FREE E-Newsletter
Wings Magazine
Subscribe
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
Video
Photo Gallery
 
MARKETPLACE
Aviation Books
Job Board
Classifieds
New Products
COMMUNITY
Events
AME Hall of Fame
100th Anniversary
Aviation Quiz
Association News
 
RESOURCES
A-List
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
Careers in Aviation
Publications
Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
David Carr Too Many Airlines?

CanJet follows a beaten path

Written by David Carr   
366-canjetIn September, Giovanni Bisignani, director general and chief executive officer of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), told The Globe and Mail that there are far too many airlines in the world. As if on cue, Halifaxbased CanJet had already given advance warning it was suspending scheduled service and grounding its ten leased Boeing 737 aircraft, with vague plans to regroup and enter the charter market.

The CanJet shutdown was neater than the collapse of Jetsgo 18 months earlier, and did not cause a similar disruptive ripple nationwide. While Canada’s third-largest scheduled airline held a respectable 20% market share in Atlantic Canada, that figure was diluted to less than 4% nationwide, and was likely to shrink further. In the last year, CanJet had already started pulling in its horns, dropping Toronto-Vancouver in November, and announcing the suspension of its Toronto- Calgary service just days before its parent company, aerospace conglomerate IMP Group, decided to wind down the operation. (By late September, Ken Rowe, chair and CEO of IMP, had announced plans for the charter operation. It will begin this winter with six Boeing 737-500 aircraft, combining its operation with Montreal-based executive charter operator Execaire.)

To plug the gap west of Toronto, CanJet had entered into a marketing pact with Vancouver-based Harmony Airways. The agreement would help each carrier develop a national reach by feeding traffic into the other’s limited route network, with Toronto’s Pearson International Airport being the transfer point.

Such domestic alliances are not unheard of in Canada, but neither are they common. The agreement between CanJet and Harmony was especially interesting given that at the time the two carriers were pursuing very different business models, with the latter distinguishing itself with hot meals and other amenities long tossed out of the economy cabin of full-service carriers such as Air Canada on North American routes.

While less messy than Jetsgo, the fallout from the CanJet shutdown has been just as predictable with some fares in Atlantic Canada inching upward, and both Air Canada and WestJet cautiously looking at adding capacity in the region. No need, according to an IMP document that accuses both carriers of already adding 10% more seats into the market.

Certainly Air Canada is using the arrival of its Embraer 190s to flex greater muscle along thinner routes. In April it launched the Newfoundland Express, a once-weekly service from Fort McMurray, AB to Toronto with same-plane service to St. John’s. This summer the airline increased the service to daily. For now at least, WestJet appears wedded to its single type strategy, meaning that any presence in smaller communities that rival Air Canada can reach with an Embraer or Bombardier Regional Jet is going to have to be realized through alliances with smaller commuter airlines. How immediate this need is, however, is less clear. Domestically, WestJet – which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year – is already larger than Canadian Airlines International was prior to being absorbed by Air Canada.

Where perhaps WestJet’s need is greater is in joining a global partnership to match Air Canada’s founding membership along with United Airlines, Lufthansa and SAS in Star Alliance, the world’s largest airline cooperative now serving 840 destinations in more than 150 countries.

WestJet has cobbled together a few cooperative agreements with Asian carriers, but the lack of presence in either of the two remaining airline alliances – SkyTeam, which includes Continental, Delta, Air France and its KLM subsidiary, or the smaller oneworld with American Airlines, British Airways and Cathay Pacific – is reported to be a bit of a drag on filling seats, especially with business travellers, a market segment WestJet is keen to grow. WestJet’s load factor is 78.9%, versus Air Canada’s 81.7%.

As predicted in Wings November 2005, WestJet has begun preliminary discussions with oneworld, which has been minus one in Canada since Canadian Airlines left the alliance in 2000. Oneworld is seen as a comfortable fit for WestJet, where the airline shares space at Pearson’s Terminal Three with the dominant carriers, American Airlines and British Airways.

American Airlines has 12% of the trans-border market, compared with Air Canada’s 35%. With 7% market share on Canadian international scheduled services, British Airways is a distant second to Air Canada’s 40%.

Whatever the outcome of WestJet’s preliminary discussions with oneworld, the airline is not expected to join any alliance before mid-2007, when a new reservations system comes on line, enabling the carrier to interline. International services continue to be Air Canada’s sweet spot, contributing 40% of revenues (equal to market share). As the airline takes delivery of its first Boeing 777 aircraft (four extended-range series 400s will be delivered in 2007), the airline is considering expanding its service to India with nonstop flights between Toronto and Mumbai. (Air Canada already serves Delhi, and has had fifth-freedom rights to Mumbai through Heathrow since 1993.)

One international service that Air Canada has withdrawn from is Newfoundland. On Sept. 4 the airline operated its last flight from St. John’s to London Heathrow, marking the first time Newfoundland will be without year-round transatlantic air service since entering Confederation in 1949. This move sparked a disagreement between the airline and the St. John’s International Airport Authority over whether the route was popular.

The answer probably lies in just how quickly a new carrier will jump onto the five-hour service. The airport authority claims it has worked with the local business community and has short-listed two airlines – one British – to operate the route, suggesting a travel-bank arrangement identical to what was used to coax Delta Airlines to fly to Fredericton from Boston. Local businesses and other organizations encourage a route startup by setting up a travel bank to guarantee an airline a set amount of money per year. The partners draw on that account to purchase tickets.

An obstacle to international ambitions of all Canadian airlines continues to be the glacial pace the federal government has set in securing open-skies treaties. Canada recently inked a new agreement with the UK, allowing both Canadian and British airlines to pick up and transport passengers to third countries. Canada now has two such agreements, compared with more than 70 that the US has negotiated, although reaching a comprehensive agreement with the European Union, which would add an estimated US$5 billion to the airline industry’s bottom line, have stalled. Meanwhile, Canada’s recently negotiated open-skies treaty with the US – which would allow airlines in both countries to transport passengers to a third country – is also in a holding pattern while the US Department of Transportation considers whether an application by Air Canada that would open the door to a closer cooperation and pricing with its Star Alliance partners, especially United, on international services violates antitrust legislation.

Antitrust notwithstanding, bilateral agreements are increasingly out of sync with an industry where former state-run airlines have been privatized, airports operate as independent businesses, and access to markets such as Japan (the fastest-growing source of travellers to Canada) remains restricted.

IATA’s Bisignani points to the failure of governments to liberalize the air transport sector as one of the causes for delaying a recovery of the industry. IATA estimates that only 17% of air traffic operates in a liberalized environment.

Heightened airport security and costly service disruptions such as those that followed this summer’s alleged plot to blow up 10 airliners en route to the US from London also threaten the fragile recovery of the global airline industry. While passenger volume has bounced back since 9/11, and high load factors point to a remarkable resilience against future terrorist attacks, security hassles and longer airport wait times are driving some passengers to seek alternatives to air travel, particularly on short-haul services. The Economist recently reported that in 2002, approximately 16% of U.S. short-haul passengers switched to the automobile as a result of longer airport baggage checks and other security measures.

Similar statistics are not available for Canada; nevertheless, this has to be good news for Robert Deluce, president and CEO of this country’s latest scheduled startup, Porter Airlines, whose business plan is to enable short-haul passengers to side-step Toronto’s Pearson International Airport. With a fleet of 10 Bombardier Q400 turboprops, Deluce plans to fly to 17 Canadian and US cities within a 920- kilometre radius from Toronto’s controversial but more convenient City Centre Airport.

That’s not to suggest that Deluce can expect an easy ride. Scheduled service out of the downtown airport has been spotty to say the least – largely because Air Canada is reluctant to operate out of the airport, but does not want anybody else to. Porter was scheduled to begin 10-timesdaily service to Ottawa in mid-October. Air Canada’s own plans to return to the airport have been stalled by the Toronto Port Authority, itself under review by Stephen Harper’s government. But few are betting that the City Centre Airport can remain a one-airline shop for too long.

One segment less likely to be affected by security delays is the leisure market, where the pace is less hurried than business travel. It takes a lot to knock the leisure market. According to Jean-Marc Eustache, president and CEO of Air Transat parent Transat A.T., international tourism has experienced virtually uninterrupted growth over the last 50 years, and is expected to grow at an average rate of 4.5% over the next few years.

Air Transat appears comfortable in its role as a leisure carrier, and has so far avoided the lure of scheduled services that contributed to the demise of Wardair, Nationair and, more recently, Canada 3000. Air Transat’s parent, however, is considering the purchase of hotels, a strategy that has been pursued by other airlines, especially in the 1980s, with mixed results.

One cost pressure that has eased recently is fuel. The price of crude has tumbled 21% from a midsummer peak of almost US$80 a barrel. Air Canada estimates that US$1 drop in the price of a barrel of crude places an extra $28 million in its pocket. Similarly, WestJet stands to gain an extra $5 million in operating profit. Whether the price of crude will fall even further has yet to be seen. Some oil industry experts suggest that demand is already soaking up much of the surplus that has been driving prices down.

Whatever the direction the price of oil takes, Air Canada has already hedged to lock approximately one-quarter of its 2007 requirement at US$60 a barrel. WestJet does not have a similar hedging strategy. It is unfortunate that lower fuel prices did not arrive in time to rescue CanJet, which listed the high cost of filling its tanks along with increased competition in Atlantic Canada and stiff airport user fees as reasons for its demise.

Interestingly, the airline industry has been largely silent of late over user fees, although like the global industry itself, this is probably a fragile peace, set to shatter following the next round of price increases. Transport Minister Lawrence Cannon introduced a new Canada Airport Act last summer intended to improve accountability of what Air Canada chairman Robert Milton continues to decry as “true natural monopolies.”

The government promises a more stringent fee-setting process, but has failed to introduce regulatory price controls. How stringent remains to be seen. The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, which rarely comes across a price hike it doesn’t like, plans to dig a little deeper into travellers’ pockets next January with a 33% increase in its passenger user fee.

This alone will not force a rethink of the legislation, but it does illustrate that the airport lobby remains firmly in the left-hand seat.