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Obviously I'm not going to ask you how you are privy to the information but accepting what you say it's difficult to see how things might change without substantial subsidy from the airport owner or the Welsh Government, assuming the latter action became legal after 31 December this year if the UK does not mirror EU state aid rules.When Flybe moved from the 195 to the 175 on the CWL routes, the reduction of 30 seats per flight should have allowed the yields to strengthen. It didn't -- many of the route yields actually went down because of the continuing need to price-match or at least remain in the very same ballpark as competing services from BRS. All that happened is that the number of empty seats reduced, but the revenue per flight barely shifted. CWL is fundamentally a low yield market now but without the volumes of BRS to support the load factors of larger aircraft that can produce the lower seat costs to profitably fly with those yields.
I hadn't seen the latest bit, but if the revenue on dedicating an aircraft to CWL/EDI on the prime morning and evening slots doesn't cover the lion's share of the fixed costs of that aircraft, there's no point in doing it. Instead, if a CWL/EDI service can productively use off-peak capacity on an aircraft being paid for by another route, then fine. I think what's being said is that the latter is all that could be achieved and even that won't now work.
GLA/BHD yields were about the same as CWL/EDI from memory. With a much shorter flight time, the operating costs are lower. What we also don't know is where the aircraft for GLA/BHD is coming from!
Back to CWL, the biggest problem here is that several posters don't seem to like the answers being given. There's an unspoken thread running through this that the market at CWL simply can't support either the types of fares or the volumes needed to make regional flying work. That's the undercurrent of what is being said, even if you don't like it.
How much was the subsidy income % wise to the yeild then?The Flybe subsidy income was a very significant part of the overall equation at CWL and was to remain so after the move to Q400s. The way in which it was done was state aid compliant despite complaints from other airports.
I can't remember who told me but I didn't question it at the time. Just curious how you know this information? And if none of the routes were profitable even with support why didn't Flybe pull out?The support level was 18% of the overall income at Cardiff. Even then, it was still loss-making against the full costs of the aircraft including all crew costs and a share of the standby aircraft and those needed to cover heavy maintenance. The routes need support - even Edinburgh. CWL-BHD certainly was not one of Flybe's most profitable routes, and I'd question the sanity of anyone who might have told you it was.
bmibaby operated from CWL to BFS. In fact, after a couple of years of operation BFS was one of four routes that baby contracted Air Wales to operate on its behalf (PIK, BFS, CDG and ORK) because, according to an anna aero report , the 737s had too much capacity to operate the routes viably, with some other baby routes dropped for the same reason. After Air Wales went out of business in 2006 bmi baby restored their own aircraft to the BFS route and in 2007 Flybe began operating to BHD in competition. Part way through 2010 baby dropped BFS as it prepared to pull out of CWL.I was under the impression that the BHD route was a good monet earner for flybe.It was always the last route to get cancelled if there was any problems else where.If my thoughts are correct when BMI BABY ran the route there was no hint of the route not earning any money. Either way it would be nice to see the figures to verify if the route was making money or not,but we will never be privy to that.
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