Serbia has become the latest country in the former Yugoslavia to initiate talks over the introduction of nonstop flights to Japan, following on from Slovenia and Croatia over the past month. The Serbian Minister for Construction, Transport and Infrastructure, Zorana Mihajlović, said after talks with the Japanese Ambassador to Serbia, that a new bilateral Air Service Agreement between the two countries will be inked in the near future in order to facilitate the introduction of new services. The future operator of Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport, VINCI, holds a concession, as part of a consortium with Japanese partners, for two airports in Osaka, and this year added Kobe Airport to its portfolio. VINCI has said it plans to link Belgrade with a number of its other airports across the world.
Serbia and Japan do not require visas for each others' nationals. In 2017, there were 5.769 Japanese visitors to Serbia, which, although light, was still ahead of arrivals from much closer markets such as Portugal, Finland and Ireland. In 2016, All Nippon Airways (ANA) expressed initial interest in operating flights between Japan and Belgrade, however, no concrete agreement was reached and the services never materialised. The National Tourism Organisation of Serbia recently held talks in Tokyo with Japanese tour operators, the country’s tourism board, as well as the Japan International Cooperation Agency and the Japan-Southeast Europe Business Association in a bid to boost travel between the two countries.
The Serbian Ministry for Construction, Transport and Infrastructure is aiming to attract more medium and long haul flights to the country in an effort to improve tourism and connectivity. It has identified several markets which hold potential to generate inbound or outbound travel from Serbia in the form of seasonal or charter flights, including Japan, Canada, India and South Korea, as well as further opportunities in the United States and China. Commenting on its upcoming plans, Ms Mihajlović said, "In the coming period we expect even more new flights from Belgrade Airport, which will link us with previously unserved markets and in turn boost tourism". Last year, Belgrade Airport identified counterparts in Zagreb and Budapest as its main competitors to securing long haul services. In a statement at the time, it said, "Our aim is to become a gateway for long haul flights in Southeastern Europe to North America, China and Asia, as well as to introduce new routes to the Euro-Mediterranean region and strengthen our regional connectivity, which would, in turn, help increase loads on flights to the abovementioned markets. The main competitors in achieving these goals are first and foremost Zagreb and Budapest".

Comments
places like PRG, Berlin have no direct flights. even VIE was struggling
Tourism from China is growing at such fast rate that Hainan alone can't carry all the passengers. That's one of the reasons why other carriers such as Etihad, Qatar, Turkish Airlines ...all expressed interest in adding more flights.
On top of that, Serbs travel A LOT and they go to a lot of exotic destinations. From what I see, Tanzania is all the rage this year.
With Qatar and Etihad upping their presence in Belgrade, FZ needs to respond otherwise ...
By that logic they are not successful in Prague either as it's linked with Belgrade.
Mexico City (Air Serbia) sorry had to add this one to start with it is Monday:-D
Toronto (Air Serbia)
Chicago (Air Serbia)
Seoul (Jin Air)
By that theory, all it takes is to link the two destinations and the tourists will follow?
Same would be done with Japan.
Let to be see in few years.
Rodney,
Sydney.
Promotion is extremely important as that's how different nations let others know they are worth visiting.
Serbia has almost 100.000 tourists from Romania and as many from places like Greece or Bulgaria. So it's not just about the visa regime.
I'm saying that whenever there's a news that some far-east airline might start ZAG services, there's always someone saying that out of all these hundreds or thousands of visitors, 90% of them visit Croatia and Zagreb on their European tour, therefore - the direct flights would be unsustainable. If BEG gets these flights - great for BEG, but I can't comprehend when ZAG is mentioned in the same context - these flights are not logical.
And I don't find it as surprising since much bigger destinations than ZAG still don't have direct long haul flights to destinations from which tourists are flocking for years. These airlines are not Qatar or Emirates that have plentiful of aircraft to deploy to any destination where there's any demand to/from.
Even though I might not use any of them, I hope they will materialize in the near future.
BTW a person posted a comment when that one TK A330 landed in Zagreb. Where were you then?
Get a life.
300 000 Japanese in Croatia and 200 000 in Slovenia, and 5 000 "in Serbia is not about hurt egos, it's about the facts and the numbers.
Logically speaking it makes more sense for them to happen at a larger, busier airport that already has year-round long-haul flights.
https://youtu.be/EFx2YYXk3wA
Well, that's almost double the number of passengers. The fact airlines keep on launching BEG flights shows that there is growing demand and that airline find interest here. Just the other week Mahan announced a third weekly flight from IKA.
Unfortunately exYU region shines when it comes to talking the talk, and then things go amazingly different in walking the walk.
BEG Has the most of the chances for these flight sincères it Is the best connected airport in the region with other reguonal airports... And that Is the win for all companies year around.
You max like it or not, but Belgrade is the centre of the region.
Bravo Beograd! :-)
I think BEG has the biggest market potential but more importantly it's not as seasonal as most other airports in the region. This is extremely important for most airlines.
February is generally the slowest month of the year and BEG managed to reach 300.000 which isn't that bad. April (without Easter lol) reached 450.000.
Seasonality is the region's worst enemy.
Also, BEG and ZAG have the same seasonality difference. If you take BEG and its slowest and busiest months (Feb and Aug 2017), you get the difference of 77,7% and when you take ZAG (Feb and July 2017), the difference is 77,8%.
Really nice, since we're talking Thai Airways, Thai Government is negotiating open air agreement with Croatian Government on requests by Thai Airways, Thai Airways is thinking of adding Zagreb to its list of destinations in not too distant future. Other carriers, Singapore Airlines and India Air are also looking at adding Zagreb sometimes hopefully not too distant future.
Croatia had 160 000 Chinese tourists in 2017, and no direct flight, if you add Taiwanese and HK yes it is 300 000 Chinese.
However, it is misleading to say it is 300 000 Chinese, as most people would assume it is the mainland.
However, first 4 months of the year, number of Chinese visitors from the mainland alone, is up by 42%, based on first 4 months, we can expect between 220 and 250 000 Chinese visitors to Croatia this year, around 80-100 000 in Zagreb, Zagreb takes around 40% of all intercontinental visitors on average.
We could be throwing numbers and our own theories and facts, but we'll all have to sit and wait when and if one of these routes will materialize.
If I had to bet on a ex-YU airport, my money would be on BEG.
Also, ZAG isn't lacking with its network, considering it's size.
ZAG wouldn't be illogical choice especially because of it's OU network towards the coast. Even if they don't want to fly, there are multiple bus routes that connect Zagreb with the coast and neighboring countries.
The name of the game is my neighbour has it so I have to have it too. Thats crazy and imature!
Da ti možda tvoj rječnik nije bio na nivou, pa te se eliminiralo, a prema ovom prozivanju iz vedra neba, ne bi me čudilo.
"It remains fact that whenever there is a topic about Belgrade long haul flights people such as yourself come here to belittle the airport"
That is a fact and it can be corroborated by looking at the comments going back years, esp since BEG-JFK restarted in 2016.
However that can be easily rectified by active moderation. We just have to hope it will happen one day.
They surely plan them but we know they also have planned flights to US and according to the enthusiasts here these flights are just round the corner.
For 5 years already.
And BTW, this discussion was between BEG and ZAG.