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Thai Airasia Takes On Indochina Incumbents


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Thai AirAsia takes on Indochina incumbents

BANGKOK: -- The no-frills carrier Thai AirAsia will start flying to Hanoi and Phnom Penh in the next few weeks in a move expected to dramatically change the air travel market in Indochina in terms of fares and how people travel.

Daily services from Bangkok to Hanoi will begin on Oct 17, followed by Bangkok-Phnom Penh flights on Nov 1.

Conventional carriers including Thai Airways International are expected to lose business and consequently attempt to close the fare gap with the budget rival, industry executives say.

On the Bangkok-Hanoi route, THAI charges 13,785 baht for a round-trip economy-class seat and Vietnam Airlines charges 17,480 baht.

Thai AirAsia will offer an introductory one-way fare of just 1,449 baht, excluding extras such as the fuel surcharge and tax.

Thai AirAsia, 51% owned by Thailand's Shin Corp and 49% by Malaysia's AirAsia, will be the second low-cost carrier to fly to Hanoi, after Singapore's Tiger Airways, which began services from Singapore on April 1.

However, Thai AirAsia will be the first budget carrier to operate on the Bangkok-Hanoi route, long dominated by THAI and Vietnam Airlines, using a 148-seat twin-jet Boeing 737-300.

Executives said Thai AirAsia hoped to attract all types of passengers _ businessmen, tourists and first-time locals in Vietnam where the economy is growing rapidly along with higher disposable income.

Hanoi was not the carrier's first choice in Vietnam. It had hoped to serve Ho Chi Minh City but it could not obtain the rights from the Vietnamese authorities, who cited constraints at Tan Son Nhat International Airport.

Likewise, Phnom Penh was the carrier's second choice in Cambodia after Siem Reap, the site of the famous Angkor Wat temples, but Cambodian authorities still want to reserve the route for conventional carriers such as Bangkok Airways.

Thai AirAsia expects to charge an introductory one-way fare of 999 baht on the Bangkok-Phnom Penh route, excluding other fees.

Insiders said the airline would continue to pursue the rights to fly to Ho Chi Minh City and Siem Reap, where traffic is heavier than to the capitals.

Thai AirAsia chief executive Tassapon Bijleveld said he expected a load factor of at least 80% on the Bangkok-Hanoi route. "This route always has lots of passengers," he noted.

More than 20 international airlines currently operate in the Vietnamese market.

Thai AirAsia claims to have carried two million passengers since its inception about 18 months ago.

Seats for Bangkok-Hanoi route will be open for booking starting on Friday.

--Bangkok Post 2005-09-20

Posted
but Cambodian authorities still want to reserve the route for conventional carriers such as Bangkok Airways.

Ah ah ah, the famous asian "finesse".

Cambodian authorities want to reserve the route to BKK Airways, or is it BKK Airways who want to KEEP this route for itself ?

:o

Or maybe both ?

They must have paid a lot of money. This route is pure gold...

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