
RwandAir will use the West African hub of Accra to feed its
direct flights to the US once it gets the final approval from the US's
Federal Aviation Agency (FAA).
In an interview with Travel Weekly, RwandAir chief executive officer Yvonne Makolo said that the Ghanaian city will facilitate connecting traffic around Africa.
“We
are making sure the New York flight is able to connect to the East
Africa region. We'll be flying the Kigali-Accra-New York route, so we'll
be looking at the West Africa market,” Ms Makolo told the publication.
The Rwandan national carrier’s model is different from that of its regional competitor Kenya Airways.
In October, Kenya Airways launched daily direct nonstop flights from its Nairobi hub to New York’s JFK Airport.
Now,
facing reduced passenger numbers and the onset of winter in the
northern hemisphere, KQ plans to cut its frequency to five times a week
effective January 15.
FAA audit
RwandAir’s original
plan was to fly to New York by June 2019, and it says that would have
required that all approvals be done before next March.
However,
this was delayed because the FAA completed its audit of the Kigali
facility in the fourth quarter of this year, and the US Department of
Transport then gave RwandAir approval to fly to the US in March.
“We
are still working around the June 2019 timeline, but it might be pushed
back. It's going to be to New York, depending on which airport we get
suitable slots. The FAA finalised the technical review a few weeks ago,
so we are waiting for all the other processes to be completed,” Ms
Makolo said.
RwandAir plans to use the Airbus A330Neo
on the New York route, a wide body aircraft with full flat beds for the
business class, and with a premium economy class.
“We
are expecting tourism to be the biggest driver of this route given that
it has become our biggest foreign exchange earner. We are also seeing
conference tourism becoming an important factor for Rwanda, making the
country the top third host after South Africa and Morocco. The leisure
and conference tourists and the African diaspora will be the key markets
we are looking at,” said Ms Makolo.
Currently the
Kigali-based carrier faces competition both on its regional and
international routes from Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airlines as they
operate the same routes.
The two latter carriers also now fly to New York, with KQ landing at JFK, and Ethiopian at Newark Airport.
South
African Airways, Egyptair, Royal Air Maroc and Delta Air Lines also
offer scheduled passenger services from Africa to the US.
But
it is only KQ that has direct nonstop flights to New York, with
Ethiopian connecting either through Dublin, Ireland or West Africa on
the outbound flight and nonstop on its return flight.
Announcing
the reduction of frequency this past Thursday, Kenya Airways chief
executive officer Sebastian Mikosz said that while the reduction of
frequencies was a strategic business decision, the airline remains
strongly committed to the New York route and will continue to offer
nonstop services.
“As the only airline that offers a
nonstop flight between East Africa and the US, this route remains
significant to us because of the role it plays in opening more economic
and tourism growth opportunities for Kenya and East Africa.
“The
decision to adjust our schedule is to cater for seasonality in line
with global practices that allows airlines to reduce or add frequencies
based on low or high seasons,” Mr Mikosz said, adding that they would
evaluate the option of reverting to daily flights for the route next
summer, just as they've been doing for the Paris and Amsterdam routes.
- The EastAfrican
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