Tag Archive: SkyTeam


The fight for Africa

Hundreds of years ago, the powers of the world fought over Africa and carved its landmass into many pieces which they proceeded to profit from for long stretches of time. Today, a similar fight is on the cards, only this time the would be conquerors are airlines fighting for the skies.

Needless to say the existence of many routes operating in and out of Africa are steeped in historical ties – Air France for instance is very strong in West Africa. However, such historical ties are only a small factor in the broader picture. The formation of global airline alliances, armed conflicts, the discovery of natural resources and a host of other factors make the picture far more complex.

If we compare the footprints of the alliances side-by-side we can see that the Star Alliance has the broadest reach. Notice in particular how the major centers that dot the coast of the continent are well served.

Star Alliance Footprint

Not far behind the Star Alliance is SkyTeam. Air France and KLM’s long history in Africa coupled with Kenya Airways’ growth and success are the major factors behind this second place.

SkyTeam Footprint

This leaves OneWorld in third but not by much.

OneWorld Footprint

Let’s not ignore non-alliance players. The collective presence Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad put forward is no longer negligible. You might argue that the gulf trio only affords three non-stop destinations outside Africa – Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi – but I would argue that one-stops at the right price are just as good or better than direct services.

With Ethiopian set to join the Star Alliance shortly, the list of African carriers ready to be rolled into major alliances drops to zero – either for lack of quality or lack of size. A lack of carriers however does not mean a lack a opportunities. The difference now is that anyone who wants a piece of the action will have to really put some skin in the game, not simply agree to a codeshare. Brussels Airlines is already doing this by setting up an operation in Lubumbashi (to be called Korongo) but they will not be the last. Numerous European and Middle Eastern carriers have half an eye on such joint ventures as do the new darlings of African politicians - the Chinese and the Indians.

What’s going on at WestJet?

WestJet's Care-antee logojet by Dave Subelack

WestJet’s Care-antee logojet by Dave Subelack

Recently I blogged about the challenges facing the top brass at WestJet. In the time that has passed a couple of interesting things have happened.

A change at the top
Sean Durfy’s resignation announcement has paved the way for Gregg Saretsky to assume the reins as CEO. While this caught me by surprise the reason given – the desire to spend more time with his family – seemed perfectly plausible. However, the cynics of this world were not quite so willing to accept this, with a number of people choosing to believe he was shown the door for the less-than-elegant adoption of the new reservation system. You could forgive the cynics for their speculation as CEOs have been at the centre of upheaval at WestJet in the past. Whatever the case may be I think it’s a win for all concerned. Durfy gets to live life at a smell the roses pace for a while. WestJet benefits from the experience and energy of a new CEO who already understands the inner workings of the company and has a stellar track record to boot. It’s great to see somebody with a sincere passion for aviation leading the charge – there are far too many “suits” running the show at other carriers.

A new dance partner
For years we’ve heard about potential tie-ups between WestJet and Southwest. It’s one of those stories that just won’t go away – murmurs about codeshares and ground handling agreements seem to flare up periodically and then vanish as quickly as they appeared. WestJet themselves have fueled this fire on a number of occasions with ambiguous statements declaring interest but only ever offering vague timelines. Personally I’ve always felt that the synergy potential between WestJet and Southwest is overblown. Though they were founded on similar business models WestJet is for all intents and purposes a full service carrier. It seems I’m not the only one with this mindset; this weekend WestJet went public with the fact that they are courting Delta with a view to drumming up US traffic through codeshares. WestJet is set to receive 5 slot pairs at LaGuardia (subject to regulatory approval) which will allow them to exchange traffic with Delta. Indications are that theses slots are to be used for flights to Toronto and Montreal. The folks at Delta must be happy about this; additional feeder traffic to LaGuardia (where they are trying to grow their presence) without using any of their own planes and crews and without signing a capacity-purchase agreement. All of this in exchange for slots they would likely have been forced to give up anyway. Talk about getting something for nothing.

Walk. Don’t run.
Despite WestJet’s friendly demeanor towards Air France/KLM and this new cozying up towards Delta I remain confident that they are not positioning themselves to enter SkyTeam – there’s simply not enough in it for either party. SkyTeam currently plays second fiddle to the Star Alliance in Canada and adding WestJet would do little to change that. What it would do is tie WestJet’s hands in terms of partner opportunities with OneWorld carriers. It’s far more likely that they will cherry pick codeshare partners from both SkyTeam and OneWorld under the “my enemy’s enemy is my friend” mantra with a view to building a robust codeshare network à la Alaska Airlines. Did I mention Saretsky used to work there?

Alliance Inforgraphic

An infographic summary of the three global alliances

While staff turnover, fleet size, and destinations are constantly in flux at all major airlines (and the alliances they belong to) I think the infographic above paints an interesting portrait of the three global alliances. This picture is set to look quite different by this time next year as no less than 10 carriers are in the final stages of negotiation or joining one of these three.

While these carriers play an important role in global aviation one can not discount the titans of the middle east (EK, EY, QR) or the many LCCs around the world. These additional carriers merit an infographic of their own. Coming soon…

WestJet – the next move

A WestJet 737 (C-GQWJ) head back west from YOW.

A WestJet 737 (C-GQWJ) heads back west from YOW. Photo by Ayush Yash Shrestha

Every day hundreds of WestJet pilots face a critical choice. At decision speed (last moment at which an aircraft can stop its take-off) they must decide and commit to a course of action. As a corporation WestJet is approaching a series of critical decision points of its own and it’s time for their executives to choose and commit. The question is will they be able to handle these decisions with as much skill and lucidity as their pilots? View Full Article »

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