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WHY is a Certain Type of Airline, TAKING OVER?! 

Mentour Now!
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Where are we in the airline recovery now after more than two years of pandemic chaos? Can we expect the airlines to bounce back from
this and will the recovery look different in different parts of the airline industry? Are there winners and loosers?
In todays video i will tell you all about whats going on right NOW so stay tuned!
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29 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 545   
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Go to curiositystream.thld.co/mentournow_0922 and use code MENTOURNOW to save 25% off today, that’s only $14.99 a year. Thanks to Curiosity Stream for sponsoring today’s video.
@xavierandradev
@xavierandradev Год назад
Something that might happen is that the demand levels we are seeing on 2022 will go down next year. A lot of people has postponed travel because of the pandemic, but that doesn't mean they will keep flying regularly. For example, a lot of people living in a different country than their families can only afford to travel to see them every two years. They did it now in 2022 but they might not travel again in 2023 and wait for 2024 or beyond.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Yes, that’s a very real possibility.
@jess500texas
@jess500texas Год назад
Don't forget taking inflation into account too. Some people are postponing or canceling their trips due to inflation eating into their budget.
@jaroslavsevcik3421
@jaroslavsevcik3421 Год назад
@@jess500texas Exactly, I can see now problem / reason nr. 1 - extreme raise of commodities prices such as electricity, gas, steel, etc. This leads and will continue leading into a big inflation. So even people who normally did not care, they will now set their priorities.
@WayneM1961
@WayneM1961 Год назад
It's no surprise to me. Ryanair, the butt of all jokes, mainly by those who have never flown with the airline and incidentally, I have on 3 occasions. I found them professional, efficient, courteous and very friendly. Ryanair have never had a fatal accident, no one has ever died as a result of boarding one of their aircraft, and surely, you can't argue with that simple fact. Interesting stuff Captain Petter
@pluisjenijn
@pluisjenijn Год назад
The only reason I stopped flying RyanAir is because they no longer allow normal sized cabin baggage for free... This has tipped the scale for me towards other carriers such as Transavia. With the luggage issues at most airports, I want to bring my stuff in my hand luggage... without having to pay a lot extra.
@aliancemd
@aliancemd Год назад
We’ve been to France and Spain when most of the restrictions were removed, but since in Europe every country has a lot more independence than a state in US, Spain still had very complicated travel restrictions, with required tests that had to be done a few hours before the flight even with vaccination, detailed travel destinations, the approval had to be done shortly before flying and had a very short expiration date, etc… I imagine this affected the airline industry in Europe as well.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Yep, fortunately that’s mostly all lifted now.
@chnet968
@chnet968 Год назад
@@MentourNow I'll go to Spain this month. Thankfully after July I only need to show my proof of vaccination without this need to book a PCR test.
@rynovoski
@rynovoski Год назад
Fortunately for the Coronavirus, anyway.
@wjhann4836
@wjhann4836 Год назад
Sorry, I feel opposite. Went to Spain several times during pandemic. Yes, there were precautions but less than for example Germany.
@valeriebumblebee7607
@valeriebumblebee7607 Год назад
Why would you compare US states to individual countries?
@robertrobert5188
@robertrobert5188 Год назад
In Australia we are already seeing a marked increase in airfare costs. Change your ticket date? More than $500 more for one way from Thailand to Australia. Not peak times, just a week later in October.
@LS-Moto
@LS-Moto Год назад
Mentour, I'd just want to thank you for your content on both channels. I've been hooked on your series where you analyse incidents and what we learned from that, and I love your combination of camera and animation work. At 30 years old, I'm probably too old to become a professional pilot, but I do hope to get my PPL license in the upcoming years. Love you your content
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Thank you so much for your kind words, it’s great to have you here! Best of luck with your PPL training if you go for it, it’s a fantastic hobby.
@innocentanderson2830
@innocentanderson2830 Год назад
You said you are too old? I think you need to look for more inspirations. You may probably consider it. All the same not for the money but if you really love aviation. I am your age mate and I think all is not lost.
@LS-Moto
@LS-Moto Год назад
@@innocentanderson2830 Hi there. Of course its not all lost. There are people who are retired, when they decide to become pilots. I mean, you never know. Perhaps I will end up flying a commercial airliner, by the end of my 30's. I used to be a skinny guy who beat cancer, only to then start working out and becoming pretty muscular, while also having developed many other fields of interests. Something I never thought 10 years ago. So you never know where life takes you. Since my life never went according to plan, I hesitate to make any long term plans, as I live today. Becoming an airline pilots starts by learning how to fly cessnas first, and this is where my focus on is currently in regards to myself. Once that is achieved, I can go from there. Currently, I got a lot of things going on and squeezing flight school into that (apart from the finances), is quite challenging. It might be a lot easier in your earlier 20's, but at that time, my parents did a good job in fear mongering me into university, as they viewed any non academic profession as a ticket to a life of welfare or homelessness.
@LS-Moto
@LS-Moto Год назад
@@MentourNow Thanks Captain :)
@zachcross5914
@zachcross5914 Год назад
I'm a technician in the United States and from the start of the pandemic there was always the worry of getting laid off, however as time went on I noticed that my company wasn't doing that even with cutting flights. We even had 2 contact negotiations during the pandemic and we were acquiring new aircraft. As we entered the new year we began hiring new techs and pilots, we are even set to receive our first 321 NEO. Now this is all good for company growth but there is still that though in the back of our minds that we are not out of the woods yet. Only time will tell how well the industry fairs coming out of this.
@TheMrFishnDucks
@TheMrFishnDucks Год назад
No sympathy for the airlines that threw away their staff and our now suffering. Nice video. Keep up the good work.
@C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13
@C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13 Год назад
"What doesn't kill you almost kills you and makes you very, very weak" Norm Macdonald RIP.
@timp3224
@timp3224 Год назад
Those airlines which had a more positive attitude to their staff seem to be doing better. As well as those investing in their fleets. And those who followed the dominant management philosophy of cut, cut, cut are now struggling.
@mikemck4796
@mikemck4796 Год назад
If you worked for an airline and they had enough reserves to buy new planes outright and pay workers for over a year who were doing nothing, how well exactly do you think you’ve been treated?
@timp3224
@timp3224 Год назад
No, I do not work for an airline. I do note that at least one European airline group distributed €billions to shareholders before the pandemic hit and then slashed employees and terms (even with government employment support available). Now, the airline is struggling to recruit staff. Those who have been recruited have little experience and are given no discretion. And the airlines’ operational performance remains poor with repeated cancellations.
@M167A1
@M167A1 Год назад
Bear in mind it could just as easily have gone the other way. People are expensive and hanging on too long might easily have been fatal
@886888aa
@886888aa Год назад
Great video , thank you. The timing for pilots is everything. I flight instructed from 91-99 and accumulated close to 1500 hours with 150 multi which I purchased in an old Apache . At that time If I wanted to get hired by Continental Express I needed to pay them to fly and the starting pay was 14K a year for an FO. I threw in the towel and ended up changing careers and never really flown much since. Am I bitter ? Yes , people like Kit Darby with FAPA and others sold us a bill of goods with the impending pilot shortage. It was all BS. Now at 57 years old I'm asked by flying buddies to come back and fly again with the promise of employment. My time has come and went though I wish the best for others looking towards a flying career.
@toddsmith8608
@toddsmith8608 Год назад
@Dave Whelan, sorry to hear that, sir. I agree with your sentiments re: Kit Darby, et al. The industry cried "Pilot Shortage!" for the past 30 years when really there was just a shortage of pilots willing to work for peanuts. Now the industry is reaping what it's sown as people like yourself chose other career paths in order to be able to support themselves and their families. It may be too late for you to go the airline route but have you considered corporate aviation? No mandatory retirement age. I completely understand the bitterness but don't write yourself off just yet. Good luck in whatever you choose to do in life.
@886888aa
@886888aa Год назад
@@toddsmith8608 I have a friend that decided to take up flying as career at 58 , he just turned 60 and became captain in a Hawker jet. He told me if I got current he could get me an interview and most likely the job. The starting pay wasn't bad. I had to sit with this decision a few days and decided to pass. If anything I would probably flight instruct. Back in the day I saw flight instructing as a means to end though I really enjoyed it so that's probably the path I would take. Thank you.
@flapoverspeed
@flapoverspeed Год назад
Dave: the airline industry thoroughly abused pilots and now cannot operate without subsidies. Those hired now won’t even have an Apache for them to fly when the next lockdown occurs.
@marcellkovacs5452
@marcellkovacs5452 Год назад
I didn't realise how cleverly Ryanair was strategising. I remember reading an article from WizzAir's CEO back in 2020 in which he was saying that they would double-down on expansion despite the pandemic.
@goodbyemr.anderson5065
@goodbyemr.anderson5065 Год назад
just like the stock market my friend, when shit is hitting the fan buy buy buy, dont sell. 99% of people get that wrong thank goodness.
@AndrewSteitz
@AndrewSteitz Год назад
@@goodbyemr.anderson5065 So absolutely true and great analogy. However, remember, those of us who know when to buy need the other people to sell at the wrong time. You are giving away our secrets! LOL
@Prelude610
@Prelude610 Год назад
An idea for an episode based on your final comments here (ticket price versus pilot salary), give us a breakdown in the costs of a typical flight. Start by separating costs of everything that happens on the ground and in the terminal, then the flight itself, and finally other costs, such as upper management and investors. I would love to see this all put into some sense of perspective.
@mytech6779
@mytech6779 Год назад
That is a big ball of string to pick apart. Every company makes different accounting choices for how they categorize each expense, even basic supplies inventory can be fifo or lifo. Then mix in sub-contracts which are common for ground and terminal services. Wet leases, dry leases, revenue from selling extra stuff after a merger. Landing fees and terminal leasing depend on the locations being served. How they manage futures contracts to buffer fuel cost.
@stratosphere1
@stratosphere1 Год назад
When CEO’s make millions the airlines must be ok
@toddsmith8608
@toddsmith8608 Год назад
@@stratosphere1 Nah, ceo's regularly make millions while driving a company bankrupt.
@Prelude610
@Prelude610 Год назад
@@mytech6779 I was thinking more along a broad brush descriptions of airline economics, with a few specific examples. Maybe start with the cost of the flight itself, crew, fuel, landing, etc. How much of an airlines income actually goes to the flights? Then broaden it. Typical maintenance budget, ground crew, agents, and so on.
@dagvl
@dagvl Год назад
@prelude610 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-72hlr-E7KA0.html is an interesting video when it comes to how airline prices flights. It's pre-covid though.
@green-ista1460
@green-ista1460 Год назад
Petter, I love your content and your style of delivery. You are so articulate and all the videos are so well researched that it’s a total joy to watch them. Thanks!
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Thank you!
@richardalex1986
@richardalex1986 Год назад
As a Canadian we already suffer from high taxes and lack of competition in our airline industry. Will be interesting to see if your prediction of higher ticket prices comes true (likely) if people just cant afford to fly as often or at all. Your videos are always well thought out, really enjoy your channel.
@joanneshaw3071
@joanneshaw3071 Год назад
As a nurse working during covid has been stressful to say the least! It’s my time out watching your videos so thank you 😊
@GregDeman
@GregDeman Год назад
Making tiktok videos in empty hospitals must have been very stressful alright.
@usmangani514
@usmangani514 Год назад
I was waiting for this from you so badly! Thank you for such an informative video. You really put a lot of effort into these videos
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Thank you! Glad you liked it
@yellowa4725
@yellowa4725 Год назад
Ryanair also have dedicated terminals at a number of their airports and have their own ground handling teams so they can get more passengers through the terminals without cancellations
@connielentz1114
@connielentz1114 Год назад
Interesting analysis as always. It seems that the airlines that treated their employees well are doing best. It really is all about the people
@Hans-gb4mv
@Hans-gb4mv Год назад
You need the cashflow to make that happen. And I'm not so sure all the Ryanair crew agrees that they are being treated well seeing some of the lawsuits that have been brought to the company in some countries.
@HiddenWindshield
@HiddenWindshield Год назад
@@Hans-gb4mv You got that first part backwards. Treating your employees well gets you the cashflow, not the other way around. I can't speak as to the second part of your post.
@jeromethiel4323
@jeromethiel4323 Год назад
Exactly. Maintaining an airline is all about keeping the planes in the sky, and delivering passengers and cargo safely at the destination. That is 100% down to the flight crew and the maintenance crews. Aircraft cost and fuel costs you cannot do much about, so airlines frequently try to get more money by screwing the most important part of the equation, and that is the people. Because that's the only lever they can manipulate effectively. Personally, i think air travel should be substantially more expensive. But that's just me, i guess.
@grantt4691
@grantt4691 Год назад
Unlike Qantas
@squaaaaak3178
@squaaaaak3178 Год назад
@@grantt4691 I flew Qantas twice, from Los Angeles to Sydney, and when I switched to Virgin I never went back, they were so much better.
@mattesrocket
@mattesrocket Год назад
Great video by the way, well put together infos, well ballanced and explained!
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Thank you! Feel free to share it with friends on your social media. It REALLY helps the channel.
@Michaelorwa
@Michaelorwa Год назад
I'm only 14 and have been thinking about being a pilot for years I've been watching your vids for yrs love them man keep it up
@seanmcerlean
@seanmcerlean Год назад
You called it right Petter.🙌🏽🙌🏽😊🤟🏻 As did i when i retrained, as well as upgrading my ops officer qualificationx. As a result i am being headhunted, by among others EZY, for a role in the IOCC and airfields looking for ATC personnel. Good call methinks. Aero professional and cae parc aviation have also contacted me recently all stemmimg from my visit to Berlin this year. Defo see you in Berlin again next year and glad they have decided to run it again. Takk så mycket Captain.👌🤟🏻
@danielmierop662
@danielmierop662 Год назад
Thank you for your content and sponsors!
@jeffcarruthers2605
@jeffcarruthers2605 Год назад
Hello from Canada. I realize we are small potatoes in the airline industry but would be interested to know how we have weathered the storm and the outlook for our Canadian based airlines. Great channel by the way.
@squaaaaak3178
@squaaaaak3178 Год назад
I love Canada, as long as you don't go the way of the United States with the extreme nutcase right wing social injustice warriors trying to take over by being criminals liars and cheats.
@MrPomelo555
@MrPomelo555 Год назад
Air Canada doing bad, as Air Canada does. 🇨🇦 🍁 😓
@qzy123
@qzy123 Год назад
I'm in the US, but I've definitely profited from Ryanair keeping their pilots happy. 😉 Thanks, Petter, for all the content and analysis. RU-vid served as a great well of information as I got into aviation about two years ago, and I dove into your channel pretty early in my exploration. I enjoy your accident analysis videos, but I'm especially a fan of the technical videos (about winglets, IRS's, etc). I'm now more than a year into my training as an A&P mechanic, and looking forward to starting my career in the industry soon!
@JimiVPhotography
@JimiVPhotography Год назад
Your channel is super informative! I always look forward to new posts. I've made use of two of your sponsors- Curiosity and Nord!
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
That makes me super happy to hear! Thank you for your support.
@danielrose1392
@danielrose1392 Год назад
With all the travel chaos, there is a further reason for the success of Ryanair. The often fly from smaller airports, which have less problems of finding the required ground personal. For several routes we fly frequently at work, Ryanair was previously considered an acceptable alternative but is now our preferred option.
@MBihon2000
@MBihon2000 Год назад
Most major airlines in the US are having a price war since there less small airlines operating. Now Frontier/Spirit is having a fare sale of $19/RT. This is being match by Southwest, as well as Delta, American, Jetblue airways. Having a great fare sale for coming holidays!
@MissMyMusicAddiction
@MissMyMusicAddiction Год назад
I miss 2020-21. I have never flown so much in my life. Flights were unbelievably cheap, as were hotels, etc. Planes were mostly empty. Now that prices and loads are normalizing, it's not so much fun.
@Colaholiker
@Colaholiker Год назад
When it comes to Delta having phased out several aircraft types, I think it is worth noting that the 777 was a relatively small subfleet in their line-up (something airlines try to avoid in general) and the MD-80s were to be phased out by I think 2023 anyway.
@squaaaaak3178
@squaaaaak3178 Год назад
Jebus, can you imagine being a passenger on an md-80 in this day and age? LOL no thank you!
@heidirabenau511
@heidirabenau511 Год назад
I didn't know that Delta still operated the MD-80, because they still operate the 717
@Colaholiker
@Colaholiker Год назад
@@squaaaaak3178 hell yeah! I'd take a ride on one of these mad dogs any day. Especially in the back! 😍 Especially the older ones that still have the cool 400 Hz hum on the PA and the old igniters where you can hear the engine start through the whole plane.
@JeanClaudeCOCO
@JeanClaudeCOCO Год назад
What routes did Delta fly them. I’m young and not familiar with this aircraft.
@Colaholiker
@Colaholiker Год назад
@@JeanClaudeCOCO if you are referring to the MD-80, basically any route where range and capacity were a good fit. My last MD-87 flight on Delta was from Oklahoma City to Atlanta in 2018.
@speedracer9132
@speedracer9132 Год назад
Is it true the airline industry is struggling to keep pilots and crew because of poor conditions and compensation? I’ve been hearing a lot of this and when I considered becoming one myself I learned how surprisingly low most pilot salaries are
@gpaull2
@gpaull2 Год назад
My first 10 minutes of class to become an AME the instructor said if you love aviation you are in the right place. If you are here for the money you should leave now. Wow I really didn’t realize just how much he wasn’t joking. I know more people that USED to be in aviation than I know people that are STILL in aviation.
@juliogonzo2718
@juliogonzo2718 Год назад
@@gpaull2 a freind of mine is a pilot in the Canadian air force. He was given the option to leave or stay on for I think 4 years in 2019. Good thing he stayed in the military as he would have been unemployed when covid hit if he entered civilian aviation
@redyau_
@redyau_ Год назад
Appreciate how the stock footage is always from the region you are talking about!
@guarami1
@guarami1 Год назад
I have been waiting for a good analysis of this topic and you are the best at it. Thank you.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Thank you! 💕 I hope I didn’t disappoint
@guarami1
@guarami1 Год назад
@@MentourNow I wave watched every video you have made, this was just fantastic how you broke everything down. P.S. More colabs with Kelsey please. Edit: I found 74gear on your wave, so thanks for that too.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
@@guarami1 unfortunately Kelsey sent me a message a year ago where he just told me he wanted nothing to do with me or my channel ever again. He did not explain why this was and it made me quite sad at the time. So any other collabs are highly unlikely unfortunately.
@guarami1
@guarami1 Год назад
@@MentourNow I am so sorry to hear that and am also sad. You seem like a very humble pilot, my father was more of an Ego Captain so I appreciate your approach to what you do. Don’t change a thing, you are a GoaT in your arena. Edit: I’m sorry to prolong the convo, but I do appreciate you being active with your community, unlike other creators who we won’t mention.
@thetowndrunk988
@thetowndrunk988 Год назад
Great video. I haven’t been to my house in the Philippines in almost 3 years. I’m getting very itchy to get outta the states, and take a muuuuuuuuch needed vacation.
@jhonbus
@jhonbus Год назад
I always wanted to be a pilot when I was a kid, especially a military pilot. Alas, I was not able to fly (or join the military!) for medical reasons, but it's always fascinating to learn about the ins and outs of this industry :)
@RalphSavelsberg
@RalphSavelsberg Год назад
Prior to the pandemic, KLM was already planning to retire their last remaining passenger 747s in 2021, so moving their retirement forward made sense. Delays in 787-10 deliveries do mean they now have fewer of those in service than originally planned, but I suspect that the capacity problems at Schiphol are a much bigger issue for the airline than a lack of seats.
@bearcubdaycare
@bearcubdaycare Год назад
Good points. It's useful to go beyond the common narrative of "business versus leisure travel/airline". But I wonder if it's also a weakness of the business model that depends on enormous profits from business travel, while not really making money elsewhere. Maybe such companies were just weaker going into the pandemic, and that showed in how severely they had to cut costs to stay afloat. In the decades before the pandemic, Southwest and WestJet had long stretches of profit and growth, while more traditional airlines had more rough patches financially, and even bankruptcies.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Very true!
@jahbern
@jahbern Год назад
Interesting timing! My daughter just flew her first flight towards her IFR! I’m excited for her future. ❤
@NicolaW72
@NicolaW72 Год назад
Thank you very much for this informative video!
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Glad you liked it!
@tcm_tatra
@tcm_tatra Год назад
Well I think the logic explanation is because people was tired to stay home , or they've missed their families if they work abroad. I've traveled twice in the last 6 months with a low cost european company and at every flight 99-100% of the seats were occupied , when before it was like 85% occupied. Meanwhile Ryanair and Wizzair are on profit in 2022 comparing to 2019 , Blueair is going bankrupt and it's cancelling lot of flights because of some poor management , leaving people stranded all around Europe and not refunding them their money.
@TomWhitchurch
@TomWhitchurch Год назад
Ryanair survived the pandemic by still taking ticket money from customers and not refunding the money 😉
@zorilaz
@zorilaz Год назад
That's how it survived. Thousands of tickets extra in their pockets
@mamijo71
@mamijo71 Год назад
Wizz also! Their "customer service" is terrible! :(
@SethMethCS
@SethMethCS Год назад
Not surprised. The price of cheap fares.
@SusanS777
@SusanS777 Год назад
Not to defend Ryanair but I had 2 separate tickets for April and June 2020 and got refunded on both. Took 8 months but i did get my money
@TomWhitchurch
@TomWhitchurch Год назад
@@mamijo71 Wizz air still actually owe me £80! And to call their customer service from the UK it's like £1.50 a minute with no email support. :(
@chellybub
@chellybub Год назад
I was expecting to see some increase in passenger services since most of the restrictions are over. Everyone has been itching to get out and see the world again. I'm glad it seems to have been the case for Ryanair and Wizzair and I hope it's the same for other service providers. Best of luck to those from the industry trying to get their pay or jobs back. Thanks for keeping us updated 😁
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
I think this summer will turn out to have been a good summer for most airlines. Thanks for watching
@chellybub
@chellybub Год назад
@@MentourNow I certainly hope so! Thanks for the reply 😊
@davidp2888
@davidp2888 Год назад
After staying on the ground for the last three years I’ll be flying again in about 3 weeks. I’m excited to travel again.
@ljthirtyfiver
@ljthirtyfiver Год назад
I start working for one of the airlines mentioned (with cash) next week I’m very excited.
@jeffreycarswell3915
@jeffreycarswell3915 Год назад
I fly for Canadian Regional airline Porter Airlines… we as an airline are almost recovered and growing incredibly. During the pandemic the airline completely suspended service parking the fleet of 29 DH8-400 aircraft. Many believed that this was going to spell the end of the airline as many nay-sayers have believed that Porter would be able to survive. As return to service was announced in summer of 2021 shortly afterwards they announced the purchase of 30 brand new Embraer 195-E2 (with options for 50 more) to begin operating across North America and Caribbean. Later it was announced in July 2022 at Farnborough that we purchased an additional 20 firm aircraft bringing us to 50 firm orders and 50 options. This makes our airline the launch carrier in North America for the E2 aircraft and will make us the second largest E2 operator in the world and largest outside of Brazil. As we are the first operator of the new type in Canada we are currently awaiting final certification from Transport Canada which has been taking a long time (which we suspect is a result of the 737Max certification issues). We are all looking forward to the day we hear the aircraft is certified and we take delivery of our first aircraft. There are several already built and will be delivered as soon as certification in Canada is complete.
@gooneriz729
@gooneriz729 Год назад
Your airline Mentour, YAY!!! Hope to fly with you soon.
@WowIndescribable
@WowIndescribable Год назад
What does it mean when you say an airline 'retired' a bunch of planes? Do they sell them? Scrap them? Mothball them in storage?
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
They generally mothball them in storage if the airframe has some life left in it, otherwise it’s eventually scrapped and made into coke-bottles
@jamescogswell9297
@jamescogswell9297 Год назад
@@MentourNow My soda bottle: “I could fly once you know”
@WowIndescribable
@WowIndescribable Год назад
@@MentourNow - I guess they can only do this if they outright own them and are not leasing them. Must be some serious tax implications too.
@mytech6779
@mytech6779 Год назад
If they don't mothball them, they go to the highest bidder. That could be another airline, a parts dealer, or a scrap yard; it really doesn't matter to the airline selling the plane.
@mytech6779
@mytech6779 Год назад
@@WowIndescribable (in USA) Very little tax implication, the value of any capital equipment is deducted a set amount or percentage each year. Usually over about 12 years, but this can depend on specifics. Any income from the sale is counted as capital gains/losses to offset other gains and losses. IOW when they buy a plane this year they do not deduct the whole purchase price from this year's income, they spread the accounting cost over many years. Largely because the plane could cost more than the total company profit for the year and the years that pay for a new plane would see wild swings in yearly tax bracket and apparent profit and cashflow.
@ericbeaulieu4663
@ericbeaulieu4663 Год назад
Here in Canada things became a bit chaotic, a lack of airport staff and some companies cannot afford the demand. Hope will be better soon!
@andrewpinner3181
@andrewpinner3181 Год назад
Thanks Mentour ! Well good on those that have foresight ! Pre-pandemic l had often used EJ & for me at least things worked well. Now their carry-on (etc) procedure is really confusing & not well implemented. l wish there was a way to transmit this info to them - l don't want to see them decline after all that's taken place.
@izzieb
@izzieb Год назад
I'm honestly quite surprised Ryanair kept their employees on - Michael O'Leary isn't known for spending money, to put it nicely. Having said that, Ryanair is a very successful business, so I suppose he probably knows something about running a business...
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
He does indeed.
@alcoyne3333333333333
@alcoyne3333333333333 Год назад
@@MentourNow how is Ryanair taught off among pilots ..?
@chnet968
@chnet968 Год назад
As for whether business travelers will come back, since many companies have started using online legal document services to sign contracts online, there will be less need for physical travel. However, I do expect they'll still want to sign paper contract if that's really big project. And there are some kind of business travels such as "periodic inspection of factory sites of compliance", or "sending management people to supervise a new business unit" that will never do online, so something like these must continue to exist.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
I think so as well, there will just be less if it.
@chnet968
@chnet968 Год назад
And for BA, even if they keep the planes, they can't fully utilize them anyway because Heathrow still suffers understaff problem and now placed a cap of 100,000 passengers per day until 29th Oct that is shared between all airlines.
@innocentanderson2830
@innocentanderson2830 Год назад
Some people have travelling as their hobbies on their resumes, so people will also find reason to travel even when deals are not the deal.
@erich930
@erich930 Год назад
Business travel is definitely not going back to 2019 levels, but I think a portion of what remains will also be taken up by business jets. How significant that ends up being will remain to be seen.
@nbrown2930
@nbrown2930 Год назад
Conference traffic and the need to connect in person haven't fully gone away yet. The sales guys will still want to connect in person.
@paulsz6194
@paulsz6194 Год назад
Hello Petter, great insights into the the aviation industry going forward. Did Ryannair end up buying any new B737 MAX series planes since the last time when Michael O’Leary was negotiating with with a opening and walked away without a deal?
@rael5469
@rael5469 Год назад
What it all boils down to is the age old question: "Want to make a million dollars? Just start an airline with $10 million dollars."
@roselynthomas7969
@roselynthomas7969 Год назад
Amazing video
@xapver
@xapver Год назад
The only thing I personally don't like about this videos is a wish to have a fantastic day - I already have it every day, I don't need it even more =) Other then that - a good summary of this chaotic and partly even catastrophic summer of this year. Greatings from HAJ.
@toddavis8151
@toddavis8151 Год назад
Australia is an interesting case study. Virgin went into administration early on but got purchased and have recovered quite well. Qantas on the other hand laid off a lot of staff and are now a basket case (if that’s a phrase you’re familiar with) with lots of cancellations etc. there was also a rise in small charter companies (Link airlines is a good example) going into commercial routes to fill in gaps. One thing that went against the Australian industry was our erratic state border closures
@MrTaxiRob
@MrTaxiRob Год назад
basket case could mean a person who has lost their mind, or a half finished project in pieces like an abandoned motorcycle rebuild... either one works here
@toddavis8151
@toddavis8151 Год назад
@@MrTaxiRob I just wasn’t sure if it was a phrase used outside Australia
@philipmackin1025
@philipmackin1025 Год назад
@@toddavis8151 Basket Case has been with English speaking areas for a very long time
@kaunas888
@kaunas888 Год назад
If the airline industry wants to attract customers, then maybe they should use their influence to get rid of the corrupt abusive and incompetent TSA, which only makes air travel that much more stressful and humiliating. But that would be too much of a smart move, so they probably will not do it. They have not so far.
@kevinphillips9408
@kevinphillips9408 Год назад
Great video
@trinity72gp
@trinity72gp Год назад
🇬🇧🙋🏾‍♀️Very interesting breakdown. It was always going to look better on the balance sheet if you OWN and not lease most/all of your fleet. I personally only fly long haul and BA at that. Plus what I last flew on (747) was retired BC. I will be travelling next year, so all in all it will be a new experience..... 🤔
@Asesna
@Asesna Год назад
I’m going into my second year of aerospace engineering. After that I want to join a pilot academy, no one else on my course wants to become a pilot which is worrying considering the future pilot supply
@VerTeXzGaming
@VerTeXzGaming Год назад
I meaaan wizzair cancelled a shit ton of flights in july. 2 of my flights were delayed 3 times, and an hour before departure cancelled. They were really suffering from not having enough staff this summer.
@antonin701
@antonin701 Год назад
Some traditional airlines are also taking the crisis as an opportunity. Air France is a good example. They kept most of their staff, started recruiting again early in 2022, got many brand new aircraft delivered during the crisis (a350s and a220s), and refurbished their cabins to become "more premium". This summer their long-haul planes were full, business class is almost as full as in 2019, and Air France has upped their capacity by 20% in the US/Canada market in 2022 compared to 2019. Air France is growing, without a doubt at the expanse of Lufthansa and British Airways
@valuedhumanoid6574
@valuedhumanoid6574 Год назад
I flew Ryan Air last month and I gotta admit...it was actually very nice. No hassles, no nasty encounters, it was pleasant. But the track record is still lopsided. Like my grandfather use to say One "attaboy" doesn't erase 20 "ah shits" But I will take it. Now if we could get Spirit to do the same...
@jamesbong4928
@jamesbong4928 Год назад
I've flown with them about a dozen times and never had a problem
@GThu1
@GThu1 Год назад
Same with Wizz.
@alcoyne3333333333333
@alcoyne3333333333333 Год назад
I've been flying with Ryanair since 1998. Never had any problems with them. I've often looked them up on Google /RU-vid, and like most things in life people only post a problem. If everyone that was happy posted in would brake the Internet, ,
@jamesbong4928
@jamesbong4928 Год назад
@@alcoyne3333333333333 - I think there's an underlying jealousy thing going on too tbh
@jonbeargenx
@jonbeargenx Год назад
I bought tickets to San Francisco in January and payed about 600€ round trip from Norway. Last time I checked (first week of September 22] the same tickets were 2500-2850€. Now I am sure the time ahead makes a big difference, but that is quite the difference non the less.
@goffe2282
@goffe2282 Год назад
I love flying..... but I avoid it as much as I possibly can for environmental reasons. I would never get on a RyanAir plane. I have done that a few times. Never again if I can help it.
@clausclausie7560
@clausclausie7560 Год назад
You should tackle the topic of security. I am done flying after my horrible stop in Schiphol. 90 minute queue and a ridiculous security check that opened 50% of bags checking objects like books + body scan AND pad down. Fucking ridiculous. They need to let 99% of people through without any checks and check legitimately suspicious people (which is virtually none). Flying is becoming a horrible experience to be avoided at any cost.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Yeah, Schiphol has had huge problems this summer.
@rafalwyszkowski70
@rafalwyszkowski70 Год назад
I flew in 2020 several transatlantic trips and planes were rather empty. In 2021 14 flights that i took in US, US EU and EU to SA SA to US were all jamed pack and expensive. This included both business and economy. In 2022 I reserved my trips several months in advance. It was a smart move as txt were sold out and buying 3-4 weeks before the travel date was impossible and prices skyrocketed. Simple last 10% of seats were priced at 50-80% premium. Hopefully demand will drop in 2023. Idk about business traveler returning or not but I can tell you that business class on transatlantic was selling so buying upgrades from PE to business was not possible on several occasions. QR did outstanding job throughout the pandemic actually moving people and cargo. I am trying now to book a couple of trips around europe for october with full flexibilty of travel dates or destination i cant find any nonstop flights under $200 RT to popular fall destinations.
@paulkoza8652
@paulkoza8652 Год назад
I think you are correct. Ticket prices will rise both due to the cost of labor and the cost of fuel. This may mitigate the demand for peak season travel. In the summer of 2022, people blew their travel budgets out of the water. They may not be so quick to spend in 2023 due to inflation on the home front. The key for the traveling public is to grab deals when they appear and don't procrastinate. Really liked your analysis.
@rationalbacon5872
@rationalbacon5872 Год назад
We all lost. Humanity lost.
@AndriiPovkh
@AndriiPovkh Год назад
Before covid there was a lot of low cost flights between cities in Europe, you were able to travel for 10-20 EUR, now it like 100-200 EUR, if it goes like this further, with even more price increase, I'm not sure if I'll consider flying at all.
@der.Schtefan
@der.Schtefan Год назад
Living in Berlin, and the pandemic has basically cut us off the major travel routes. EasyJet (which changed into being a quite nice airline) cut most of their operations, Lufthansa sees us as a regional spoke airport, and the only carriers that increased are Vueling and Ryanair (which is not the most luxurious way of travel, let's put it that way). Often I pay so much more to fly to the south, or there are just no direct routes available anymore to any nice place. Going 2h with train to Hamburg is sometimes easier than flying from German's capital.
@Croz89
@Croz89 Год назад
I think some charter airlines did see an uptick in summer 2021 in Europe. People were playing it safe with package holidays, who offered covid protection and even discounts on testing to entice holidaymakers.
@HeleenHenstock
@HeleenHenstock Год назад
It's very expensive to fly domestic in South Africa now. BA and Comair was grounded.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
That will likely change if there are new airlines coming into the scene
@blatherskite9601
@blatherskite9601 Год назад
You see the people and companies that see the opportunity in the problems... our local curry restaurant switched seamlessly to delivery and carryout to preserve and develop business, whereas the old established restaurants just died during lockdown. The curry restaurant is now doing amazing business, with full restaurant every day. No longer can you just roll up on a Friday evening and get a table... and the cost of the meals is now high, too.! Good one, guys!
@Nivola1953
@Nivola1953 Год назад
I know what the industry looks like, at least here in SE Asia! I flew to Frankfurt and back in May-June and within the region just yesterday. My son in law is In flight manager on a major airline. The reports are always the same, all flights are up to capacity, even to destinations like Kota Kinabalu, in North East Borneo. It actually looks like airlines are having problems, activating back all the planes and crews that had to be “mothballed” in 2020.
@johndoh5182
@johndoh5182 Год назад
I have to think that with all the improvements to internet bandwidth and increasing cost for business travel, most business travel is dead. So, probably shrinking business class sections on planes for different market will happen, but this is hard to judge. While business travel will shrink, personal travel for those people making really good revenue is going to increase, and while in the US as an example the lower 60% is in worse shape now, the top 25% is better off and getting better all the time, so THEY will be replacing part of that business loss. 25% of 330 million is a LOT of people to replace business travelers, and with the right incentives from airlines I see this as a growing business for them even while business travel shrinks. This helps US airlines the most, and I don't know the economics of other parts of the world to make any judgement.
@JeanClaudeCOCO
@JeanClaudeCOCO Год назад
You’re right. I work in a business reliant on business travel in the US and I can say things are still off. Business travel picked up a bit in the spring months just before the summer. Most if not all my friends and colleagues travel and went on vacation this summer and they looked to filled those business class seats but it was for leisure. With all the chaos, inflation, strong dollar, business travel may not rebound or it could be prolonged until next year if things get better and there is a need. That’s why Premium Economy is booming and airlines are reconfiguring planes for this. If the passenger can’t use a company discount or credit card for Business seats he may be tempted to use his own for a more comfortable ride then sit in economy.
@cxa340
@cxa340 Год назад
Having been in this industry a long time I would say eh yes and no Business travel as it was is dead - yes you are right, that mis was happening but the pandemic speed up the process. We now see a lot less demand than before because people have become used to virtual meetings as a replacement for travel - especially if the fares are high. Also, we have seen that unmanaged travel has exploded while managed has really taken the biggest hit. Managed travel was also the bread and butter - these were big companies with corporate contracts and travel departments etc and they really helped fill the front cabin on long haul international - now the budgets for these companies has been slashed. Unmanaged business travel was always increasing, but this was an uncomfortable truth to the big 3 airlines - my own airline despised unmanaged travel and routinely tried to piss off these types of passengers it seemed by enacting bad policies and procedures that alienated this growing segment. Unmanaged travel usually was from small to medium size businesses, fare and schedule were important so they make not be captured to us, so this segment was highly likely to book with another airline if our fare was too high or schedule inconvenient. At the same time, this segment usually booked on personal credit cards and got reimbursed or used opaque corporate cards so as a passenger we should have had a great opportunity to capture high income passengers who wanted to earn benefits with us and would prefer to book with us for their business and personal travel to the point where they may even hold our credit card in their wallet. You are really talking about the unmanaged travel segment here - they do more than take just a leisure trip a year they travel for work and fun, many times they have say in who they fly with all things being equal, and they clearly have preferences. This segment is expanding and there is an opportunity here to offer business class fares for summer or off season trips to Europe, competitive international business class fares on short haul Latin America so they can check extra bags, or premium economy on a trip to Hawaii. The problem is that for the big 3 their analytics departments are still trying to catch up on how to service this segment.
@Ticklestein
@Ticklestein Год назад
Would have loved to hear you give full disclosure regarding the major airline that you have a segment on vis-a-vis your employer, Petter.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Yes, I understand that but they have asked me not to talk about it since I’m not a spokesperson for the airline. It’s a fine line to walk, I admit that
@Ticklestein
@Ticklestein Год назад
@@MentourNow Appreciate the reply and that’s a more than reasonable response
@wxkat
@wxkat Год назад
Hawaii has a captive market since tourists and residents alike have to fly to travel interstate (no roads linking the islands). That helped keep airlines like Hawaiian and Southwest, which provide interisland service, operating during the pandemic. Southwest, which started service to and within Hawaii in 2019, is as of this post also engaging in a fare war with Hawaiian for interisland travel.
@shrimpflea
@shrimpflea Год назад
What about small regional airlines. Can they compete with the big boys for these island hops?
@ravensrulzaviation
@ravensrulzaviation Год назад
Hi Petter, I fly Southwest all the time, at least 20 flights last couple years, I wouldn’t say they are Low Cost, I consider them regular domestic here, their lowest ticket prices 1 way is 163.00 for me just to fly 2 hrs to Florida, but, you get free IMessage and WhatsApp Service on their free IFE that you use on your devices and 8 dollar all day internet plus they only fill planes to normal passenger size. 149 for the 700 series and 175 for the 800ng series. They don’t offer meals, don’’t need to, you can take your own food on the plane for the flight and the leg room is incredible and I am 6 ft tall.
@Meechooilka
@Meechooilka Год назад
Low Cost doesn't mean it's cheap for travellers. Low Cost means "operated with an especially high emphasis on minimizing operating costs and without some of the traditional services and amenities provided in the fare (from Wiki)". This should and can result in lower fares, but it doesn't necessarily have to. Norwegian is also considered low cost, but it is not always cheap. At least not when compared to Ryanair.
@TheUnforgiven69
@TheUnforgiven69 Год назад
This will all lead to flying becoming impossible for those who could barely afford it pre-pandemic. It's a vicious circle ending up with airlines seeing fewer and fewer passengers as ticket pricing skyrockets. Pre-pandemic I flew Canada to Los Cabos Mexico via Swoop on a direct return flight 4.5 hrs one way for 450 dollars CND total. Now the same flight requires a second stop, takes 12 hrs and the price has doubled to at least 1000 with Swoop no longer offering Cabo so via Westjet or Air Canada. Simply put...I'm not going to Cabo lol
@C2K777
@C2K777 Год назад
WOW! Really??? You let yourselves be banned from domestic flights, let alone internationally, if you hadn't had the jab, then the jab and the booster, then the jabs, the booster and then the 2nd booster over the course of 18 odd months and now you're telling us that routes got axed and prices went through the roof???? Who could've seen that happening eh 🙄
@TheUnforgiven69
@TheUnforgiven69 Год назад
@@C2K777 I was never banned. I flew thru the pandemic. Most countries like Costs Rica and Mexico only required a double vaccination. The prices haven't "gone thru the roof" They are still close to what they always were... it's just that discount airlines have lost pilots and crews and are no longer able to serve certain destinations. You shouldn't care...you don't seem like the type who can afford to fly plus you are likely unvaxxed filth confined to your sofa so piss off lol
@leeriddick7
@leeriddick7 Год назад
@@C2K777 Some logic leap you've made there to blame this on the vaccines, quite impressive honestly
@C2K777
@C2K777 Год назад
@@leeriddick7 It is a FACT, neigh, it is recorded in Law that Canada introduced an internal travel ban. One of the elements was a ban on all air travel unless you were not only jabbed but that you were 'up to date' with them. Your ignorance of the facts isn't my problem. Maybe read up a little more before you try looking smart with you passive aggressive little quips son.
@dennis2376
@dennis2376 Год назад
Thank you.
@mattesrocket
@mattesrocket Год назад
What shocked me during the pandemic is to see, how stuck, over-complex, not-agile our society and working world is: the pandemic would have been THE big chance for airports and the whole aviation industry, to modernize the whole prozesses at the airports. It's so oldstylish, so complicated and uncomfortable and often stupic, how the whole process is for passengers from arriving at an airport until the plane is in the air. It's in many parts so stupic, rediculous, uncomfortable, AND CHAOTIC. And it became even worse. Modernization is lacking but would have been possible only at a certain kind of break, what the pandemic was. ...the same what "theaters" are going on in the plane at boarding and during "service", it' s horrible and outdated.
@Meechooilka
@Meechooilka Год назад
@Figment please, do. We will have more room.
@peterlbaldwin511
@peterlbaldwin511 Год назад
Curious that one glaring omission of a "success" story in surviving the recent economic chaos caused by the pandemic, is the long haul Gulf based airline "Emirates". Started in only 1985 so comapartively new to some of the International carriers, "Emirates" has not only won the prestige "World's Best Airilne "award several times, they also operate by a long margin the largest number of Airbus A380's.(I believe the Emirates fleet, is well over 100 of the giant aircraft and more than all the rest operated by other airlines combined). During the economic chaos they did not scramble to ditch the aircraft but instead kept them in full first rate flying condition, thus able to resume full service, whilst other airlines were still frantically trying to find suitable planes..
@wjhann4836
@wjhann4836 Год назад
On top of your Ryanair arguments: Some time I was flying to and from Spain, Ryanair seemed to be the only Airline offering a regular flight plan - it felt like the only Airline offering Germany to some Spain destinations. So - their "taken risk" gave them revenue and relative full plains.
@thomasbootham2707
@thomasbootham2707 Год назад
That’s pretty much there business strategy every time an airline cuts a service or route Ryanair usually jumps in immediately and picks up the slack
@NicolaW72
@NicolaW72 Год назад
@@thomasbootham2707 Indeed.
@DetectiveHouse
@DetectiveHouse Год назад
7 July 2018, FAO to DUB - that was my last ever Ryanair flight! That day I vowed never to fly Ryanair again. Since then, I have won free flights (round trip) twice and turned them down when I found out they would be with Ryanair. Next month I’m travelling again. Despite Ryanair having direct flights to the destination, I chose to fly with another airline (my favorite) even though it means having a layover on the way there and back. I swore I’d never fly Ryanair again and it’s a promise I am committed to keeping!
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
What happened on that flight?
@alcoyne3333333333333
@alcoyne3333333333333 Год назад
Time to get over it my friend,
@williamjones3462
@williamjones3462 Год назад
I take a minimum of 4 flights a month and sometimes many more. Early in the pandemic there would be no more than 2 dozen passengers. Sometimes I was the only one in the security line and waiting area. (I have the pictures) Now every flight is full. I have to book early to travel. Last month I had to change flight plans at the last minute. Instead of nonstop to Dallas from Tampa I was routed to Louisville, Midway then Dallas. Barely arrived in time for work. The advantage of being a SWA A lister I can board early and find space in the overhead.
@ravensrulzaviation
@ravensrulzaviation Год назад
Allot of the airlines are opening more routes for the fall season, example, international flights to ICELAND from BWI on PLAY Airlines and on ICELAND Air, both on the new MAX’s, plus back to Germany and always to the UK.
@obbayazit
@obbayazit Год назад
Hi petter, as you know both USA and EU have rules that only a domestic entity may have majority of an airline's shares. Because of this Indigo Partners has holdings of Wizz, but not enough to have controlling share. So I wouldn't call it the owner. I think you may have explained a similar issue between Northwest and KLM in a past video and how this restriction on each side ruined the partnership by not letting either airline to buy the other, and make changes they wanted to do.
@GThu1
@GThu1 Год назад
As far as I know, Wizz is mostly in European hands.
@salihahzem
@salihahzem Год назад
I’m kind of surprised you haven’t mentioned TURKISH AIRLINES… They have kept their workforce intact as well, closed last year more than $1B net profit, have a larger fleet compared to 2019, carried more passengers in last two months compared to same period in 2019, %14 more ASK overall thru 2022 and has the most number of flights during this summer within Europe after Ryanair and Wizzair. Easily one of the best performing legacy carriers anywhere. Their hub at Istanbul Airport has also been the top airport in IATA Europe region around 1350 aircraft movements daily.
@mattesrocket
@mattesrocket Год назад
we never stop learning. Really interesting!
@jamilkadirov8955
@jamilkadirov8955 Год назад
Because it's obvious that Turkish Airlines are really good. No need to mention
@worshippers3590
@worshippers3590 Год назад
Is there a way of getting access to those stats?
@salihahzem
@salihahzem Год назад
WORSHIPPERS Airlines, including TURKISH have those in their “investor relations” webpages. As for the airport rankings; ACI and other IATA reports are the ones to look.
@grahamsalmons2027
@grahamsalmons2027 Год назад
Despite the rabid pilot shortage in the US, the FAA is not offering visas to attract pilots from abroad. Community retention schemes (eg British Airways) in which the pilots took a pay cut to reduce the number of redundancies, which has proved very beneficial to the airline in the bounce back, have now become points of bitter dispute as airlines wrestle with the difficulty of industrial relations but a difficult and competitive market. The pandemic showed how disloyal and ruthless airlines are to their employees, creating broad scale redundancies and as a result a %age of the workforce never returned to flying.
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Indeed.
@ahmadtheaviationlover1937
@ahmadtheaviationlover1937 Год назад
I looove that rock music in your outro
@kantemirovskaya1lightninga30
Some great info I will pass now to my soon to graduate 17 year old who wants to become a pilot after much soul searching. He is not interested in flying for a big airline but rather regional or small but great info nonetheless
@MentourNow
@MentourNow Год назад
Great! Wish him the best of luck from me.
@surfleetsurfer6370
@surfleetsurfer6370 Год назад
👍🏻👍🏻 Businesses, which have managed if not perfectly well but kind of ok during the pandemic aren’t going to reinstate the massive travel budgets that they had before. I can’t see it anyways. Especially Long Haul.
@zebrasncrumpets1831
@zebrasncrumpets1831 Год назад
Hello, Captain! Please could you give us your thoughts on what happened in Madrid with 5 TCAS conflicts nearly at the same time on 3rd September, some 100ft separation? VAS aviation released a video on that, would be great to get your opinion on this! Thank you!
@CameraObscure
@CameraObscure Год назад
The improvement in Air quality during the height of the Lockdown world wide is something I would perfer remain personally. Less planes,cars,trucks etc was the best thing about the whole Covid situation.
@paulblichmann2791
@paulblichmann2791 Год назад
And dumb people were so courteous to cover their ugly faces from view! No traffic, $20 plane tickets, 20% pay bonus... COVID was awesome.
@clarkpj1
@clarkpj1 Год назад
PSA jumped salaries when Envoy and Piedmont did. Now Mesa has upped the ante by going to $100/hr for FO's. Now we're hearing that Skywest will be next.
@Roguescienceguy
@Roguescienceguy Год назад
The price of the education is what eventually did not make me pursue that dream. Nowadays it would be even harder for budding airlinepilots to recover that debt.
@Arcadiez
@Arcadiez Год назад
It's mid september and the payload is still very good between 80-90%. The delays are reduced, few airports which caused delay by lack of personal. Unless like today when the French ATC strikes once again. Seems like the industry is recovering well.
@Scott757300
@Scott757300 Год назад
You know all is well in the industry when the French ATC are on strike 😂
@Arcadiez
@Arcadiez Год назад
@@Scott757300 We weren't even passing French airspace. But still got affected, due to the reduced capacity over other countries. Gotta love the French. Do anything in their power to avoid having to actually work, haha.
@Eternal_Tech
@Eternal_Tech Год назад
@@Arcadiez During World War II, the French did not surrender; they were just on strike! 😊
@aleugen6045
@aleugen6045 Год назад
Just had the 'pleasure' to fly from Schiphol yesterday. Have to say it is not only airlines who have to fight to have enough crews, but also airports have to change their ways to get their staffing in order. I will not list here all the queuing and missed flights complaints - they're everywhere on the web. The scariest part is that they seem to have gone down on competence level to the point where something bad could happen. Example: the team at the gate declare 'Now boarding' status but keep the gate shut - no boarding. Then they switch to 'Gate closing' and after that they start boarding. All without ANY voice announcement. Which means that either the flight status boards are not connected to the passenger validation (boarding pass scans) or they found an innovative way about it. Asked them why they did that, answer was: "You know, we want to motivate all passengers to rush to the gate". If other parts of the airport services solve their jobs in this style, we may have security or safety incidents pretty soon. On the other hand, last month Schiphol announced possible profit for 2022 - isn't that a bit greedy? On yet another hand, the Dutch government handed Schiphol a blessing in disguise by ordering them to cut number of flights in 2023 to 440000 (down from 500000). On the face of it, that means trouble. On a closer look, it offers the airport greater leverage in talks with the airlines competing for flights to Amsterdam - some flights will be left out next year - no one wants to be 'theirs'. Kindly asking, could you share your view on this matter?
@Luke_Go
@Luke_Go Год назад
I spent hours and hours trying to solve two issues with Lufthansa this week. It's been a nightmare! Lufthansa has been having big internal issues during the past weeks. I gave up and now booked with a competitor.
@Meechooilka
@Meechooilka Год назад
so has KLM. Legacy airlines have struggled the most, it seems. Additionally, people really prefer now to fly point-to-point, without stopovers. And low-cost carriers provide excellent options for this.
@Luke_Go
@Luke_Go Год назад
@@Meechooilka I used to be a Delta Diamond Medallion, but because of KLM, I no longer fly with them... I agree with you: if there would be a Jetblue or Easyjet flight from Europe to the US West coast, I would book it. Condor is a great airline (which I sadly couldn't use this time). Hopefully Jetblue will expand massively in Europe and I hope that WIZZ will also expand trans-continental travel.
@Meechooilka
@Meechooilka Год назад
@@Luke_Go I think we are yet to see whether low cost trans-atlantic travel is feasible, possible and popular. Norwegian kinda started it before the pandemic, but I am not sure how successful it was. This will also depend on the success of the narrow-body XLR versions among passengers. I am also sure that if this market was profitable, Ryanair would have tapped into it already. So time will tell.
@Luke_Go
@Luke_Go Год назад
​@@Meechooilka The biggest problem Norwegian had, where their 787s (or lack of being able to use them). WIZZ and Easyjet have proven that they can successfully operate 6-hr-flight routes (Middle Eastern destinations) and with the A321XLR sightly longer flights across the Atlantic are the logical next step. Jetblue has been so successful with their A321neo trans-Atlantic flights that it added two additional flights per day - and A321XLR has yet to enter service!
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