Clive wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2025 11:10 am
As many have pointed out EDI is only 40 miles from Glasgow. That is absolutely nothing to North American travellers. We need to be honest and ask why wouldn’t airlines like WestJet use EDI to serve Scotland. Or more pertinently what could GLA bosses do to sway those business decisions our way?
Because it's a large market in itself, with 600 pax pdew - and north of 135k inbound US visitors a year visiting
Glasgow!
Westjet only started serving Scotland in 2016. What did those in charge at GLA say/offer to them then that they picked GLA over EDI?
DL came to GLA in iirc 2017 - after they'd
already started serving EDI. What did the then GLA management do to sway that? Clearly it was successful.
AC came back to GLA around the same time. Again they were
already serving EDI and clearly GLA were able to sway them to serve GLA too.
Clearly N American airlines can be swayed to serve GLA as well as (or instead of) EDI because it has happened in recent history! - despite castles and old towns and long, long after the establishment of Holyrood and appropriate facilities at EDI.
So the suggestion that it's practically impossible for those in charge at GLA to sway N American airlines to serve GLA is baseless and disproved by recent history and GLA management's own recent prdecessors!
Indeed, it's clear that even AGS and their CEO don't agree with the argument that airlines can't be swayed to GLA, cause even they themselves have repeatedly said returning direct scheduled US flights is a major target!
You haven’t addressed that.
What's consistently not been addressed is the point that I and many other posters have made again and again and again in this forum. Namely that the change that we're complaining about is something that took place in 2020, pre and post covid - Not in 1103 when edinburgh castle was built, not in 1999 when Holyrood opened, but 2020.
Why? Why was GLA able to have scheduled flights to the USA - and as mentioned above, attract North American carriers up to that point - and then after that they all disappeared and it's now apparently impossible to get them back.
This is the crucial fundamental point and it's routinely ignored because it doesn't fit with arguments about castles and parliaments.
I still think it’s easy for use to sit at home and claim GLA bosses are failures but we are not working in the hard nosed reality of multi million pound business decisions.
Of course we all want GLA to fulfill its full potential - that’s why we have this discussion group - but I always find it quite unfair to put a label of malaise or unprofessionalism on the GLA bosses when in fact they want and need every success far more than we do. To state that other route development teams are just better at their job is unfair IMO, without regard to the real world they have to work in.
I'm criticising GLA bosses because when we benchmark (something that businesses do a lot in the "real world") the airport against many of its peers it the UK and Europe (not including EDI!) it is performing poorly, with poor connectivity and pax numbers.
I'm criticising GLA bosses because they they themselves said GLA has a connecttivity deficit which they've failed to resolve.
I'm criticising GLA bosses because they themselves have publicly mentioned a whole lot of route development priorities and requirements and they've literally failed to deliver on any of them.
I'm criticising GLA bosses because important people like Stuart Patrick and large players like barrhead travel are clearly concerned about what's happening at the airport and suggesting they're failing to even cater for existing, demonstrable demand.
And it’s no longer the fact that they’ve taken GLA services but they’ve quadrupled the market to a level that even MAN eyes with envy.
The article I quoted shows clearly that they haven't quadrupled the market and much of the growth they've experienced has come from relocating airlines/routes/pax from GLA. The CAA stats will tell a similar story.
It’s because Scotland and Edinburgh in particular is chiming as a must see destination with tourists in ways it didn’t 30 years ago, as air travel and tourism has developed.
Yes, we're experiencing an inbound tourism boom to Scotland, particularly in terms of inbound US tourism. Such a phenomenon should be a massive gift for GLA - as Scotland's 2nd largest airport serving a city proven to be very popular with US visitors, and the gateway to the W Highland and Islands - But instead It's almost completely passing it by.
How come 10 years ago when Glasgow had less US tourists it had a number of scheduled flights to the USA and now 10 years later, when it has demonstrably more more US visitors, it has none? Quite obviously it's not an issue of lack of US visitors to Glasgow.
Btw, on MAN - If you look at the tourism stats, Glasgow has consistently more American visitors than Manchester.
I’d be very pleasantly surprised if the new owners at GLA can land more than a daily New York hub and a leisure schedule to Orlando. Very surprised indeed. Cue Aer Lingus IMO.
I think most of us would be pretty happy with that at GLA. I don't think anybody's suggesing that it should have as many US serviceas as EDI.
Speedbird Julie wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2025 12:05 pm
Nail. Head. The establishment of the parliament changed everything. The international profile of Edinburgh was transformed amongst other changes.
Anything else, AGS, Dewar etc is almost irrelevant.
So the establishment of the parliament in Edinburgh transformed the international profile of Edinburgh and that's caused a boom at the airport serving that city - and indirectly made its neighbouring city and airport 50 miles to the west less attractive.That seems like a convincing argument on the face of it, but the issue is that we're have a very strong and clear comparator elsewhere in the UK, namely Wales.
The establishment of a similar parliament and devolved administration at Cardiff at the same point in time doesn't appear to have been transformational in terms of the international profile of Cardiff - and it definitely hasn't been transformational in terms of the performance of the city's airport, CWL which has struggled terribly and apparently came so close to closing that it had to be taken into public ownership to save it.
Meanwhile, CWL's main competitor to the West, BRS, has experienced a boom and has shown a quite amazing performance in terms of new routes and pax numbers (despite the fact it has no parliament and no castle, less foreign visitors than Glasgow, no rail/tram link and is notorious for poor road access and congestion).
So it appears that establishing a devolved administration is not a guarantee of enhanced international profile and a boom at the city's airport and other factors are probably relevant.