Quote:
Originally Posted by fanofYOW
Yes but at the same time you can't deny the fact that so many people drive to YUL to catch a flight, whereas if we have those flights here, people would stop doing that which would increase our numbers, the same numbers that are showing AC we are a low yield. All these people are giving YUL those numbers and ultimately now multi-day transatlantic departures are being serviced there. They are a business you are right. So they must know this is the reality and the fact that they haven't done anything about it is not surprising. Less aircraft, less resources, less everything for them if people here continue to drive there instead of them basing an aircraft here to service those routes. Can't blame them though, if I ran a complex business like an airline, I would also want to milk the idea of "YOW has low yield because that's what the numbers say, and completely ignore other factors" for as long as I can. I see a lot of travellers at my place of work and I ask them which airport are they flying from, you wouldn't believe how many say Montreal. Like probably more than half. That's anecdotal though. The only way to really find out the actual numbers is to data collect. Pretty much asking every single person going through YUL's doors how many are based in Ottawa. But I don't have to tell you why that will never happen.
They did discuss this in front of AC already. Here's that article: https://www.obj.ca/article/lack-direct-a...wa-economic-growth-aviation-summit-hears
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You can say it's a conspiracy all you want. But there's a wide world of airlines out there. Not just AC. Nobody is prioritizing YOW for long haul. And even with shorthaul, Porter might end up with a bigger hub at Pearson than at YOW.
And yes, they know that people drive from YOW to YUL. They don't just know that. They often include Ottawa-Gatineau in YUL's catchment. They know based on payment addresses where their customers are from. And they've decided the yield isn't there. It's not personal. It's business.
I've said before I hope the XLR changes some of this calculation for long haul. But even then when a prime slot at Heathrow (morning arrival hours for example) is worth $10M, it's a tough sell for an airline to use that flying an XLR to Ottawa, when they can send a 77W a whole bunch of other places and get a better return. This is why I hope we get Aer Lingus from Dublin. Widebody services from Eurolegacies is looking increasingly unlikely to YOW. Air Canada to Heathrow is probably the only widebody service Ottawa will ever get.