China isn’t such a rosy place to go

A number of airlines have been asking for permission to delay the start of flights to China from the United States.  The Dallas Morning News reported that American Airlines now has filed for such permission on their Chicago-Beijing route authority. Both US Airways and United Airlines have also asked for the same thing on their recent route authorities.

 

US Airways lacks the aircraft type for making the trip from Philadelphia and United Airlines, who does have the equipment, simply doesn’t want to fly to their new destination in the current economic climate.  These kind of routes cost a tremendous amount of money to operate and without some certainty that they’ll make money, the risk doesn’t seem worth it right now.  To the winners of these authorities at least.

 

The airline industry has played the “save us” card on these routes by making the argument that just because their economic situation changed, they should be given a second or third chance to find a more convenient time to operate these routes.  Yes, the entire industry has experienced a lot of challenges and, yes, the cost of fuel is certainly the biggest. 

 

However, we are not without other airlines who I suspect would be happy to operate these routes.  Why wait for an airline to decide its ready to fly them when we can identify other airlines that are willing to fly them right now.  I suspect that both Delta and Continental Airlines would give serious consideration to even removing equipment from a different route in order to be able to fly these routes.  Northwest, who already operates a large number of Asian routes, might well be tickled to death to offer more service.

 

It is time to go back to a “use it or lose it” model.  Giving airlines 2nd and 3rd chances only removes the incentive to figure out how to operate in today’s climate.  An airline should have no more than 12 months to operate a route authority from the date it is awarded.  If it cannot or will not, then its time to seek other “bids” for these routes.   When you deny such routes to Delta (who asked for ATL-Beijing) and give the to American Airlines (who wanted DFW-Beijing but ultimately asked for and got Chicago-Beijing) who then asks to defer their operation, you are putting Delta at a competitive disadvantage and American Airlines gains. 

 

Let the airlines who can and will operate these routes, have the routes.  Don’t permit large legacy airlines operating in fear the opportunity to “sit” on the routes and prevent that economic growth to someone else. 

One Response to “China isn’t such a rosy place to go”

  1. The FAA should make up their bloody minds; the air travel industry is either regulated or it is not. If it is not a regulated industry, then let the airlines – legacy or otherwise – that can handle – and *want to* handle – the routes take the routes, and devil take the hindmost. And if it really *is* a regulated industry, then they can all drop the damn airfare games.

    (btw, whoever does eventually get the Bejing routes can do us all a favor: carry the entire TSA there and leave ’em to rot in the dungeons of the Forbidden City.)

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