Virgin Atlantic eyes Sydney, Auckland, Singapore in expansion plan
Virgin wants a bigger slice of the Heathrow pie, and promises big things in return...
Virgin Atlantic says it would recommence flights to Sydney, while also adding Auckland, Singapore and Tokyo to its network, as part of a bold expansion plan which hinges on adding a third runway to London's Heathrow Airport.
However, the issue is less about congestion and more about British Airways' dominance of the airport's limited capacity: according to Virgin, BA's parent company International Airline Group holds more than 55% of all of takeoff and landing rights at Heathrow, with the remaining 45% spread thinly across all other airlines.
Opening a third runway and skewing the traffic share towards those other carriers would light the fuse on a dramatic growth phase for Virgin Atlantic, says CEO Shai Weiss.
"Heathrow has been dominated by one airline group for far too long," Weiss asserts. "The third runway is a once in a lifetime opportunity to change the status quo and create a second flag-carrier. This would lower fares and give real choice to passengers."
While a third runway for Heathrow might not open until 2026 Weiss has already earmarked 84 new destinations across Europe, the Americas and the Asia-Pacific region, compared to just 19 destinations on today's network map.
While most are within the airline's reach using its current fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliners, Airbus A350s and Airbus A330s, some – most notably Sydney and Auckland – lie outside the range of any current aircraft on the basis of being a non-stop flight from London, although Hong Kong or Singapore could serve as a conventional stopover point.
Virgin previously flew from London to Sydney via Hong Kong but shuttered the route in May 2014, citing "increasing costs and a challenging economic environment."
The airline at the time relied on a gas-guzzling four-engine Airbus A340, although it is now shifting towards more efficient twin-engine aircraft including the Airbus A350-1000, which this month made its debut between London and New York.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
08 May 2014
Total posts 48
Not ignoring the fact that LHR's 3rd runway would be many years away, didn't Virgin Atlantic just tell the ACCC it had no intentions of re-commencing flights to Australia?
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
09 May 2011
Total posts 362
Auckland seems an odd choice
Air New Zealand - Airpoints
21 Jan 2016
Total posts 193
Not really. Virgin Atlantic already has co-share arrangements with Air NZ, so flying to Auckland would give Virgin Atlantic access to Air NZ South Pacific services.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
26 Nov 2017
Total posts 16
There is no such thing as bad press! Seriously though, I had no idea of BA's dominance over the LHR slots.
20 Oct 2011
Total posts 77
I call bull on most of those. Sydney and Auckland would be continuations of existing flights (ie HKG) so would not require another Heathrow slot.
Most of the rest is highly aspirational. Like me picking out the colour of my 4th Tesla, assuming I'll win a lottery.
22 Jan 2018
Total posts 98
Sounds like a brainstorming session that went public, and the media blows it out of proportion. This airline has hardly delivered results as the uk's 7th largest. Do they really think they'll become the 2nd largest, and deliver on it?!! Even the choice of destinations was funny - Kolkotta?! Lol even air India ended European flights from there years ago.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
21 Mar 2017
Total posts 40
This is stupid. They cancelled Vancouver, Tokyo, Sydney, Nairobi, Moscow all in recent history over not being able to fill planes and now all of a sudden a third runway would magically fill their aircraft? Wtf?
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