EAP
Newsletter January 2002
edited by airtraffic promotion
group
(no
official newsletter of
EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg)
>>> N E W
S <<<
Charter UPDATES
CORSICA IS GETTING MORE SCHEDULED SERVICES Compagnie Corse
Mediterranée (CCM) is a new visitor to the EAP with a weekly ATR-72
flight to Bastia from April 27 thru September 28. The link is
running under AF flight numbers. Saturday, Sunday and two mid-week
services (high season) to Ajaccio will be introduced by Crossair
again.
NOUVELLES FRONTIERES WILL OFFER
A CORSICA CHARTER. Aeris International is heading for Bastia
once a week from July thru September.
EUROWINGS IS TO COMMENCE FLIGHTS
TO HERAKLION. An Airbus 319 will lift off from the EAP during
Summer period 2002 to the Greek Island of Crete.
VACCATIONING AT VARNA's BLACK
SEA SHORES IS BECOMING MORE POPULAR TUI will offer charter
services to this spot, starting in April with TU-154 operated by AIR
VIA - Bulgarian Airways. Holiday resorts in Eastern Europe have
become highly attractive to families with tight budgets.
Jet Aviation an the BBJ
JET AVIATION BASEL HAS STARTED COMPLETION OF A BBJ FOR SOUTH
AFRICAS' ARMED FORCES which is due for delivery in the third
quarter of 2002. The aircraft's cabin will seat 18 VIP passengers.
The company has also started building a new 6'500 sqm. service
center which would help to free up space within the present hangar
complex for future business charter activities already offered by
Jet Aviation's Business Jet Aviation. If offered as a maintenance
and charter package, aircraft handling would not pose any problem.
Approving licenses to handle aircraft is still in the hands of the
airport authorities.
Statistics 2001 and comment
Total Passenger Count

-6%
= 3'550'696 Passengers
red=2000, blue=2001
Total Cargo handled

-8%
= 114'269 Tons of Freight
green=2000, brown=2001
2001: WITH MIXED RESULTS
Passengers and airfreight went down as a result of economic
downturns and the collapse of Swissair. The market has since been
hit by a lack of confidence and tight security. Following suite,
airlines cut back on services and capacities. The EuroAirport lost
6% in passengers, now standing at the 1999 level of close to 3.6 mio.
and 8% in flown and trucked freight tonnage, again arriving at
levels reached in 1999 with 114'200 tons. Expresscargo (21168 tons
+6%), Hapag Lloyd and Lufthansa posted solid increases. Passengers
shifted to LH services in great numbers (LH and HLF each at 130'000
pax + 30%). Crossair saw its figures slip to 1.55 mio passengers -
6% and its ZRH link reported a 30% decrease in traffic due to
massive reductions in services after the October grounding and train/bus
links now on the market. Decline in European travel with AEA members
is at 12.3% in 2001. Charter traffic also slipped by 13% to 740'000
passengers which was caused by the withdrawal of Swiss tour
operators and reduced seat capacities in November and December by
FTI. The latter had to restructure its business in Switzerland.
Belair and Edelweiss, the airline brands of Hotelplan and Kuoni are
operating out of ZRH only. Negative trends by Swiss TO's may be
offset by strategies of TUI, Thomas Cook, New Avione, Starter
Voyages which can graze on Swiss territory with competitive Euro
rates, traditionally claimed by Zurich's major TO's. Cross border
booking is common place in the Basel region with a population of 6
mio. within a two hours car drive - three countries and three
markets are at the EAP's doorsteps.
Carribean comeback 2002
CARRIBEAN DESTINATIONS ARE
PICKING UP STEAM AGAIN. After setbacks in catching passenger
bookings to Caribbean holiday resorts (Puerto Plata), recent
announcement to introduce new and additional charter services the
picture starts to look brighter once again. Market entries of
large-scale tour operators like TUI and Terramar are a clear signal
to longstanding locals that their judgment to see a market ex EAP to
Caribbean and Central American destinations proves right.
Starting in May, a total of five resorts will be served ex EAP by
Aeris, Condor and Monarch Airlines. (see chart below).
Destination |
Airline |
Aircraft |
Service
opened on |
Tour
Operators |
Puerto
Plata |
Monarch
Airlines |
A330-200 |
Dec
23 2001 |
Avione
(250 seats) |
La
Romana |
Aeris
International |
B767-300 |
Feb
2 2002 |
Avione
(260 seats) |
Puerto
Plata* |
Condor |
B767-300 |
May 7
to Oct 22 2002 |
TUI,
Terramar, NUR |
Punta
Cana |
Condor |
B767-300 |
Nov
21 2001 |
FTI
(200), TUI (60) |
Varadero |
Condor |
B767-300 |
Nov
2001 |
FTI
(200), TUI (60) |
Cancun |
Condor |
B767-300 |
May
13 to Oct 28 2002 |
FTI
(200), TUI (60) |
*)
subject to change
If all programs are launched as targeted, seat availability
will be again at about 3'200 every month beginning in May. |
Passenger tax increase
DEPARTURE TAX FOR PASSENGERS WILL GO UP BY 3 EUROS (CHF 5) THIS
YEAR The old tax was set at CHF 19 (12.70 euros). The airport
management wishes to off-set the losses in passenger revenues
incurred by the Swissair collapse and the present uphill struggle
for passenger confidence by the New Crossair. At a 3.5 mio.
passenger volume in 2002 the additional income will amount to 11.7
mio. in Euro currency. The EU Parliament and EC Commission is
considering new legislations concerning security, control on noise
levels, and state aid to airports review. Mandatory standardization
on airport security measures is promising to raise costs to new
heights. ACI Europe is anxious to learn who will be called in to
foot this bill.
Embraer 145 CatIII - Update
CAT IIIA LANDING CERTIFIED CREWS ON THE EMBRAER 145 ARE DUE TO BE
CLEARED SOON. Presently, most Crossair crews are flying with CAT
II landing minimas of 300 meters visual range (RVR) and 100 feet
cloud base on RWY 16. Landing CAT III requires 200 meters RVR and
100 feet cloud base, only. Under CAT IIIA the minimas are 200 meters
RVR and 50 feet vertical visibility, and CAT IIIB at 150 meters of
RVR and 20 feet vertical visibility. CAT I minimas are 550 RVR and
250 feet vertical visibility. In order to be certified for any CAT
I-III approach extensive hours of simulator training and en-route
landings under CAT 1-III conditions have to be successfully managed
and supervised by certified flight instructors. All but one Embraer
145 are equipped with hard and software to perform CAT IIIA and B
approaches. HB-JAI is due to be readied soon. In March 2002,
additional ERJ-145 jets are expected for delivery.
>>> T O
P I C S <<<
UNIQUE SELLING POINT IN THE RACE FOR BUSINESS AT THE EAP!
Many are only talking about it -
just a handful are really going for it ! - DIRECT ACCESS to the
EU- MARKET (via MLH) and to the SWISS MARKET (via BSL)
for imports and exports makes the EuroAirport a gateway in Europe.
This market edge starts to sink in with airlines, integrators and
forwarders.
The INTEGRATORS are
negotiating better access to the EU-markets with French customs.
They want to go for one customs clearance only for the entire EU
zone when shipping via EAP. By this way, delivery times become even
shorter. It also would result in larger market volumes available for
the freighter capacities just a few trucking hours away in Germany
and France.
CROSSAIR CARGO is already
going this way when taking on cargo on its EuroCross network with
X-presso (and soon to come with Railwings Europe, a same day
delivery system ex Swiss railway stations). Goods with EU origin can
be transferred plane-to-plane or plane-to-truck with airway bills
issued to final destination without any customs clearance. Shipments
to non-EU countries (Switzerland, Eastern Europe) have to be cleared
by Swiss customs.
Advantages of this nature may
enlarge the import market via EAP when freight is carried on FREIGHTERS
operated by carriers like Korean Air or Singapore. Clearing cargo at
the entryway to the EU market (at MLH) the EAP's catchment area
would reach South Germany, the North & South of France with
large exports and imports. In the past SQ freighters to BSL carried
large shipments for Hewlett Packard to nearby warehouses at Metz and
Stuttgart.
FORWARDERS could also
benefit from expanded import markets to Germany and France via EAP
if they are out to convince the partners in overseas. Fast transits
for EU clearance and the EAP's proximity to Europe's main arteries
of transportation (highways and rail) are clear cost savers. If all
ends meet, airlines will offer better shipping rates.
This still calls for better
infrastructure at the EAP which presents a real bottleneck. The
present downturn offers some relief for cargo handling. But new
freighter services may contribute to warehouse congestion once again.
AIRTRAFFIC PROMOTION GROUP, WANDERSTRASSE 77, 4054 BASEL - TEL./FAX. ++41 61 302 5775 / E-MAIL.
EAPNEWS@HOTMAIL.COM
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