Canada's west coast. VA strikes me as fairly similar to my limited knowledge of WestJet: VA already flies between the Oz east coast and LAX, so it has taken the transpacific route risk.
Perhaps in time QF may inject more resources into this SYD - YVR - SYD route. I assume that since the Great Circle Sydney, Australia to Toronto, Canada distance is 15555 kilometres that is just too far for a nonstop flight in 2016 even if an airline was able to obtain the necessary slots and inter-governmental agreements, and perceived that between Canada's largest city and Sydney, Australia there was the demand for such an initiative and that it could be financially attractive for an airline, bearing in mind that for instance SQ struck trouble with its all-business class configuration between SIN and the USA east coast: it withdrew the monoclass offering due to losses or insufficient returns on shareholders' funds.
Conversely some airlines do very well across the Pacific from various locations: NZ is one and from MNL and now CEB PR is another, while JL, KE and OZ also carry many passengers from further north to the good ol' USA.
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