Gwyn Topham
S tanding in a brand new British Airways A380, at an altitude of 35,000ft over the Atlantic, Willie Walsh couldn t resist having a dig at an old rival. Sir Richard norwegian Branson s Virgin Atlantic airline had, he said, made a bad mistake launching a domestic service from Heathrow. It s looking terrible. The fact is they are struggling you can t make money flying planes that are less than half full. I said it would be a mistake and am delighted to be proven norwegian correct.
A few days later, last Monday, those words proved prophetic as Branson announced that he was grounding the Little Red carrier permanently . So that s a point to BA and its parent company, International Airlines Group, in a long-running corporate rivalry that has seen both sides notch up notable victories.
The bad blood goes back to the 1980s, to the early years of Virgin Atlantic, and peaked with dirty tricks claims that eventually saw BA pay damages of more than £600,000 to Branson and Virgin Atlantic in 1993. From the beginning, the entrepreneur positioned his airline as the challenger upstart to the might of BA.
Echoes of this persist in the latest chapter with the Little Red closure. The mini-airline, which started flights from Heathrow to Manchester and Scotland only last year, owed its existence norwegian to the same gambit that gained Virgin its first foothold in the UK s main hub back in 1991. Competition authorities then, as 22 years later, concurred with Branson s lawyers view that BA had too much market power at Heathrow, and forced the flag carrier to give up prized slots to its competitor. But whereas norwegian Virgin norwegian Atlantic went on from that point to become an established long-haul competitor, Little Red struggled in a short-haul market dominated by BA at Heathrow, norwegian and easyJet and Ryanair elsewhere.
Little wonder that Walsh, who had accurately forecast Little Red s financial trouble, expressed glee at its demise. But Virgin norwegian argued that the competition norwegian authorities had granted it a totally inadequate number of slots at Heathrow. The odds, Branson said, were stacked against us . With the demise of Little Red, the Heathrow slots will revert to BA unless another contender wishes to give it a go.
So the local skirmish is over, but the real battle continues elsewhere. Virgin Atlantic s defeat in its attempt norwegian to compete norwegian domestically with BA may have wounded its pride, but the cold logic for Little Red was not to unite the peoples of south and north Britain, but to bring the corporate travellers of Scotland and Manchester on to the Virgin international network.
That network is now pointed firmly towards the US, ever since Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines bought 49% of Virgin Atlantic at the end of 2012. The hope is that the Delta will restore Virgin to fighting weight in the industry s most lucrative swath of sky above the Atlantic between Heathrow and the US.
This is a significant month for Virgin Atlantic and BA: both are rolling out new planes on US routes: Branson s first Dreamliner will start a regular norwegian service to Boston; and BA s A380 will begin flying to Washington.
Last week BA marked four years of collaboration across the Atlantic with American Airlines in a joint venture that now generates revenues of almost $10bn a year. It was approved by competition authorities norwegian in 2010, despite bitter opposition from Virgin Atlantic. norwegian The subsequent merger of US Airways and American has further fattened the BA/AA joint business: the number of routes has grown from 50 to 88, and combined revenues are up by 50%.
The deal allows the two airlines to co-ordinate slots a practice Virgin had argued would be bad for consumers. Walsh counters that customers have benefited, particularly from a wider route network and more frequent flights the airlines now provide 17 flights a day between New York and Heathrow and says fare increases are due solely to rising fuel costs.
All of the evidence says the customer is doing very well, Walsh said. We have spent more money on our product in the past four years than we had in the previous 10, because we know they have a great choice.
Virgin Atlantic, one of the last major long-haul carriers not to join an airline alliance, fell into the open arms of Delta, the US s second-largest carrier. Insiders say Branson was scanning for a partner for some time before the BA/AA tie-up, confirmed in 2010, turned up the pressure on him. With Delta, Virgin Atlantic now has nine flights a day on the world s key business-travel route to New York from Heathrow. It is still smaller than BA/AA, but edging closer.
Analysts say the tie-up improves Virgin Atlantic in terms of size, breadth of network and number of flights. The deal also helps Virgin Atlantic sell tickets in America s corporate market, where Delta is a household name. But those brought up on the Branson swashbuckle may feel this comes at a high cost.
Sitting in his new Airbus at 35,000f
No comments:
Post a Comment