Virgin sceglie di non entrare (per il momento) in SkyTeam


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Virgin-Delta Air Venture to Stand Alone With No SkyTeam Link

Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL) said its new partner Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. doesn’t plan to join the SkyTeam group and that their joint venture will remain separate from that between the U.S. company and Air France-KLM Group. (AF)
Virgin said Dec. 11 it was looking at joining SkyTeam and might reach a decision in a matter of months after Delta bought 49 percent of its stock. Alliance membership helps carriers boost marketing efforts through joint ticket sales, shared lounge access and the combination of frequent-flier programs.
Delta and Virgin are working with regulators on both sides of the Atlantic and anticipate that approvals for their venture will be received later this year, possibly in the fall, with the cost- and revenue-sharing pact to be activated immediately after that, said Ed Bastian, the Atlanta-based company’s president.
“At some point down the road SkyTeam will come up, and I’m certain that over time it will be viewed favorably, but right now that’s not the priority,” Bastian said today. “Their main priority is addressing their financial needs in respect of the losses they’ve been posting and getting the JV up and running.”
Delta paid Singapore Airlines Ltd. (SIA) $360 million for the Virgin stake and needs antitrust immunity to coordinate pricing and schedules on 31 daily trans-Atlantic flights. Bastian said that while the application includes coordinated timetabling with Air France-KLM and Rome-based Alitalia SpA, Delta will have two separate joint ventures for the U.K. and continental Europe.

Heathrow Boost
“We’ve made the investment in Virgin Atlantic so it’s not anticipated that it would ever be enlarged,” Bastian said at a press briefing in London. “There is a lot going on with respect to putting together the JV and that’s where their focus is.”
The Virgin deal gives Delta a bigger platform at London Heathrow airport, Europe’s busiest and the home base for British Airways (IAG), the top carrier in North Atlantic corporate travel.
The airlines will control about 25 percent of the U.S.-U.K. market, compared with the 60 percent share held by BA and American Airlines, which already have antitrust immunity, Delta Chief Executive Officer Richard Anderson said in December.
By linking with Virgin, Delta is targeting North Atlantic flights that generate roughly one-quarter of all global revenue from premium fares, more than twice as much as Pacific routes, according to International Air Transport Association figures.
“There have been a lot of questions as to whether the Virgin Atlantic brand will stay in the market,” Bastian said. “Rest assured it is staying in the market. There is no question about that.”

‘No Secret’
Delta and Virgin both offer forward-facing, flat-bed seats with direct aisle access, and thus a consistent premium product, Bastian said, in contrast with BA and American.
For Virgin, still majority-owned by U.K. billionaire Richard Branson, the Delta deal marked the end of a go-it-alone strategy for a carrier squeezed by high fuel prices, a sluggish economy and increased competition as rivals consolidate.
Virgin has imposed a salary freeze and has delayed adding bigger planes while cutting unprofitable routes to destinations including Nairobi in Kenya, and Kingston, Jamaica. Its loss widened to 135 million pounds ($203 million) in the year to Feb. 28 from 80.2 million pounds a year earlier, the Sunday Times reported March 10, citing an internal company memo.
“We were fully aware of the current-year losses,” Bastian said. “Virgin’s had a difficult couple years, that’s no secret. One of the things that’s dramatically different between us and Singapore is the relevance in the market place. There are many more commercial opportunities that we will be able to produce.”
While Bastian said that “at some point in time SkyTeam will need to show Virgin why it’s important to join the alliance,” he added that one-to-one joint ventures have become a focus for carriers seeking a deeper level of cooperation on key routes.
“The alliances have a lot of substance so I don’t predict you’re going to wake up one morning and find them imploding, but alliances have to prove their worth,” he said. “Delta’s approach has been to create really strong bilateral relationships.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...re-will-stand-alone-with-no-skyteam-link.html
 
I benefici della JV con Delta li hanno comunque e riguardano il core business dell'azienda (Virgin è Atlantic per un motivo). Magari i benefici di entrare in Sky Team non giustificano i costi: guardando alla route map di Virgin appare evidente come, una volta coperto con la JV il mercato nordamericano, non è che vi siano grandi sinergie sulle altre destinazioni del vettore - a Tokyo, Sydney, Johannesburg, Accra, Lagos, Dubai, Dehli e Mumbai non ci sarebbe praticamente alcuna reciprocità dentro Sky Team.
 
Delta plans transatlantic shuttle service with Virgin

Author - Tom Otley - 24 May 2013

Delta wants to start a shuttle service between New York's JFK Terminal 4 and Heathrow's Terminal 3, the airline's CEO has revealed.

Delta boss Richard Anderson said: "Once we have gained the requisite approvals from the EU, Britain and the US our intention is to operate a joint Delta / Virgin shuttle from Terminal 4 into London Heathrow T3."

"[At the JFK end] that means we can use both lounges - the new SkyClub and the Clubhouse. If you look at the passenger survey data, the number one rated business product in the US to Europe market is Virgin Atlantic and number two is Delta, so they will join together to offer the very best service to the business traveller between JFK and Heathrow."

Under the proposed joint venture, Delta and Virgin Atlantic would co-ordinate schedules, network planning, pricing and sales between North America and the UK. The operation would be similar to that already run by British Airways and American Airlines across the Atlantic.

The two carriers would operate a total of 31 daily round trip flights between the UK and North America, 23 of which would operate at Heathrow. The airlines also plan to implement codesharing, reciprocal frequent flier benefits and shared lounge access.

The carriers are also seeking anti-trust immunity for five-way coordination on UK-US traffic flows so that Delta can continue to effectively operate its existing joint venture with European airlines Air France, KLM and Alitalia, alongside this proposed agreement with Virgin.

Anderson said that he envisaged that if regulator approval came through, it would do so in the "third quarter of this year". Delta is also buying a 49 per cent stake in Virgin Atlantic which was previously owned by Singapore Airlines.

Meanwhile Delta is due to open its new Terminal 4 at New York’s JFK airport today (May 24).

"T4 is a major step forward for Delta. We will have 18 international wide-bodied gates and as the largest international carrier at JFK this is a watershed event for Delta," said Anderson.

The newly extended Terminal 4 represents a $1.4 billion investment by the airline and will officially open with the first long-haul flight to Tokyo Narita. The expansion of concourse B adds nine gates, a refurbishment of seven gates, a new 24,000 ft lounge above the gates as well as the new Sky Deck.

Delta regards the new T4 as its "most important global gateway, with service to 100 cities worldwide" - pointing out that this is more than any other carrier.

Anderson also mentioned that there would be a "Phase 2" which would add "another 11 additional gates at the airport".

He said: "Phase 1 has around 100 check-in and kiosk capabilities throughout the facility, and can handle over 3,000 international passengers each hour, with a Sky Club with a deck which looks out over JFK."

http://buyingbusinesstravel.com/news/2420830-delta-plans-transatlantic-shuttle-service-virgin
 
Delta wants to start a shuttle service between New York's JFK Terminal 4 and Heathrow's Terminal 3, the airline's CEO has revealed.

Peccato che Delta opera dal T4 a LHR, finche' non si rimaneggia chi sta dove con l'apertura del nuovo T2, mi sembra che il T3 sia "full house"...!
 
T2 sarà esclusivamente Star Alliance Members

Appunto, motivo per cui molti vettori Star Alliance che al momento operano dal T3 (Turkish, Air Canada, Singapore, Egyptair, Thai, SAS e molti altri ancora), trasferendosi al T2 (quando sara' aperto), potrebbero fare posto ad altre compagnie al T3.
 
Ma il T2 non e' troppo grande per ospitare solo i vettori Star Alliance, specie ora che BMI non esiste piu'?

http://www.staralliance.com/en/press/heathrow-airport-prp/

non credo proprio ... tieni conto che solo LH/LX/SQ/UA occuperanno gia un terzo del terminale.
Da Heathrow operano quasi tutti i membri dell'alleanza.

Airlines // Weekly Flights

Aegean --> 42

Air Canada --> 157

Air China --> 14

Air New Zealand --> 28

ANA --> 14

ASIANA AIRLINES --> 14

Austrian --> 42

brussels airlines --> 40

Croatia Airlines --> 20

Egyptair --> 30

Ethiopian --> 12

LOT --> 40

Lufthansa --> 404

Scandinavian Airlines --> 272

SINGAPORE AIRLINES --> 52

South African Airways --> 25

SWISS --> 168

TAM --> 20

TAP Portugal --> 88

THAI --> 24

Turkish Airlines --> 56

UNITED --> 252

US AIRWAYS --> 46
 
buongiorno.
giusto per chiudere il discorso di LHR T2 - interessante l'articolo apparso su la stampa proprio su quello che stavamo discutendo qui ...

Lufthansa colonizza un terminal a Heathrow


La compagnia crea coi suoi alleati un nuovo hub all’estero, cioè un aeroporto che farà da centro per le sue rotte

La Lufthansa colonizza un intero terminal dell’aeroporto di Londra Heathrow. Fra un anno esatto a partire da oggi il Terminal 2 del principale scalo di Londra concentrerà le attività locali di tutte le 27 compagnia della Star Alliance, cioè dell’alleanza di vettori che orbitano attorno a Lufthansa, e queste 27 occuperanno quasi tutto il terminal, lasciando un po’ di spazio solo a un’altra compagnia extra Star.

La notizia è stata data a Città del Capo, dove si svolge il convegno mondiale della Iata, da Christoph Franz, che di Lufthansa è presidente e amministratore delegato.


fonte: LaStampa/Economia