Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
RainerBoeing777 wrote:Will Iberia increase its services to BOG? There were rumors that it was going to increase the route from 7 weekly frequencies to 10 all operated with the Airbus A340-600
LH748 wrote:Just a random question: is there any particular reason why Iberia seems not to have any short flight numbers but only uses 4 digit numbers?
All their TATL flight numbers are 6XXX and I never quite understood why they wouldn't use shorter numbers. Most other airlines keep the very high numbers for codeshare flights but not Iberia. Is this just a Spanish quirk?
SCQ83 wrote:It is less risky to add more flights to a well-established destination. Before BA launched new destinations in the US, they quite "maxed out" the demand in trunk routes like JFK. And UX tries from time to time those secondary markets, like Iguazú or San Pedro Sula.
In any case, LatAm is not North America with thriving secondary cities like in the US/Canada. Wealth/business is heavily concentrated in capital cities or major urban centers like GRU. There is not much else feasible to be launched from Madrid in Latin America:
- Mexico: MTY / GDL: already mentioned by IB. It will happen eventually
- Nicaragua: MGA: launch cancelled b/c of the turmoil there
- Colombia: CTG: already mentioned by UX. It will happen eventually
- Brazil: BSB: already mentioned by IB. It will happen eventually when the Brazilian economy fully recovers
SCQ83 wrote:It is less risky to add more flights to a well-established destination. Before BA launched new destinations in the US, they quite "maxed out" the demand in trunk routes like JFK. And UX tries from time to time those secondary markets, like Iguazú or San Pedro Sula.
In any case, LatAm is not North America with thriving secondary cities like in the US/Canada. Wealth/business is heavily concentrated in capital cities or major urban centers like GRU. There is not much else feasible to be launched from Madrid in Latin America:
- Mexico: MTY / GDL: already mentioned by IB. It will happen eventually
- Nicaragua: MGA: launch cancelled b/c of the turmoil there
- Colombia: CTG: already mentioned by UX. It will happen eventually
- Brazil: BSB: already mentioned by IB. It will happen eventually when the Brazilian economy fully recovers
dcajet wrote:Effective Oct. 27, Iberia will add extra frequencies to the following cities in its main long haul market, Latin America:
EZE: goes to 17 weekly from the current 14, 3 additional flights with the 19J/269 A332, remaining 14 with the A346
IB6849 MAD 09:00 EZE 17:55 235 332
IB6848 EZE 19:45 MAD 11:55+1 235 332
GIG: goes to 5 from the current 4 frequencies, A333
MEX: goes to 17 weekly from the current 14, all flights with the A346
SCL goes to 10 weekly from the current 7 flights, A346
Kadish wrote:Good news for them. But every single time i read news like this im tempted to buy them a global map so they could see there r more places for opening new routes....n the same goes for ux.
Kadish wrote:Indeed is less risky, but adding new routes to USA, Japan, Thailand, India or Africa shouldn't be a problem.
SCQ83 wrote:That means that Madrid - Buenos Aires will be up to 6 daily this winter season (3 IB + 2 AR + 1 UX) and Madrid - Mexico will be up to 5 daily (3 IB + 2 AM) with probably back to up to 6 daily in summer (3 IB + 3 AM)
Demand in MAD-EZE is endless having closed 2017 with 815k passengers. The 2nd European route from EZE was FCO with 284k. If Norwegian ever enters MAD-EZE, the 1 million mark might not be unfeasible in a few years.
Luisvalero wrote:
Add to that the resumption of GYE, + ASU/VVI
SCQ83 wrote:Not unexpected. Given the political and the security situation, it would be unwise to launch flights to MGA at this time, even if that same crew was doing the return to MAD. I just have to think about what people said about CCS, where IB crew cannot even leave the hotels because of the security problems IIRC.Nicaragua: MGA: launch cancelled b/c of the turmoil there
dcajet wrote:The only way you can see IB in ASU or VVI is if UX leaves. Those markets can't support 2 Spanish airlines competing for a tiny piece of pie.
LTU932 wrote:SCQ83 wrote:Not unexpected. Given the political and the security situation, it would be unwise to launch flights to MGA at this time, even if that same crew was doing the return to MAD. I just have to think about what people said about CCS, where IB crew cannot even leave the hotels because of the security problems IIRC.Nicaragua: MGA: launch cancelled b/c of the turmoil there
And even if they were launching MGA, wasn't that going to be a triangular flight via GUA anyway? If so, wouldn't the crew change occur in GUA?
dcajet wrote:
GIG: goes to 5 from the current 4 frequencies, A333
airlinermiami wrote:Ethiopian is not dropping Madrid is tagging it with Lisbon only for the winter months. Lisbon is seasonal, Madrid is year round.
airlinermiami wrote:Ethiopian is not dropping Madrid is tagging it with Lisbon only for the winter months. Lisbon is seasonal, Madrid is year round.
About África even with fewer social ties, I think Iberia can do well if they have a good comercial strategy, Spain in very well geographically located for west african destinations.
I agree about North America , I believe Iberia could do a lot more business in North America but the UK has a lot more ties to north america than spain , the same speaks for Spain and Latin América
anyway Iberia still have good oportunities for growth and iberia’s main hub , Barajas airport is a class A aiport in general with still good growth capacity and potential.
SCQ83 wrote:dcajet wrote:The only way you can see IB in ASU or VVI is if UX leaves. Those markets can't support 2 Spanish airlines competing for a tiny piece of pie.
Iberia codeshares with Boliviana de Aviación in BoA's flights from Cochabamba and Santa Cruz de la Sierra to Madrid. That is why Boliviana uses T4.
The Bolivian community in Spain is slightly larger than the Paraguayan and Bolivia being a tourism destination (Salar de Uyuni, etc) creates more traffic and allows two carriers (Air Europa and Boliviana) competing on MAD-VVI.
dcajet wrote:I never said the well being was an argument, I was talking about reasons being the political and security situation in Nicaragua. I just mentioned what I recall reading here about IB flight crew being basically forced to stay in their hotels in CCS during their layovers and from what I see, IB still serves CCS. Plus I did not state for a fact that the crew layover would be in GUA, it's just an assumption based on the possible routing of MAD-MGA, which I believe was to be routed through GUA.LTU932 wrote:And even if they were launching MGA, wasn't that going to be a triangular flight via GUA anyway? If so, wouldn't the crew change occur in GUA?
The well being of Iberia's staff is not the decision behind the cancellation of planned service to MGA, as you well say, layover would have been in Guatemala City where Iberia already operates. Any prospect of business that propelled this flight have evaporated and will remain next to nonexistent until Nicaragua's crisis gets sorted. And like in Venezuela, this could take years.
LTU932 wrote:. Speaking of which, does IB demand payment exclusively in Euros or US Dollars for flights booked in Venezuela, or do they still accept local currency?
Kadish wrote:A bit off topic, the second 359 has just arrived n first will be used in european routes n after that,where? JFK? Or they will try a south american route?
RainerBoeing777 wrote:Will Iberia increase its services to BOG? There were rumors that it was going to increase the route from 7 weekly frequencies to 10 all operated with the Airbus A340-600
Kadish wrote:A bit off topic, the second 359 has just arrived n first will be used in european routes n after that,where? JFK? Or they will try a south american route?
Summa767 wrote:RainerBoeing777 wrote:Will Iberia increase its services to BOG? There were rumors that it was going to increase the route from 7 weekly frequencies to 10 all operated with the Airbus A340-600
More than rumours. It was stated by Iberia's CEO. There was a formal application by Iberia to the relevant Spanish authorities: https://www.fomento.gob.es/aviacion-civ ... bia-171115
This was done in November last year and in theory flight would start this October.
That 's not happening, so it would seem that IB decided against increasing service to BOG and the frequency rights that they obtained will expire. They are in a position of disadvantage in this market as Avianca offers nearly 4 times as many flights between Colombia and Spain than IB does.
dcajet wrote:I'd imagine once they have the 3rd and 4th frames in house we will find out which station in Latin America will be the first one to see the A359 - I'd imagine it'll be either EZE or MEX, as they are the 2 top stations both in terms of frequency and volume..
dcajet wrote:IAG runs a very tight ship, with the focus on profits, not so much on market share or # of frequencies or # of passengers carried. Their goal is not necessarily being the #1 in market share. Also keep in mind Avianca feeds those MAD & BCN flights out of BOG with connections from its regional network - not something Iberia does.
dcajet wrote:The well being of Iberia's staff is not the decision behind the cancellation of planned service to MGA, as you well say, layover would have been in Guatemala City where Iberia already operates. Any prospect of business that propelled this flight have evaporated and will remain next to nonexistent until Nicaragua's crisis gets sorted. And like in Venezuela, this could take years.
airlinermiami wrote:About África even with fewer social ties, I think Iberia can do well if they have a good comercial strategy, Spain in very well geographically located for west african destinations.
airbazar wrote:airlinermiami wrote:Ethiopian is not dropping Madrid is tagging it with Lisbon only for the winter months. Lisbon is seasonal, Madrid is year round.
I didn't say it was dropping MAD. I said it was dropping it as a non-stop. The flight will be routed ADD-LIS-MAD-LIS-ADD. MAD will become a tag from the LIS route.
Kadish wrote:About North América I see no less than 4/5 that could work well.
Summa767 wrote:I assume that it will be EZE, or even LIM rather than MEX -for which the A346 will probably be used for a while as the "hot & high" performance of the quad is preferred for destinations such as MEX, BOG and UIO. Having sad that, perhaps IB should see if the A359 has the performance to do a UIO-MAD non-stop rather than using the A346 given the 3 landing incidents it has has there. The latest one being at the new airport, where the affected airplane has been now for 2 weeks..
Whatever the reason, they certainly got cold feet and cancelled the planned increase. AV has the advantage with its local network, but I would have thought that with IB's network at MAD it can reach a multitude of destinations in Europe and beyond that are out of competitive reach for AV (which only serves LHR outside Spain. Munich does not start until late October). But I guess there's also AF, KL and LH that also compete in that market.
LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.
julianrv wrote:[
I don't see how the A350-900 should be better to deal with strong winds than the A340-600, I guess they're going to review their ops guidance so the alternative airport is used if wind is over a certain threshold.
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LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.
LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.
pipeafcr wrote:LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.
I believe that the bilateral between Colombia and Spain does not allow for more frequencies
julianrv wrote:dcajet wrote:The well being of Iberia's staff is not the decision behind the cancellation of planned service to MGA, as you well say, layover would have been in Guatemala City where Iberia already operates. Any prospect of business that propelled this flight have evaporated and will remain next to nonexistent until Nicaragua's crisis gets sorted. And like in Venezuela, this could take years.
Apparently IB was also getting some subsidies and with the current turmoil that's also in question.airlinermiami wrote:About África even with fewer social ties, I think Iberia can do well if they have a good comercial strategy, Spain in very well geographically located for west african destinations.
In theory MAD should work well for West Africa given its geography but Iberia has tried in the past NKC, ACC, SSG, LOS and LAD and all of the were eventually cancelled. LOS was supposed to be a profitable route but given the currency crisis Iberia decided to first cancel crew overnight to save costs and finally decided to cancel it altogether as it was unable to repatriate funds. BA and other euro carriers keep serving it so I guess it just wasn't exactly a goldmine for IB.
Also apparently those routes were headache for their ops deparment and a constant source of disagreement with the unions as they were operated with the same crew operating the return flight and were in the edge of flight time limits set by the Iberia collective bargaining agreement. LAD was operated with widebodies under an special agreement where the plane arrived in the morning and left in the evening with the same crew to avoid them a lovely stay in Luanda for a few days.
Under IAG Iberia has a return of invested capital target of 15% to be met, which is currently around 12-13%, so I don't think we're going to see IB doing some exotic bets on those ever developing markets of West Africa and will rather keep sticking to develop its bread&butter business in LATAM. RAM and Air France probably got the more extensive network in those West African markets but don't think they're good example when it comes to running a profitable company.
Only Dakar seems to have worked well for Iberia, it was operated with a mix of non-stops and via LPA freqs in the past but now it's a daily non-stop flight. Also IB has just recieved rights for 3 additional weekly frequencies so they should be increasing frequencies soon.airbazar wrote:airlinermiami wrote:Ethiopian is not dropping Madrid is tagging it with Lisbon only for the winter months. Lisbon is seasonal, Madrid is year round.
I didn't say it was dropping MAD. I said it was dropping it as a non-stop. The flight will be routed ADD-LIS-MAD-LIS-ADD. MAD will become a tag from the LIS route.
If this comes from the Avianews article then I'd take it with a grain of salt as the times they show in the article don't seem to match the departure/arrival banks at ADD if they're going to operate LIS-ADD non-stop.Kadish wrote:About North América I see no less than 4/5 that could work well.
Which destionations do you think that could work well from Madrid for Iberia?
US/Canada traffic from MAD is quite seasonal, during summer YYZ, YUL or IAD could work well for IB but outside of that I only see that SFO could have chance work year around.Summa767 wrote:I assume that it will be EZE, or even LIM rather than MEX -for which the A346 will probably be used for a while as the "hot & high" performance of the quad is preferred for destinations such as MEX, BOG and UIO. Having sad that, perhaps IB should see if the A359 has the performance to do a UIO-MAD non-stop rather than using the A346 given the 3 landing incidents it has has there. The latest one being at the new airport, where the affected airplane has been now for 2 weeks..
I don't see how the A350-900 should be better to deal with strong winds than the A340-600, I guess they're going to review their ops guidance so the alternative airport is used if wind is over a certain threshold.Whatever the reason, they certainly got cold feet and cancelled the planned increase. AV has the advantage with its local network, but I would have thought that with IB's network at MAD it can reach a multitude of destinations in Europe and beyond that are out of competitive reach for AV (which only serves LHR outside Spain. Munich does not start until late October). But I guess there's also AF, KL and LH that also compete in that market.
AV has greater success at MAD capturing some lower yielding traffic mostly to Ecuador and Central America than IB does catching ex-BOG traffic to Europe. Maybe IB will wait for S19 to go x10 weekly, previously they have operated BOG x10 during the summer so I was surprised when they announced they'd increase BOG to x10 during winter while keeping it x7 during S18.LatinAirliner wrote:Rare to see they are not increasing BOG. They are way behind Avianca, and if UX opens CTG, IB will be short there.
That won't happen sooner than 2020, at the moment UX got its plate full with starting PTY in and due to the lack of aircraft they're starting IGR as a 2-weekly tag to their MVD flight instead of combining it with a new flight to GIG as was initially announced.
Kadish wrote:N for the Routes to USA/CAN maybe PHL,DTW, IAD, SEA...3/4 weekly could work with the newer 321lr in the East coast
Kadish wrote:I think it s also a way to prevent anothwr airline like ux to enter in the market...but for me it's hard to understand why they r not sending the plane to Tokyo where the yields are higher and also good factors...
dcajet wrote:IAG runs a very tight ship, with the focus on profits, not so much on market share or # of frequencies or # of passengers carried. Their goal is not necessarily being the #1 in market share. Also keep in mind Avianca feeds those MAD & BCN flights out of BOG with connections from its regional network - not something Iberia does.
Mex87 wrote:Sorry, can´t recall where, but I read that Iberia won´t send the A359 to MEX and UIO -two of the airline´s top routes- because the plane would struggle to haul all those passengers and freight, an achievement done almost effortlessly by the A340-600. Instead, they remarked that A346s were recently upgraded to offer better services on long haul routes.
julianrv wrote:Kadish wrote:N for the Routes to USA/CAN maybe PHL,DTW, IAD, SEA...3/4 weekly could work with the newer 321lr in the East coast
PHL is already served in the JV by AA, IAD maybe during the peak summer but I don't see SEA or DTW working at all from MAD.
A321LR is ok to the US East coast from northern european markets but it won't make it from MAD to the US on a hot summer day.Kadish wrote:I think it s also a way to prevent anothwr airline like ux to enter in the market...but for me it's hard to understand why they r not sending the plane to Tokyo where the yields are higher and also good factors...
Intial plan was to make GUA daily by operating the current MAD-GUA-SAL-MAD x4 weekly instead of the current x5 and adding the new MAD-GUA-MGA-MAD x3 weekly as it's not possible to operate non-stop from GUA to MAD due to runway lenght. Currently GUA/SAL traffic split is around 60/40.
NRT is already going from x3 to x5 this winter, I agree that Tokyo sure sounds fancier and might be a higher yielding market in general but Madrid geographical position and strong O&D traffic makes it greats to sustain flights to Latinamerican destinations. Given Madrid geography for asians destinations you mostly depend on local traffic and domestic connections to fill the plane unless you're willing to depress yields by offering Asian destinations via MAD like TK sometimes does by offering very low prices on Western Europe-IST-US traffic.
Kadish wrote:I think it s also a way to prevent anothwr airline like ux to enter in the market...but for me it's hard to understand why they r not sending the plane to Tokyo where the yields are higher and also good factors...
dcajet wrote:Kadish wrote:I think it s also a way to prevent anothwr airline like ux to enter in the market...but for me it's hard to understand why they r not sending the plane to Tokyo where the yields are higher and also good factors...
I do not have the numbers of IB's ops to Central America or to Japan but more often than not, the less traveled to cities are the ones that tend to be the most profitable as Iberia tends to be the only game in town when it comes to flying to Europe directly. Same applies to some routes to Africa - they can be incredibly profitable. Just think of all the options one has from MAD to Tokyo with a simple connection. Then think of SAL: most connections involve stopping in the USA and dealing with passport controls, etc, You can't beat Iberia to Latin America and they surely charge a premium for that.