At a time when many U.S. airlines are cutting back capacity to
Mainland destinations, carriers plan to increase flights to Hawai’i. During the past several months, half a dozen airlines serving Hawai’i
have announced that they are adding about 60 regularly scheduled
flights a week to the Islands, some from markets as far away as
Charlotte, N.C., and Detroit.
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According to a recent study by the Hawai’i Visitors and Convention
Bureau, the nation’s airline industry plans to add more than 497,000
more passenger seats to Hawai’i in 2010. The additional capacity
represents about a month’s worth of airline capacity, said HVCB CEO John
Monahan.
The increase is good news for the local travel industry, which saw a
15 percent decline in capacity after last year’s twin shutdowns of Aloha
Airlines and ATA Airlines, the global financial crisis and soaring fuel
prices.”The amount of new service started this year or that has been
announced for next year is huge,” said state Tourism Liaison Marsha
Wienert.
“That tells you that the airlines have confidence in Hawai’i as a destination.”
Hawaiian Airlines is adding the most capacity with the delivery of its new, long-range Airbus A330-200 aircraft in April.
The state’s largest airline plans to add 21 weekly flights, including
daily flights to Maui from Oakland, Calif. and San Diego as well as a
daily Los Angeles-to-Honolulu flight.
The new Airbus jets are part of the local carrier’s plan to spend as
much as .4 billion over 15 years to acquire up to 24 new long-range
aircraft.
Over the longer term, Hawaiian’s new Airbus jets gives it the
capability to fly direct flights out of New York and other Atlantic
coast cities, making it easier to market Hawai’i tourism to new East
Coast markets, said David Uchiyama, marketing director for the Hawai’i
Tourism Authority.
UPGRADES IN EAST
U.S. Airways has already started up its own East Coast connection.
The Phoenix-based airline last week launched daily nonstop service
from Charlotte, N.C., augmenting the company’s existing Hawai’i service
from its Phoenix hub.
Meanwhile, Delta Air Lines has said it will resume direct flights to Honolulu from Detroit starting in June.
The Atlanta-based carrier, which stopped flying directly from Detroit
in 2004, will operate three flights a week from the Motor City, which
will make it easier for travelers from the Eastern seaboard to travel to
the Isles.
To be sure, most of the growth will come from West Coast markets, especially those once served by Aloha and ATA.
CAPACITY STILL OFF
Alaska Airlines, which only began daily flights to Hawai’i two years
ago, said it plans to add 14 flights a week to the Islands from
California, making Hawai’i one of the airline’s largest markets. Last
month, the carrier began flying direct flights to Kona from a former
Aloha and ATA stronghold, Oakland, Calif.
As a result of the expansion, about 11 percent of the carrier’s capacity will serve the Hawai’i market.
Continental Airlines plans to beef up service from other former Aloha
and ATA routes. Starting in March, the airline said it plans to fly
four times a week to Maui from Orange County, Calif.
It also plans to increase the frequency of its Orange County to Honolulu flights from four days a week to seven days a week.
David Carey, CEO of Outrigger Enterprises Inc., estimates that the
overall airline capacity is still off about 5.5 percent from its
pre-Aloha and ATA days. But he said that’s much better than other
Mainland markets where airlines have cut back as much as 20 to 30
percent.
“We’re still still down several percent but anything showing positive growth going forward is good news,” he said.
ONLY NEWS WAS BAD
The increased passenger lift represents a sharp reversal from early
2008 when Hawai’i’s travel industry was struggling to persuade Mainland
carriers to help fill the void created by the shutdowns of Aloha and
ATA.
Many of the carriers were reluctant to increase capacity due to soaring fuel prices and the global economic meltdown.
What’s more, some eastbound carriers such as Korean Air Lines had
planned to expand their service to Hawai’i but later reconsidered after
bookings tailed off as a result of fears of the H1N1 flu.
“It was one thing after another. First you get hit with fallout from
the airlines, then it was the jump in oil prices, then you get hit with
the financial crisis and then the H1N1 fears,” Uchiyama said.
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