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A lot of people use the BA/EI codeshare already but I can only see it being used more and more now.
The added benefit of the earlier departure plus clearing the first part of US immigration in Dublin is a massive plus for passengers!
Am I right I’m thinking that KLM had all the paperwork and contracts l ready to base a B737-700 at LBA only for another UK airport to nip them over the line..?
It’s only going to increase KLM’s appeal so I wouldn’t be surprised if we do see an aircraft upgrade there!
Despite the fact the route has increased passengers year on year, the route is a loss maker due to the requirement to deduct Air Passenger Duty and London Heathrow landing fees from each fare - so the decision has been taken to use the valuable slots on routes that will make money despite the loss of interlining passengers.
When we have numpties who live in Leeds who are willing to travel across the Pennines to fly from Manchester to London it's no wonder Leeds flights are being scaled back. Road and rail access to Leeds Bradford Airport will need to be greatly improved before people start to use it more for business flights. I know the journey times to Manchester by road or rail are not exactly great from this side of the Pennines but at the same time if you're stuck in traffic bumper to bumper through Kirkstall, it's not giving people the confidence to use LBA for business travel. #sayitasitis #justsaying
Heather, so why do British Airways choose LBA flights to chop over Manchester flights. Like the city of Leeds, Manchester has excellent rail connections to London. Manchester airport also has an abundance of long haul operations reducing the need for London connections for onward destinations. City specific Leeds is no less relevant than the city of Manchester, both have vibrant and expanding centres so I just don't get why Manchester airport is favoured by BA for London ops to such a large extent. The only thing I can come up with is its appalling road links that so many people make reference to when discussing flying from LBA.
If BA want to free up slots for new routes, their two shortest routes are LBA and MAN, and as they are not going to axe flights out of MAN
Manchester airport also has an abundance of long haul operations reducing the need for London connections for onward destinations.
Whilst the BA cutbacks on LBA-LHR have given rise to understandable disappointment, it seems that some here have introduced a narrative that the alternative was to cut MAN flights ... which BA have decided not to do because they love MAN so much. Hmmm ... right. Let's just pause and think about that one for a minute!Where is the evidence that a straight choice was made between MAN and LBA services anyway? First I've heard of it.
Now let's push prejudice aside here and examine the facts. Just over a decade ago, MAN-LHR offered twelve daily departures by British Airways (and there was competition on the route then as well - eight daily from BMI, now themselves integrated into BA). Types used by BA were B752 and B763. Additionally, there were upto eight daily BA departures to LGW using B737-family equipment. Today, the MAN-LGW service is no more. Whilst it was viable in its own right, the value of those scarce Gatwick slots meant that the MAN flights were axed in favour of more lucrative redeployment of those slots. Sound familiar? Aviation economics at work. Meanwhile, MAN-LHR now offers a typical eight departures per day using smaller A320-family types with no competition on the route. Based on the former BAW / BMI combined schedules, around 12 slot-pairs per day have been stripped from MAN-LHR in favour of more lucrative redeployment on other routes. To lament the loss of some LBA-LHR schedules is wholly understandable, but to suggest that it has happened because MAN gets the "sacred cow" treatment is really quite embarrassing. Twelve redeployed LHR slot-pairs per day betray the truth. Playing the "martyr card" versus MAN doesn't work here.
Unfortunately, one needs to rethink the implications of this from the perspective of a BA management team rather than from that of an enthusiast. Those long-haul connections from MAN are in every case NOT operated by BA ... they are offered by "the competition", eating into what BA like to think of as "their" turf. Passengers using the Shuttle do in many cases transfer on to long-haul sectors which ARE operated by BA. So from a BA perspective, those long-haul operations available direct from MAN are actually a reason to pitch-in and compete by offering spoiler-fares via the Shuttle and LHR. Stepping back and abandoning the North entirely to their competitors is not good business for BA. The availability of competing long-hauls from the North is viewed as a challenge to BA, not a justification for yielding yet more ground to them.
Your suspicions that LBA-LHR is not considered a 'special case' in BA's eyes is correct. But any notion that MAN-LHR is itself a 'special case' in contrast to LBA is equally ludicrous. A cursory examination of the evidence knocks that idea dead. Similarly hilarious is the idea that BA would expect Leeds customers to travel to Manchester to 'protect' loadings on the MAN-LHR Shuttle. They will take the train to Kings Cross, or drive. Afew punters with existing bookings could be rerouted over MAN rather than cancelled, but long-term the MAN-LHR Shuttle is not intended as a service for the Yorkshire market. BA are astute enough to understand that.
So, yes, the BA cutbacks at LBA are disappointing. But in looking for an explanation, examine straight aviation economics ... follow the money. Decisions like this are not made based upon petty local insecurities, or an irrational preference for the airport down the road. They are made based upon the most cost-effective use of those very scarce slots at both LHR and LGW. That is why Manchester, in turn, has seen its own London flights slashed by two-thirds over the last decade or so. Blame economic reality, not pro-MAN prejudice.
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