Moderators: jsumali2, richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
C010T3 wrote:They don't have a reason to ever fly to Doha.
720B wrote:The current Qatar - Colombia bilateral air agreement, is way too ambiguous (see link below, in Spanish only, sorry). Unlike other agreements where the fifth freedom destination points are clearly defined, here they were left as "to be determined by both countries authorities"; which opens the door to really anything.
Funny enough the original agreement specified Caracas, Kingston, Bridgetown or Montevideo as the fifth freedom destination points
jfk777 wrote:why would Qatar fly to or from BOG to LAX, Lima or Santiago ?
jfk777 wrote:While AV does have a right to complain about BOG to Spain why would Qatar fly to or from BOG to LAX, Lima or Santiago ? Qatar would do far better combining BOG with another Caribbean destination like Santo Domingo the DR. IF things were normal in Venezuela then Caracas and BOG would make a nice combo. Panama would make a nice destination for Qatar in that part of the world. BOG just doesn't make sense.
OGLOBAL wrote:I do agree with AV argument that they should serve routes uncovered maybe MXP FCO but not sure how much more demand is there to/from EU i mean it's pretty well covered already with LHR FRA AMS MAD BCN CDG but again i remember in the 90's AV had flights to ATH stockholm and FCO just not sure how beneficial this will be to QR
MalevTU134 wrote:OGLOBAL wrote:I do agree with AV argument that they should serve routes uncovered maybe MXP FCO but not sure how much more demand is there to/from EU i mean it's pretty well covered already with LHR FRA AMS MAD BCN CDG but again i remember in the 90's AV had flights to ATH stockholm and FCO just not sure how beneficial this will be to QR
AV never served Stockholm.
ARN wrote:Avianca never served Stockholm. The photo
on this website showing an Avianca 747 was
a one off flight to the Nobel Prize ceremony.
Information on Wikipedia is probably derived from
that photo.
BWIA served Stockholm in the late 80s. So did Cubana for a couple of years aswell some 15 years ago or so. Those have
been the only Latin American/Carribean carriers. .
In the early 90s SU-flights to SCL also made a stopover in ARN with the il-62.
C010T3 wrote:IMHO Avianca is right. The Colombia-Qatar market is very small. They don't have a reason to ever fly to Doha. Why should they be exposed to that kind of competition in the markets they do have interest in?
Colombia should only grant fifth freedom rights in markets that are irrelevant for a Colombian airline.
ARN wrote:Avianca never served Stockholm. The photo
on this website showing an Avianca 747 was
a one off flight to the Nobel Prize ceremony.
Information on Wikipedia is probably derived from
that photo.
BWIA served Stockholm in the late 80s. So did Cubana for a couple of years aswell some 15 years ago or so. Those have
been the only Latin American/Carribean carriers. .
In the early 90s SU-flights to SCL also made a stopover in ARN with the il-62.
MalevTU134 wrote:Believe it or not, but CCS, if done right, is extremely high-yielding. And both BOG and CCS are oil (and gas, at least CCS) capitals, so the petroindustry links are there.
MalevTU134 wrote:Why doesn't LIM or SCL make sense? DOH-BOG-LIM/SCL is perfectly logical, isn't it? And don't forget that for the return flight to DOH, QR would most probably need to stop somewhere due to BOG's elevation, so even DOH-BOG-LIM-DOH is possible.
http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=doh-bog%0D%0Adoh-ccs-bog&MS=wls&DU=mi
DOH BOG 292° (W) 289° (W) 8,261 mi
2 segment path:
DOH CCS 293° (NW) 291° (W) 7,630 mi
CCS BOG 231° (SW) 243° (SW) 636 mi
8,266 mi (+0.1%)
Rajahdhani wrote:MalevTU134 wrote:Believe it or not, but CCS, if done right, is extremely high-yielding. And both BOG and CCS are oil (and gas, at least CCS) capitals, so the petroindustry links are there.
QR seems to be rather sensitive to market and business demands (at least more so, than - comparatively - EY), and with the current situation in Venezuela - I doubt they would be able to get necessary air transport approval, or the cash/return agreements in place, in time - before the situation in Venezuela gets any better. It would expose them to alot of risk, and they would have to 'sweat' it out, until the nation's economy improves. Certainly it will, but the relative uncertainty makes new entry risky. I get precisely what you are saying though - there will always be a demand, and that demand (at the best of times, is a crown jewel in the AA Latin American Corona). Getting in, while the market is depressed - is a smart move, if you know if and how it will improve. Until that point, it's a bigger risk than might be worth.
All that said, it is more likely (due to operational constraints) than this...MalevTU134 wrote:Why doesn't LIM or SCL make sense? DOH-BOG-LIM/SCL is perfectly logical, isn't it? And don't forget that for the return flight to DOH, QR would most probably need to stop somewhere due to BOG's elevation, so even DOH-BOG-LIM-DOH is possible.
I guess it is about routing. "Backtracking" through LIM might be an issue. Interestingly, your pairing of CCS would be a very good one, and not jeopardize or canabalize any LATAM feeds/yields.
BOG-LIM would compete - not only against AV, but T0 (Avianca Peru), but also FC (Viva Colombia).
As is, it is achievable (via code-share, or via JV/ATI in future), on LP (Latam Peru), and 4C (Latam Colombia, formerly Aires).
This then returns the idea of CCS - which, despite the detractors; would be a decent GCMapper stop...http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=doh-bog%0D%0Adoh-ccs-bog&MS=wls&DU=mi
DOH BOG 292° (W) 289° (W) 8,261 mi
2 segment path:
DOH CCS 293° (NW) 291° (W) 7,630 mi
CCS BOG 231° (SW) 243° (SW) 636 mi
8,266 mi (+0.1%)
P.S. - the GCMapper route would need to be adjusted some, in order to be used in the real world. As is, flying over Libya would be inadvisable, and tracking the whole thing North (a smidgen) so as to maximize the flight time over the Med., might be worth it. Either way, approx. .1% would make a decent argument for CCS, even sweeter. I am sure that cheap fuel, and perhaps an ability to use said locally 'trapped' currency', might make it even more so. Don't overnight crews there, but still, a great stop - just with noticeable risks of when the overall Venezuelan economy is not set to see stability in the near/medium term.