Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
1 Billion Dollar Maleysian Airport Sinks
AirAsia CEO Aireen Omar, spoke on the subject to the Bloomberg news agency.
Omar, "Airport still sinking. This issue needs to have a serious solution, "he said.
The construction cost of this airport is 1 billion dollars was mentioned.
Monday, July 27, 2015
Air New Zealand Events Executive Opportunity Awaits
Can you imagine turning a company's courtyard into Buenos Aires? Could
you create a beautiful New Zealand national park inside a corporate
meeting room? - Events Executive opportunity awaits - https://lnkd.in/exDBcH9
Emirates Commences Services to Bamako Flights
Emirates will commence services to Bamako, the capital and largest city
of Mali from 25th October 2015. Bamako will be linked to Emirates’
current four times weekly service to Dakar, Senegal, and served by an
Emirates Airbus A340-300. The new route will connect with Emirates’
network of 24 cities in the Far East and Australasia and 16 in the
Middle East.
Virgin Airlines Velocity Points
Looking for a credit card that truly rewards you? AMEX are now offering
their Platinum credit card with a bonus of 100,000 Velocity Points – the
biggest-ever Velocity bonus offer. For more info and to apply, click
here: virg.co/cTETD
ANA Brussel-Tokyo Non Stop
Yōkoso, welkom, bienvenue Belgium! Swap waffles for wagyu and St. Gudula for Asakusa Sensōji!
ANA flies Brussels-Tokyo Narita non-stop from 25th October 2015. Your new terminal from Europe to Japan. For details: http://ana.ms/1KIVJbV (Photo courtesy of Visitbrussels)
State of Aviation: Why Airlines Must Take Control of Their Own Destiny
In this series, professionals debate the state – and future – of their industry. Read all the posts here and write your own (use #MyIndustry in the body of your post).
The outlook for airlines today is better than it has been for many years. That was the clear message from the recent annual meeting of the International Air Transport Association.
IATA expects airlines to report total profit of US$29.3 billion this year, compared with US$16.4 billion last year.
Passenger numbers in 2015 are growing at their fastest rate since 2010, economies continue to recover from the Global Financial Crisis, and fuel prices are relatively low, giving airlines a stable base for profitability. For the first time, IATA expects airlines – on average – to return their cost of capital.
Despite this strong performance, margins remain thin (a forecast 4 percent in 2015) in a sector where profits are always hard-earned.
But what makes me optimistic about the industry’s future is the work airlines are doing to take control of their destiny.
Business models are being reworked, fleets renewed, service revitalised and new partnerships formed. Much of this work has been hidden by tough economic conditions in recent years – now it’s starting to shine through.
That’s good news for travellers, because a healthy financial performance gives airlines the foundation to re-invest in service, technology and ultimately growth.
The longer-term challenge for the industry is to understand and respond to the deeper, underlying trends that will shape the future.
Arguably the most influential of these trends is the rise of the Asia-Pacific region.
Already the world’s biggest aviation region in terms of passenger numbers, by 2034 the Asia-Pacific market will be double the size of Europe and North America combined. Over time you would expect the region to close the profitability gap with the current leader, North America (set to report US$15.7 billion in profit this year, compared with the Asia-Pacific’s US$5.1 billion).
Airlines inside and outside the Asia-Pacific are looking for the best ways of serving the region’s diverse markets and connecting them to the other big global regions.
Consolidation between airlines has already happened on a large scale in North America and Europe. The Asia-Pacific is the next frontier, but consolidation here is likely to happen via a mix of different models, rather than pure mergers. I see Qantas playing a big role in this emerging Asia-Pacific network through organic growth, through partnerships with airlines like Emirates, China Eastern and (as we announced most recently) American Airlines, and through minority investment in the Jetstar airlines.
A
strong brand, a broad network and the right partners will all be
competitive advantages in the changing global market. But potentially
the biggest competitive advantage of all is customer understanding – one of the other big themes of the IATA annual meeting.
With hundreds of millions of new passengers set to enter the global aviation market over the next two decades, the airlines that understand clearly what their customers want and shape service to their needs will have the best chance of success. Brands like Apple are the world leaders here – setting the standard for airlines to aspire to.
If airlines can combine stronger profitability with a new generation of customer-focused innovations, competing with the best brands in other sectors, the industry’s future will be bright indeed.
The outlook for airlines today is better than it has been for many years. That was the clear message from the recent annual meeting of the International Air Transport Association.
IATA expects airlines to report total profit of US$29.3 billion this year, compared with US$16.4 billion last year.
Passenger numbers in 2015 are growing at their fastest rate since 2010, economies continue to recover from the Global Financial Crisis, and fuel prices are relatively low, giving airlines a stable base for profitability. For the first time, IATA expects airlines – on average – to return their cost of capital.
Despite this strong performance, margins remain thin (a forecast 4 percent in 2015) in a sector where profits are always hard-earned.
But what makes me optimistic about the industry’s future is the work airlines are doing to take control of their destiny.
Business models are being reworked, fleets renewed, service revitalised and new partnerships formed. Much of this work has been hidden by tough economic conditions in recent years – now it’s starting to shine through.
That’s good news for travellers, because a healthy financial performance gives airlines the foundation to re-invest in service, technology and ultimately growth.
The longer-term challenge for the industry is to understand and respond to the deeper, underlying trends that will shape the future.
Arguably the most influential of these trends is the rise of the Asia-Pacific region.
Already the world’s biggest aviation region in terms of passenger numbers, by 2034 the Asia-Pacific market will be double the size of Europe and North America combined. Over time you would expect the region to close the profitability gap with the current leader, North America (set to report US$15.7 billion in profit this year, compared with the Asia-Pacific’s US$5.1 billion).
Airlines inside and outside the Asia-Pacific are looking for the best ways of serving the region’s diverse markets and connecting them to the other big global regions.
Consolidation between airlines has already happened on a large scale in North America and Europe. The Asia-Pacific is the next frontier, but consolidation here is likely to happen via a mix of different models, rather than pure mergers. I see Qantas playing a big role in this emerging Asia-Pacific network through organic growth, through partnerships with airlines like Emirates, China Eastern and (as we announced most recently) American Airlines, and through minority investment in the Jetstar airlines.
A
strong brand, a broad network and the right partners will all be
competitive advantages in the changing global market. But potentially
the biggest competitive advantage of all is customer understanding – one of the other big themes of the IATA annual meeting.With hundreds of millions of new passengers set to enter the global aviation market over the next two decades, the airlines that understand clearly what their customers want and shape service to their needs will have the best chance of success. Brands like Apple are the world leaders here – setting the standard for airlines to aspire to.
If airlines can combine stronger profitability with a new generation of customer-focused innovations, competing with the best brands in other sectors, the industry’s future will be bright indeed.
Discover Turkish Airlines
You won’t regret a trip to Brussels! Witness and discover the unique
characteristics of the European city with Turkish Airlines employees.
Check out blog at: http://bit.ly/1HsmbFK
The high-thrust TrentXWB-97
The high-thrust TrentXWB-97 has been developed to support long-haul routes for the Airbus A350-1000 https://lnkd.in/d8wNaXm
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