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Yes i think it is interesting and both have their pros and cons and you'd have thought BRS would come out on top but for a change it was CWL! I agree I doubt we will ever know the reason that swayed Qatar to CWL rather than BRS.As my main aviation interest is in the economics of the subject I'd be fascinated to know the pros and cons that influenced Qatar in their decision. Unfortunately, I doubt that I ever will.
Funnily enough, I wondered about that. One snag is that the local news media (telly, radio and newspaper) are not very proactive when it comes to the airport. They rely almost exclusively on airport press releases that are usually reproduced with little if any editing.Would you have expected for Bristol Airport to make some comment about Qatar airways going to Cardiff? Along the lines of .....we are disappointed blah blah but will redouble our efforts blah blah
Or
Just pretend it never happened.
It was Radio Wales news headline for most of the afternoon at least and was reported all over social media with a lot of positivity.I looked at the Welsh media's reaction to Qatar and CWL. it was given considerable prominence.
I honestly don't think that'll happen. I think this is more than just an airline route. I think this is the start of a trade and financial connection between Wales and Qatar with potential investment from Qatar in projects like the South Wales Metro, Swansea tidal lagoon and maybe even the airport itself.Perhaps they don't want to burn any bridges that have been forged over the past while. Perhaps Qatar will do a Helvetic and hop over to brs later ..
Welcome...The QR CWL announcement has caused this long-time lurker to sign up! Having moved to the area from living within 30 minutes of LHR, BRS is quite a different experience, positive in some respects, not so much in others!
My own view on the CWL situation is that QR will at least start with a single-aisle aircraft. For a 7 hour flight that would not be my preference, even if BRS had won the route! I think that rather than chase a direct MEB3 competitor, BRS should redouble efforts to expand by attracting more connecting traffic (Brexit notwithstanding).
Although KL, LH (via BM codeshare), EI, SN and Wow all currently play in this space, with varying degrees of success, to my mind, bmi regional (or possibly FlyBE) is key to this debate. Almost all long haul far east carriers (CX, SQ, MH, TG etc.) are struggling against the MEB3. They have flights to many European gateways which a regional airline could feed from BRS. Airports like MXP, CPH or ZRH (with Brexit in mind) are prime candidates for feeder traffic which could go a long way to mitigate the QR CWL effect if BRS was to chase that traffic.
Unsurprisingly, the BM CCO has recently argued that building extra runways in the south east is the wrong approach for the UK as a whole, and instead the focus should be on attracting demand away from LHR to regional airports, which are not capacity constrained. This is what BRS wants too, so to me the strategy is obvious - more flexibility of connection points priced competitively to make passengers think twice about making the trip along the M4!
The QR CWL announcement has caused this long-time lurker to sign up! Having moved to the area from living within 30 minutes of LHR, BRS is quite a different experience, positive in some respects, not so much in others!
My own view on the CWL situation is that QR will at least start with a single-aisle aircraft. For a 7 hour flight that would not be my preference, even if BRS had won the route! I think that rather than chase a direct MEB3 competitor, BRS should redouble efforts to expand by attracting more connecting traffic (Brexit notwithstanding).
Although KL, LH (via BM codeshare), EI, SN and Wow all currently play in this space, with varying degrees of success, to my mind, bmi regional (or possibly FlyBE) is key to this debate. Almost all long haul far east carriers (CX, SQ, MH, TG etc.) are struggling against the MEB3. They have flights to many European gateways which a regional airline could feed from BRS. Airports like MXP, CPH or ZRH (with Brexit in mind) are prime candidates for feeder traffic which could go a long way to mitigate the QR CWL effect if BRS was to chase that traffic.
Unsurprisingly, the BM CCO has recently argued that building extra runways in the south east is the wrong approach for the UK as a whole, and instead the focus should be on attracting demand away from LHR to regional airports, which are not capacity constrained. This is what BRS wants too, so to me the strategy is obvious - more flexibility of connection points priced competitively to make passengers think twice about making the trip along the M4!
I first read on this thread about this at Heathrow on Weds waiting for my flight to Bahrain! Then I read about in (what used to be called a broadsheet) newspaper. That article hinted that investment opportunities in South Wales might be linked, possibly a Qatar Sovereign Wealth Fund investment in the airport itself! but no more than 'hints', no confirmed facts.
QR was the best option (out of the MEB3) for BRS as its One World, with a potential 'cross over' with BA, mostly.
Maybe CWL is reasonably convenient from the BRS area, but from places like Dorset & South Somerset its takes as long to get there as it does to LHR. Coming from further west I really wonder if travelers will do a U turn across the Severn Bridge, they'll probably just carry onto LHR. If they're using train or bus then the options are pretty limited to CWL. Can see it picking up pax from BRS and South Glos but not a lot more areas to the south of the Bristol Channel.
Etihad could conceivably try it at some stage in the future, doubt Emirates could get a 777 into BRS.
Personally having waited decades for a BRS / ME flight, then when it turns up it goes to CWL - most depressing. So its LHR for me in the foreseeable future.
For what its worth, my sources in Cardiff state that the Qatar flights are going to be mainly business class passengers. How can they guarantee this at this stage?
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