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Anything skytrax says is rubbish. |
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Seems like "rubbish" is my word of the day, because that is what a LOI (letter of intent) is. There is no deposit, no guarantee the airline will actually order the planes. Heck, with an LOI, the airline doesnt even need to choose the engine manufacturer. This is simply Boeing being desperate to show some positive news ref. MAXgate. Boeing: " Here, look ! A top airline alliance told us they intend, maybe, eventually, on ordering 200 Max planes! How exciting !" Now I'm not saying IAG wont follow through on their LOI and make this a firm order, but until that happens, this is a non-event. |
Transport Canada has approved the merger of First Air and Canadian North. The feds have already approved it.
may effect operations in Edmonton Winnipeg and Ottawa. |
Jean-Lesage Airport (YQB), in Quebec City, can finally (!) be reached by transit.
Quebec City travellers can now take the bus to get to airport |
Never really understood the reluctance cities tend to have for running transit out to the airports. (Well, the taxi industry campaigning against it is obvious). Airport transit isn't really for the passengers though that seems to be what the media hooks onto.
Instead you need to look at the airport workers, and the workers of the industries that tend to cluster around said airport. They're the ones who will be using it daily, and every worker that takes the bus or train instead of driving is one less parking spot needed for employees (and eventually one more parking spot available for Long Term parking rates) |
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Not an excuse but you would need to find cities willing to run transit with good frequency at times most of their fleet is not in order to make it work for employees. |
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Parking structures aren't the cheapest things to build or maintain. |
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1. YYZ 10,657,685 (+4.8%) 2. JFK 10,166,639, (+6.5%) 3. LAX 7,975,009 (-1%) 4. MIA 7,712,227 (+5.2%) 5. CUN 7,594,936 (+1.1%) (YTD May 2019) 6. PTY 7. MEX 5,537,565 (+2.9%) 8. SFO 4,477,398 (+8.1%) 9. EWR 4,346,151 (+4.3%) 10. YVR 4,303,979 (+3.9%) 11. YUL 4,165,117 (+7.9%) 12. ORD (hasn't posted April yet) 13. ATL 4,044,496 (+1.3%) Managed to find MEX (YTD April) and CUN (Q1 and YTD May) numbers, so added them. EWR overtook both YVR and YUL. Simply means April is a weak month for both YUL and YVR for international travel, even though both airports had healthy increases. SFO leads the pack in terms of Y.O.Y Intl growth %, with YUL in close second. LAX is interesting, as it is the only major airport on the list (barring PTY) with a decrease in traffic for the first 4 months of the year. |
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PS: Feel free to go into detail. :) |
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Landing Fees: 78.4 Million Concessions & rentals: 67.6 Million Parking and ground transportation: 49.6 million General terminal charges: 47.8 Other: 9.1 Million (page 10 if you are looking, 2019 report) https://www.torontopearson.com/en/co...ns-and-reports |
WS has updated its schedule through August in regards to the Max8 grounding.
https://blog.westjet.com/westjet-upd...-max-schedule/ Noteworthy: YHZ-CDG remains suspended until August 29. |
Skeds are now live for Air India's return to YYZ. From routesonline.com:
3x's weekly with 777-300ER, effective Sept 27 AI187 DEL0300 – 0845YYZ 77W 135 AI188 YYZ1145 – 1230+1DEL 77W 135 |
YYC MAY 2019 STATS: Domestic/Transborder's growth was likely partially slowed by the MAX8 grounding.
International had the highest increase. Domestic: 1,040,708 +3.4% Transborder: 269,013 +2.2% International: 132,544 +7.6% May overall: 1,442,265 +3.5% 2019 Year to Date: 7,025,575 +4.58% Last 12 months (May 2018-May 2019) 17,651,246. (+6.02%) Full details: https://www.yyc.com/en-us/media/fact...tatistics.aspx |
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More WS winter changes:
YYC-PUJ *NEW* 1x Weekly 763 Eff Dec. 13 YYJ-SJD *NEW* 1x Weekly 737 Eff Nov. 5 YYC-CUN - 763 replaces 738 on various days. |
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