Air Serbia registers strong charter demand


Air Serbia is recording strong travel demand for its Aviolet charter flights this summer, with the airline set to operate approximately 600 return charter services to popular destinations during the holiday season, in comparison to roughly 530 last year. Passenger numbers on Air Serbia's dedicated charter brand have grown over the years and now handle over 90.000 passengers annually. The Aviolet network has expanded to 23 cities across five countries this year, including Spain, Greece, Italy, Turkey and Tunisia. The total number of services may increase further as tour operators continue to book additional charter flights to cater to the travel requirements of holidaymakers in Serbia. All flights are maintained with a fleet of three Boeing 737-300 aircraft which have the capacity to seat 144 passengers.

Air Serbia is currently considering future options for Aviolet, which was launched in the summer of 2014. The airline's CEO, Dane Kondić, told EX-YU Aviation News earlier this year, “Aviolet was created as a brand to take advantage of the old aircraft in terms of how we gave them separation to the mainline fleet. We will always be in the charter market, because that is the nature of the outbound Serbian market. While we have those aircraft, they will be branded as Aviolet”. He added, "Aviolet remains a good option for us but the interesting thing is to see if it has legs to do something more than just what it is currently doing".

Air Serbia has previously said it has two options for its remaining B737-300 fleet. Speaking to the "Tango Six" portal earlier this year, Air Serbia's Chief Operations Officer, Declan Keller, noted that the carrier could invest in the jets and thus extend their utilisation for a further four to five years. Such a move would require an engine overhaul and cabin refurbishment. Alternatively, the airline is considering the retirement of two B737s by year's end, according to Mr Keller.

Comments

  1. Anonymous09:05

    I'm quite interested to see what will happen with this once the 733s are gone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:32

      Hopefully they will lease A320s in their place.

      Delete
    2. JATBEGMEL11:39

      My guess is the A320 neo will replace the A319/A320's in JU fleet which will then go to 'Aviolet'.

      However, I dont think they will keep the Aviolet brand once they replace the B733, which was created to distance the B733 from the Air Serbia brand.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous09:08

    Didn't they used to have 4 B737-300s? What happened to the fourth one?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:16

      I dont know where did you see that they are not using 4?

      Just check the link all 4 are flying regularly...

      https://www.flightradar24.com/data/aircraft/airserbia-ju-asl

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:45

      They are probably scheduling charter flights as if they had 3 B733s while the 4th is kept as a backup.

      Delete
  3. Nemjee09:13

    Some people in Jat Tehnika said that two 737s are leaving the fleet after the busy summer season, I think those are YU-AND and YU-ANI.
    I guess next summer we will see those Airbuses fly some charter flights.

    I think it's a shame Tunis Air didn't get the flights they wanted. BEG's numbers would have been further boosted.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:16

      Dodn't they? They are flying Monastir plus Tunis.

      Delete
    2. Nemjee09:21

      Yeah but they got half the frequencies they asked. For example, they wanted to weekly to Monastir but got one because our Directorate said that JU has the means to operate these flights.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous09:22

      They won't have enough planes to do charters next year if they plan to do it with the Airbuses. Assuming they don't cut even more of their network.

      Delete
    4. JATBEGMEL12:02

      It would be a waste if JU invested money into the B733's. My opinion is:

      - They dont need capacity for 2 x A320, 8 x A319 and 4 x B733. This will only be more problematic once the A320 neos start to enter the fleet.
      - 2 B733's returing after this season, and 2 next season falls into place with the A320 neo arrival.
      - Money spent in investing into the B733 could be used to add ATR's which it desperately needs, or regional jets which would be a perfect aircraft to expand operations, especially now the massive gap between the ATR and A319. A regional jet would make JU more flexible, where an ATR can or cant be sent, however the A319 too large (PRG, VCE, HAM, VIE). The freed (mainly ATR) would in turn boost destinations such as TIA, SJJ, as well as possibilities on new destinations (INI, BWK, ZAD, OMO)
      - A320 neos are scheduled to begin its slow arrival next year. A319's in this case would easily replace the B733 and not surprise JU travellers with the 'Aviolet' product. Maintenance would be cheaper, fuel costs lower, basically operating cost should be cheaper without the additional fleet (B733).

      Delete
    5. Voleo bih da nisam u pravu,ali čisto sumnjam da će Air Srbija(Aviolet)plaćati lizing erbaseva cele godine zbog letnjih čartera,možda eventualno ako nađu način da ih iznajmljuju tokom zimskog reda letenja kao što će već raditi sa jednim ove godine?

      Delete
    6. JATBEGMEL22:37

      ^^^

      - JU is already looking to lease out 1 A319 in the winter. Lets see how that goes and what becomes of it.
      - JU would have a unified product on the Airbus fleet which could easily go between charter and scheduled. The B733 steps in when it needs to.
      - Airbus fleet has better fuel efficiency and is cheaper to operate. The B733 is in their ownership, the B733 isnt the cheapest to operate, burns more fuel and would require expensive maintenance to keep it flying.
      - Sooner or later the B733's would have to leave the fleet, even if they wanted to or not.
      - No known plan has been made for the retirement of the Airbus fleet. A320 neo will take a couple of years to fully enter the fleet.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous22:49

      @JATBEGMEL - Love your comments!

      Delete
  4. Anonymous09:21

    Their branding has always struck me as way too similar to Nouvelair

    http://m.suvarnabhumiairport.com/img/airline_logo/LBT.png

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:27

      lol they ripped it off :D

      Delete
  5. Anonymous09:28

    Well the positive development is that they updated their website and schedule

    http://aviolet.rs/

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous09:29

    Wht not base one Aviolet plane in Nis or Banja Luka and operate a few destinations direct from their? You can keep the same Aviolet branding and service.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:35

      Belgrade airlines would never do that!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:35

      Ne znam samo gde bi ih tamo odrzavali? I ko bi ih odrzavao uopste?

      Delete
    3. Anonymous09:37

      +1 last anon

      It's too expensive. Who is going to do maintenance, who is going to pay for crew to stay in INI or BNX, who is going to do catering etc.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous10:40

      Sta lupetas kakav ketering samo voda.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous10:43

      Шта ти лупеташ? Авиолет има сервис исти као и Визер, имаш ценовник и купујеш оно шта желиш.

      Нема потребе за тако простачким и примитивним начином изражавања.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous11:16

      А додао бих да ЈУ нема више сервис на свим летовима на којима лети Атр изузев Веча, Венеције и Прага.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous14:13

      A da neko mozda kaze da Jat/ErSrbija/Aviolet i ne mogu bas kad se sete i kako im se prohte da otvaraju baze i linije po drugim drzavama, jer je, koliko me pamet sluzi, BNX jos uvek u drzavi Bosni i Hercegovini

      Delete
    8. Anonymous18:21

      Чисто сумњам да би се тамо неко противио да ЈУ отвори базу.

      Delete
    9. JATBEGMEL19:25

      Wont happen because:
      - Takes an aircraft from its base (BEG) which is lacking aircraft.
      - Defeats the purpose of their hub system in BEG.
      - No support in INI/BNX (technical etc).
      - No catering (water, food, beverages).
      - No crew base. JU has an excess of staff as it is so hiring a seperate staff for the new base isnt the smartest of choices.
      - There is only soo much JU could offer from both INI and BNX, with LCC seeming to be the best option for these airports, something JU isnt.

      Nothing to with JU being 'Belgrade Airlines'. Just as AF is based in CDG, A3 in ATH, TK in IST, SU in SVO, LO in WAW, AZ in FCO, JU is based in BEG. Serbia isnt Germany, Niš isnt Munich. JU should simply restart BEG-INI to fit in its waves in BEG. Would be great if the government would finance it as a PSO route, as with UZC/KVO.

      Delete
  7. They could have come up with Sun-Serbia, or something along those lines, like Sun Country Airlines... It would be funny. Air Serbia and SunSerbia.

    I always liked the name of Sun Country Airlines, don't know why.

    On the other hand, they should really develop a proper sub-brand for charters and politically sensitive destinations (PRN comes to mind) and invest accordingly in fleet and in product.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:51

      +1

      Delete
    2. JATBEGMEL11:44

      I dont think JU intended for Aviolet to be a brand that will stick, more like something in the mean time to keep the B733 however distance it from its brand, that is not painting the aircraft in Air Serbia livery. The aircraft is only used on Air Serbia scheduled flights when one of their aircaft (usually ATR) is AOG. Once the B733 is retired, I dont see Aviolet existing anymore.

      Delete
  8. Anonymous09:51

    Well I'm not surprised they have more flights considering there is no one else flying to Turkey except for them this year.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:58

      It's not just to Turkey but to Greece, Tunis, Italy and Spain.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:00

      Well to Greece Aegean and Ellinair fly charters. To Italy and Spain there were never other airlines operating charters or interest from other airline to operate charters.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous10:06

      This is for today:

      08.55 Corfu
      09.00 Antalya
      15.00 Rimini
      15.00 Skiathos

      Yesterday

      05.20 Samos
      05.20 Enfidha
      10.20 Cephalonia
      10.30 Antalya
      13.40 Zakynthos
      15.00 Palma De Mallorca
      15.45 Skiathos

      So you see, not so many flights to Turkey

      Delete
  9. Anonymous09:53

    Coming from Croatia in my opinion this is something Croatia Airlines should have done years ago. Lease or invest in 2 planes for the summer and operate charters all over Europe. If Aviolet gets 90,000+ passengers per year, I'm sure a OU charter brand could match those figures or even more. In my opinion it is a smart move by JU management.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:56

      Ja vam pricam da morate promeniti flotu jer slabo letite (sad ce da skoci Purger) drugo su turisti jedna kompanija za Hrvate sa RJ druga za turiste sa A321 kao nekada Aviogeneks i AdriaInex.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous11:55

      Ja cu ti kazat kako pricas gluposti.

      Beduin

      Delete
    3. Croatia airlines does charters too but they just use their own brand and aircraft. From memory they had a decent amount of charter based passengers but can't remember the figure.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous12:02

      Just 56,100 pax on charters last year at OU.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous12:03

      Maybe that's because they carry a lot of tourists on scheduled flights?

      Delete
    6. Anonymous12:07

      You miss out on a lot of potential tourists by just offering scheduled flights. A few years ago OU pilots wrote a letter to the CEO where they highlighted the lack of charters. It's very easy money because you sell all the seats on the plane to tour operators. Even if the plane goes half empty you still get paid as if it were a full load.

      Delete
    7. Alen Šćuric Purger12:10

      Zašto bi ja skočio?

      Delete
  10. Anonymous10:08

    OT

    I see QR is sending its A321 to BEG, is the first one?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:14

      "Starting July 1. the airline will up capacity on its existing four weekly service from the A320 to its 182-seat Airbus A321 aircraft"

      http://www.exyuaviation.com/2017/06/gulf-airlines-ramp-up-belgrade.html

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:44

      God bless you. Thanks. Their A321 looks stunning.

      Delete
  11. Anonymous10:15

    Good to see charter demand growing.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous10:33

    Maybe they can make Aviolet as ASL low-cost subsidiary to compete with Wizz and other LCC in Beg and INI.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous11:54

    Anyone know what's going on at ZAG this morning? Lots of flights are delayed:

    08.25 VIE OS Q400 (dep 09.37)
    08.25 LHR OU A320 (dep 09.23)
    08.30 PRG OU Q400 (dep 10.51)
    11.40 SPU OU Q400 (est 12.15)
    11.40 BWK OU Q400 (est 12.50)

    This is really bad. The weather is fine so...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:05

      Also, Qatar cancelled its second-daily flight, demand?

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:10

      I thinkbl it's because the terminal is still new, Kucko complained about this. The man saw it coming.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous12:16

      QR217 is canceled because it is scheduled only 2 days ago (QR goes 2Xdaily to ZAG)... so... it is not easy to fill A320 in that short time :)

      Delete
    4. Anonymous12:18

      I don't get why they would add flights three days in advance. They need at least a month in order to fill a plane

      Delete
    5. Alen Šćuric Purger12:29

      Koji vrag se danas događa u ZLZ. Vrijeme je savršeno, a apsolutno svi letovi kasne. Što više odmiće dan to je veći kaos.

      SPLIT OU 650 06:30, kasnio 5 minuta
      MUNICH OU 4436 06:45, kasnio 10 minuta
      FRANKFURT LH 1405 06:50, kasnio 12 minuta
      PRAGUE OK 819 07:00, kasnio 13 minuta
      BARCELONA OU 374 07:10, kasnio 8 minuta
      FRANKFURT OU 410 07:40, kasnio 26 minuta
      VIENNA OU 440 08:10, kasnio 27 minuta
      AMSTERDAM OU 450 08:25, kasnio 15 minuta
      LONDON OU 490 08:25, kasnio 58 minuta
      PRAGUE OU 320 08:30, kasnio 2:20 sati
      COPENHAGEN OU 480 08:35 kasnio 18 minuta
      VIENNA OS 682 08:59, kasnio 37 minuta
      ZURICH OU 462 9:00, kasnio 1:15 sati
      PARIS CDG OU 470 09:00, kasnio 15 minuta
      FRANKFURT OU 416 09:05, kasnio 14 minuta
      ZURICH OU 460 09:05, kasnio 7 minuta
      ISTANBUL TK 1054 09:30, kasnio 19 minuta
      DOHA QR 216 09:45, kasnio 11 minuta
      BARCELONA VY 1281 10:00, kasnio 33 minute
      BELGRADE JU 231, 10:05, kasnio 6 minuta
      MANCHESTER ZB 3421 10:40, kasno 6 minuta
      SPLIT OU 652 10:40, kasnio 1:35 sati
      BOL OU 640 11:40, kasnio 1:10 sati
      WARSAW LO 612, 12:00, kasnio 10 minuta
      SPLIT OU 654 12:10, kasnio 20 minuta

      Jedini on time:
      STOCKHOLM ARLAND DY 4350 10:30 - jedini on time

      Qatar QR218 za Dohu je otkazan (jel to zbog ovog kaosa ili zbog toga što su dali 8 aviona Britishu radi njihovog štrajka?)

      I koji je ovo vrag?
      ZAGREB (a ne VIE) OS 682Q (Q????) 08:25, nije poletio????
      * za Zagreb iz Zagrebu u 8:25

      Delete
    6. Anonymous12:46

      Purger can you guess what's wrong?

      Delete
    7. Purgeru,
      pretpostavljam da znas da se kasnjenje do 15 minuta u avijaciji ne smatra kasnjenjem

      Delete
    8. Anonymous12:49

      Some of these flights had delays well above the 15 minute mark.

      Delete
    9. Anonymous12:52

      British Airways arrived on time:
      scheduled: 11.35 // actual: 11.42

      Departure
      scheduled: 12.30 // expected: 14.00

      Delete
    10. Anonymous12:56

      Maybe there is a problem with the system? The airport is still brand new so we should give them some time to adapt.

      Delete
    11. Anonymous12:58

      Not even a guess? You probably know more than all of us here when it comes to the wy ZAG operates. :)

      Delete
    12. Anonymous13:05

      @ AnonymousJuly 1, 2017 at 12:56 PM
      They have been "adapting" for 4 months already and had another 3 months of testing before that.

      Delete
    13. Anonymous13:11

      What confuses me is that some airlines like Monarch, Air Serbia or Lot departed perfectly on time but some others are late, very late. BWK just got moved to 13.15.

      Delete
    14. Could this be related to OU's industrial action??

      Speaking of industrial action, BA's flight is being operated by Qatar. This could be why the outbound flight has been cancelled.

      Delete
    15. Anonymous14:16

      Q400, no those planes were taken off from the flights operated to the Arab countries before the ban

      Delete
    16. Anonymous16:14

      BEG has similar delays almost every day and nothing is new. Predominantly JU leads the pack of delays, as soon as summer schedule hits they seem to go bazook. Not any much better than joke about time.

      Delete
    17. Anonymous16:23

      This is seriously getting out of hand:

      BWK OU Q400 11.40 // 13.52
      LHR BA A320 12.30 // 14.13
      MUC LH E95 13.15 // 14.10
      CDG AF A318 15.00 // 16.12

      Most other flights were around 30 to 60 minutes late.

      Even Emirates which has been sitting there for like 3 hours.

      Delete
    18. Anonymous16:25

      @4.14 compare the times at Zagreb and Belgrade today and then talk about joke about time. Better to recognize that there is a problem then claim that everything is fabulous and amazing while planes are delayed up to 3 hours. Putting issues under the carpet rearely solves anything.

      Delete
    19. Anonymous16:30

      BEG had two severely delayed flights today:

      ATH JU A320 12.20 // 13.13
      ZRH LX A320 14.40 // 15.49

      JU to ATH was delayed because of traffic at ZRH while LX arrived late to ZRH from Valencia this morning.

      so 2 big delays today.

      Delete
    20. Anonymous16:34

      Exactly. That tells you that not a single flight was delayed because of issues at BEG. While in Zagreb planes are sitting three hours even though they arrived in Zagreb on time. But anyway if it doesn't bother you it doesn't bother me, just don't attack others to justify the issues they are having.

      Delete
    21. Anonymous16:37

      The reason OU is having problems is that one of the Dashes has broken down... again

      http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/zapeli-u-becu-satima-cekali-u-avionu-croatia-airlinesa-a-jutros-posadu-da-se-naspava/980207.aspx

      Delete
    22. Anonymous16:38

      Anon 4.37

      Do you know the registration?

      Delete
    23. Anonymous16:39

      Anon 4.14 came here to cause trouble, the discussion occurred because there are unusual delays at ZAG especially since planes arrive on time but end up being late by over 2 hours.

      Delete
    24. Anonymous16:40

      @ 4.38

      9A-CQD

      Delete
    25. Anonymous16:42

      Thank you! So on top of OU having a chaotic day so did the airport. How unfortunate for the passengers.

      By the way, from the article it says that the hotel and all that was taken care of by OS. Doesn't OU have a station manager in VIE?

      Delete
    26. Anonymous16:46

      ZAG delays already with new terminal????

      Delete
    27. Anonymous16:52

      You said it yourself, NEW terminal.

      Delete
    28. Anonymous18:05

      And why ZRH flights are so late lately, CDG, AMS, LED and Beirut never return on time, ATH??

      Delete
    29. Anonymous18:08

      Does Zagreb Airport have a patrol police working on here? Whenever a single issue at the airport is god forbid mentioned they release the hounds.

      Delete
    30. Anonymous18:18

      Anon 06.05

      Beirut is never on time in BEG because the handling agent down there is useless and can't rotate an A320 in time.

      BEY is always over 90% full and 100% are connections to CDG and AMS which are usually the first destinations to leave in the morning. Unlike ZAG and OU, JU has a hub system which is much more difficult to maintain.

      Delete
    31. Anonymous19:27

      Anon 06:05 it's not really an excuse you can change the handler or flight planning department can simply add 15-20 min into the schedule so that flights arrives on time.

      Delete
    32. Anonymous19:38

      And what's the excuse for all the delays in Zagreb?

      Delete
    33. Anonymous22:16

      Ali kad analitičar krene da beleži kašnjenja od 6,7,8min! Vrh!

      Delete
    34. Anonymous22:45

      Also, don't forget that BEG handles twice the number of pax/planes than ZAG does.

      Delete
    35. Alen Scuric Purger00:36

      O boze. Poanta je da su bas svi avioni osim jednog kasnili danas, a dobar dio je ozbiljno kasnio.

      Delete
  14. Anonymous12:19

    I still think there is room for winter charters out of BEG to destinations such as Canary Islands where the 737 can easily take. Also Egypt, south Israel, Tanzania. The only challenge is that the classic 737 does not have a medium range.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:31

      +1

      Delete
    2. Anonymous14:24

      Canary Islands, Israel, Egypt, range-wise, OK, but Tanzania, have you looked at the map before posting, I mean range-wise, not to mention how "easy" would it be to fill full plane of tourists for Tanzania, and even more considering operation costs, traffic rights.....

      Delete
    3. Anonymous15:24

      Maybe you are right. Then, Morocco should work out being cheaper and I am sure most Serbs can afford it.

      Delete
  15. It would great if they use the JAT name instead of Aviolet for charters.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous15:27

      Why? I find the name quite cool and modern. JAT sounds like too old fashioned now and is now history

      Delete
    2. JAT was a name and brand people in the former Yugoslavia and Europe respected. Surely they could modernise it and use the brand effectively across this part of the Balkans.

      Delete
  16. Anonymous13:34

    Quote Dane Kondic: "“Aviolet was created as a brand to take advantage of the old aircraft in terms of how we gave them separation to the mainline fleet". Hello ? On certain days the B733 operates a dozen flights for ASL! So where is the separation and distinction of the fleet? They even send them to Frankfurt and other destinations with high number of business and foreign passengers with a disastrous follow-up for the reputation of the airline.....

    I have just booked a on-way flight for end of July BEG-FRA via CDG on AF flights (codeshare ASL aircraft) for 150€. Cheapest ASL tickets 271€. Lots of offers from codeshare partners like AB for dumping fares on ASL metal. Even flights sold thorugh Bulgaria Air via SOF to FRA for 170€. So where is the logic to punish own customers and allowing c/share partners to dump fare on OWN flights???? I simply don't get it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous13:51

      No one takes Kondic seriously anymore, especially now when he started to fire people. Shame that every1 is leaving but him.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous16:48

      Every1, wow, never seen it spelt like that, gotta love the millennials.

      Delete
    3. JATBEGMEL22:45

      1 stop is usually cheaper than direct...unless you are LCC.

      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/12125404/Man-saves-money-on-train-fare-by-flying-from-Sheffield-to-Stansted-via-Berlin.html

      Delete
  17. Anonymous15:31

    Does someone know if it is likely for JU to lease a couple of 737-800 to replace the current Авиалеть ones?

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous16:06

    OT

    BEG handled 506.795 passengers in June, so far this year 2.311.921, up from 2.111.342 last year.

    If I am not mistaken, that's 9% growth so far.

    I am so happy that 5.5 million is becoming a reality.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous16:20

      Oh wow! Thanks for sharing! Yes, BEG with no doubt 5.5 mln. Btw, W6 have announced massive expansions in 2018 for BUD, SOF and OTP so maybe BEG might receive its 3rd plane next year and FINALLY get connected to Spain!!!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous16:26

      I sure hope so. There is also room for European expansion like MMX and EIN going to daily!

      Delete
    3. Anonymous16:36

      Yes, but they will need at least 2 more machines to do daily rotations I think. EIN/DTM/MMX/ should def go daily.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous16:43

      I am sure BCN twice per week could work. Plus increase EIN, MMX and DTM to daily and you got yourself a third aircraft.

      If I were Wizz, I would introduce BEG-PRG flights.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous16:44

      New daily maximum as well on last day of June, 21.231.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous16:50

      I remember some years ago when the daily record was around 14.500 :)

      Delete
    7. Anonymous16:54

      Anon 4:43pm: of course! BCN is connected to so many cities in winter excluding BEG. I still dont understand it. Even tiny Skopie and Katowice are. I am going to to send them a letter asking about both BEG and INI. They are not taking the country seriously!!!

      Delete
    8. Anonymous16:56

      Well, let's hope Vueling pulls its act together and maybe then they will consider making BEG a year-round destination. So far their results have been rather impressive.

      Delete
    9. Anonymous16:57

      ^

      In addition, Barcelona Airport, which has a seasonal link to Belgrade operated by Vueling, is seeking year-round flights to the city. In 2015, 14.719 passengers travelled with Vueling between the two cities, while a further 19.570 travellers flew indirectly between Belgrade and Barcelona. A total of 104.936 online ticket searches were made.

      http://www.exyuaviation.com/2017/05/wizz-air-begins-belgrade-expnasion.html

      Delete
    10. Anonymous16:59

      Or if JU had an extra plane, they could have launched 4 weekly flights.

      2x
      06.40-09.10
      09.55-12.35

      2x
      17.00-19.30
      20.15-22.55

      Delete
    11. Anonymous17:00

      Anon 4.57

      Thanks for the link and the numbers. That goes to show that the market is there but airlines are ignoring it. I mean BCN is even closer than CDG or AMS.

      Plus, I dislike Vueling. They are expensive and always late.

      If only someone else would step in.

      Delete
    12. Anonymous17:13

      VY are always late because of the lack of fleet. BEG deserves both BCN and MAD! MAD is perfectly connected to the rest of Spain and Latin America.
      I think BEG prefers to stick to Germany instead, which is not a bad thing of course.

      Delete
    13. Anonymous17:27

      Well, that's because both JU and W6 are after the same market, gastosi.

      Delete
  19. Anonymous16:23

    Good old proven B737 is keeping air serbia alive and functioning somehow, without those work horses they would not make it through the summer season. Notice that Aviolet charter is much more on time than regular schedule!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous19:40

    It's easy for them to get fucked now, when the government destroyed Aviogenex and relieved them of competition.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Anonymous19:47

    when the government destroyed Aviogenex and relieved them of competition.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:58

      Isti vlasnik da pravi sam sebi konkurenciju? Fantastistično!

      Delete
  22. Anonymous19:53

    When they heard that there were 4 interested companies buying Aviogenex, they were frozen. And they hacked to the door of the government ... and the result is known, Aviogenex had to die that AS would have invaded.

    ReplyDelete

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