Croatia Airlines is preparing for the arrival of its first A220 aircraft during the second quarter of next year with the carrier also planning to make adjustments to its network, with an emphasis to be put on winter operations from secondary cities in Croatia. “Our new strategy will bring adjustments to our network which will further highlight that Croatia Airlines is an important part of Croatia’s transport and tourism infrastructure. During the coronavirus pandemic, we linked Osijek with an international destination for the first time - Munich - with the support of the city, county and tourism boards. It has now developed into a year-round route. During the previous winter, we connected Pula with Zurich and maintained flights between Split and Zurich in cooperation with local tourism boards. Our goal now is to link both Zadar and Dubrovnik with international destinations during the winter period. The whole of Croatia is important to us because that way we will succeed in our mission”, the company’s CEO, Jasmin Bajić, said recently.
Commenting on competition the airline faces at its main hub in Zagreb, Mr Bajić noted he welcomed any challenge but only under the same conditions. “Ryanair has been a competitor of ours in the past in Split and Dubrovnik. However, over there we had the same commercial terms. In Zagreb they have been given privileges, so instead of eighteen euros they pay two euros tax per passenger. Competition is not the problem if you have the same conditions”, the CEO said. He added, “There is another important factor to consider. Take the example of Sarajevo where the low cost Wizz Air had a base. They decided to shut it down over night and discontinue all their flights. That is how it works with low cost airlines, they just suddenly discontinue routes and launch new ones when they think it will be profitable. We have a different mission - to ensure our country’s connectivity with Europe’s main hubs and in turn with the rest of the world”.
Mr Bajić expects for Croatia Airlines to become profitable in 2025. This would mean the airline would post its first full-year profit eight years after it was last in the black. “We drafted our post-Covid strategy together with the Boston Consulting Group and one of the most important things that will enable us to have a sustainable business in the future is the fleet renewal, which is why we opted for a unified single type fleet. This will bring us various benefits in terms of pilots, mechanics and especially maintenance, considering the age of the existing fleet”, Mr Bajić said. He added, “Currently, we have pilots and mechanics for the Airbuses and the Dashes, while with a single type fleet we will achieve significant savings, especially since these aircraft utilise 25% less fuel than the previous generation of aircraft. That is one of the main benefits of the new fleet. According to our post-Covid strategy, we plan to return to full profitability in 2025”.
And i plan to be married and have 2 kids by then... I guess i need to start looking for a girl real fast
ReplyDeleteWhat a load of ***
🤣🤣🤣
DeleteYou are right. This is nothing but bunch of wet dreams.
@Anonymous09:01
DeleteNaa, porn is much better, no drama.... :D
https://youtu.be/vlwd8hlXDrU
ReplyDeleteHahahahahahaha
Delete😃 I just imagined Jasmin getting out of the yellow tricycle, with sign "Buzin-Minken-Vrankvurt" on it
DeleteSo no plans to expand from ZAG :(
ReplyDeleteDoes not seem like it for now.
DeleteCan't compete against Ryan
Delete@Anonymous09:02
Delete"So no plans to expand from ZAG :("
With what equipment??? If they wanted to expand in Zagreb they'd need at least 5 more aircraft on top of 15 they're getting.
"Mr Bajić noted he welcomed any challenge but only under the same conditions." hahahahaha Mr. Bajic hahahahahha
ReplyDeleteAnd Ryanair was competitor in the past in SPU and DBV!!! Hahahahahahahaha, Ryanair started operating SPU and DBV only recently, only year or two ago, only seasonally, and only from Dublin. The best CEO at his best, not only that he doesn't know the difference between A319 and A320 but does not know who is "competitor" and where - Ryanair in Zadar, for example, not Split and Dubrovnik. Would be better if he kept his mouth shut.
DeleteMy guess is Dubrovnik-Munich and Zadar-Munich as new routes this winter.
ReplyDeleteWithout doubt
DeleteAnd Frankfurt as well. High quality feed must be provided for Mutti, year-round, on the most expensive regional aircraft on the market. People will pay for it, who cares
DeleteBasically all the new routes they introduced since Covid (including Mostar) are paid and subsidized route by tourism board or local governments.
ReplyDeleteExactly
DeleteI wouldnt say all
DeleteIt is all. All the new Split routes get support from local tourist board, Mostar is well known to be providing support, it has already been announced that tourist board in Brac is supporting new route....
Delete2025?? What about next year?
ReplyDelete2024 is still too early 🤣
DeleteThis is crazy. Almost all European airlines will be above pre covid levels this year.
DeleteGood news
ReplyDeleteBravo OU!
ReplyDeleteHow yes no.
DeleteI imagine Croatia one day with LH aircraft one their fleet
ReplyDeleteHuh?
DeleteToo clever for us common
DeleteRyanair pays only 2€ tax per pax ??? hahaha!
ReplyDeletenow we see why they dont fly to BEG, SKP and LJU
DeleteAnd they got very angry when the airport announced it was increasing the tax by 1 euro 50. Mind you it applies to everyone.
Deleteand dont mention TZL :D
DeleteRyanair doesn't pay 2 euros. That's a lie.
DeleteFR just announced 40 new routes and none of them are from ZAG.
Delete@9.16 well tell us the correct number
Delete" “Ryanair has been a competitor of ours in the past in Split and Dubrovnik. However, over there we had the same commercial terms. In Zagreb they have been given privileges, so instead of eighteen euros they pay two euros tax per passenger."
DeleteRyanair didn't fly to SPU and DBV in the past. They just started, recently, seasonally and to one or two destinations only. So this is pure BS and another lie and manipulation, as usual
Deletejust move your base to SPU
ReplyDeleteBRAVO CROATIA
ReplyDeleteDoes your comment sound more believable to yourself when capitalised?
DeleteYes
DeleteJasmineeeeeee!!! Dje si? Pa jes'ti to meni? Masala! Nego de nemoj krupna slova, rec ce raja da si neodgojen....
DeleteLet's see how this plays out.
ReplyDeleteIt would be interesting to see which one of their routes is best performing. Both passengers wise and financially.
ReplyDeleteFrankfurt passenger wise
DeleteZero, financial wise, with tendency of worsening
DeleteWith FR terminating ZAG-MAN/SOF/SKG/TGD maybe it's time for OU to take a closer look at these key regional markets.
ReplyDeleteThey haven't finalized their Zagreb network for winter. These are not terminated.
DeleteActually they have about two weeks ago when they loaded ZAG-DUB with one less flight than last year.
DeleteI'm telling you that the network has not been finalized. It will be by mid next month.
DeleteAnd I am telling you it was finalized. FR needs all the capacity it can get for TIA, ZAG is a low yielding market for them.
DeleteIt simply isn't, whatever your wishes and dreams may be, as you will shortly see.
DeleteWe will see.
DeleteEven if they are being discontinued, Croatia Airlines certainly can't make it work with their costs being much higher than Ryanair.
Delete09:46 They're not basing any plane in TIA though
DeleteWhy would they cancel TGD when flights are always full..hardly to find one way under 100euros anymore.
DeleteMost of the routes that they have not resumed from Zagreb are now on the airport's incentives list. Let's see if OU brings any of them back now so they are paid for flying there.
ReplyDeleteConsidering that the Covid related loss compensation won't be approved by EU starting from next year (not a fact but a guess), I expect Croatia Airlines to go for restructuring by the end of 2024.
ReplyDeleteThe next restructuring will be cutting more non - LH group and non- * alliance destinations and focusing exclusively or merely on feeding LH in MUC and FRA from every village in Croatia, year-round. This is announcement and introduction for what follows. Another Air Dolomiti. With just one slight diferrence - Dolomiti has never been, nor supposed to be, flag carrier of the country with highly developed tourism and huge diaspora, in Europe and overseas. But apartchiks are placed on their positions to be politician's puppets and execute orders of the Party and certain individuals with "strong back", in order to provide them both personal benefits.
DeleteAnd for what is happening someone should be investigated and prosecuted, which would happen if Croatia was democratic country with the rule of law. But it's travesty of democracy, banana state and Kradeze ATM, and everything will just remain as it is
DeleteGood luck OU!
ReplyDeleteLuck they need.
DeleteTheir Split operations are developing nicely. It would be good if they could extend more routes into the winter.
ReplyDeleteWhich ones could potentially work in winter?
DeleteVienna
Delete"That is how it works with low cost airlines, they just suddenly discontinue routes and launch new ones when they think it will be profitable. We have a different mission"
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like their mission isn't to be profitable.
It most likely isn't.
DeleteHe was only telling the truth :D
Delete"with an emphasis to be put on winter operations from secondary cities in Croatia"
ReplyDeleteI thought they didn't have a sound strategy on how to deploy the A220s. Now I am certain.
I fell like they think the A220 is some magic pill that will save their finances because it has lower costs. I just don't see it.
DeleteEasyjet dropped LGW-ZAG route ( which was nearly always full) because ZAG increased fees.Allegedly NOT for Croatia Airlines. So Easyjet pulled out leaving only BA as competition on London. they reduced frequency for short time..then back up. Real loss losing ZAG- LGW ..instead now we have Ryanair and STN.
ReplyDeleteFinally they remembered Dubrovnik
ReplyDeleteConcerning the last chapter of the article and profits : BCG was money laundry, split provisions and bunch of BS as for example single-type aircraft. BCG wrote what they wanted, so BCG earned money, and they are "covered" for selecting wrong strategy and wrong type and age of aircraft. Profitability : 25 % in fuel savings not in a dream can compensate for new planes to be flown leased, instead current owned, plus with all new trainings and operative costs for the new type, facing huge operational issues with the carriers operating it already. For what is happening here, investigation should be opened and someone prosecuted and jailed, "one could see it from the plane"
ReplyDeleteAnd by profit they are probably counting on some money from fleet sale, which, taking into account the age and market saturation, is probably going to be fart in the wind. It would probably better to keep aircraft they own and find some use if them.
DeletePrecisely. 320F for summer coastal flights, scheduled and charter. Q400 for secondary cities, connections within Croatia and domestic feed. Leased classic Embraers in double quantitiy for building respectable regional network, existing 320 neo order turned to A321XLR plus 330 focusing to North America and some Asia. Good wave system at home, good code shares overseas, marketing work, 30 units fleet with 50-60 destinations, everything should have happened long ago. But.....
DeleteBravo Hrvatska!
ReplyDeleteBHB. Bravo Hrvatska Bot
DeleteFor what exactly? Would you mind explaining your claim, the same as I did for my claim just above. Or it simply must be Bravo because Hrvatska is in question? And everything else is non-Bravo. Com'n, give me a reason to back you up, I would really like if I could...
DeleteYou have it in the title of the article
DeleteLOL!!!
DeleteSome of us like to be optimistic. Or am I not allowed to say anything beside Kradeze this Kradeze that? If you don't like it, march on
DeleteYou are not optimistic. You are detached from reality. I am optimistic because I hope situation in Croatia and OU, which is chatastrophic, will change, and soon. By hailing Bravo to such disaster, you accept status quo. That's not optimism, sorry
DeleteHow are new routes and profit in 2025 disaster?
DeleteEver heard of people's wisdom : "Prvo skoci pa reci hop"? Or you believe expertise, competence and authority of Mr Bajic are such to guarantee his words, wishes and promises? Or you just don't want to see reality?
DeleteWell I don't have a crystal ball to predict what's happening in 2 years. For now, I'll take mr. Jasmin's word.
DeleteLOL again!!! And have good night and sweet dreams full of shiny brand new A220 fleet. Maybe mr. Jasmin shows in your dream too, I feel attraction is strong 😃 And no hard feelings, writing this only as a joke 😃 For the outcome of our conversation, the time will show who was right.
DeleteZeljo moja, tugo moja lol
ReplyDeleteBunch of crock peppered with outright lies, for example; FR paying only 2€ at ZAG
ReplyDeletewell how much do they pay ??? You all seem to know cause youre telling its a lie
DeleteIt isn't lies, FR only pay 2 euros per passenger. Most Airports have to pay Ryanair, so you could say Zag is lucky to be getting 2 euros. The day Ryanair's fees are increased, they will leave immediately.
DeleteThey pay the same fees as everyone else. Why do you think they were bitching about the fee hikes in April??
DeleteCroatia keeps winning. Bahahahaha.
ReplyDeleteLove how OU is growing in a more quiet and conservative way. You upgrade your fleet to gain more prestige, you study more options to tackle with the competition, you do not focus only on the capital and you have regional leader ambitions. Bravo Hrvatska!
ReplyDeleteAnd you have record financial losses, record loss of market share and record state aid. Bravo indeed.
Delete@15.15 the actual reality is that they are not growing at all. Their capacity levels are 20% below pre Covid pevels which in 2023 is a disaster and reason to dismiss the entire management
DeletePassengers associate prestige with Qatar, A380, Singapore airlines, A350 etc. No one ever will associate it with OU A220.
DeleteOMG, I really can't believe someone could be so detached from reality to speak about "prestige" in humiliated servant and pathetic feeder full of corruption and incompetence, operating regional routes only with record losses and tendency to be worse. No comment. But really.
DeleteJust because an airline is not flying classic Embraers and long-haul to Sao Paulo and Johannesburg doesn't mean they can't offer a prestigious experience on board. So yes the A220 will be extremely presitigious. Passengers are just flying a plane, not studying the history of ex-yu aviation and untapped potentials of Hrvatska.
DeleteAhahahahahahahahaha, so we went step further now from only prestigious to extremely prestigious. For those whose World begins and ends in Graz and Frankfurt, yes, definitely. Enjoy all that prestige, have a very good night and thanks for giving me a good laugh again 😃
DeleteAnonymous, A220 is a modern and efficient aircraft. It will be a good replacement for Croatia Airlines Airbus A319 and A320 fleet.
DeleteA220 is many things but extremely presitigious is not. Airbus is not marketing is as such. Luxury outfits like first class suites are not available for it. Enthusiasm is understandable but manage your expectations.
In a broader perspective I maybe exaggerated a bit with my choice of word. If not ''extremely'' than it's just a regular amount of prestigious, no doubt about that.
DeleteWill A220 still be prestigious when OU asks for more government subsidies to pay for those planes?
DeleteOf course. Prestige of feeding Mutti is worth every cent!
DeleteIf I am not wrong, post-COVID strategy drafted by Boston Consulting Group was accepted in August 2021. If we accept this strategy as a holy grail - a unique, unprecedented source of wisdom - how relevant is it still today? Two years later, it's like a life time in aviation, especially with what has happened since - end of COVID, war in Ukraine, economic war with China and tension over Taiwan, issues with parts, engines, airplanes, suppliers, qualified workers, green agenda... Really? And, this is only with the assumption that this strategy was any good when it was written. I hope that I am wrong, but it doesn't sound promising to me.
ReplyDeleteZag-Tiv....I hope!
ReplyDeleteHope never dies. But you will get more MUC and FRA instead
DeleteZagreb to Tivat with stopover in Muc and Fra ...Danke Dojcland und Av Vidazen !
DeleteSeems a bit useless with multiple daily DBV flights and TGD with FR. Or are Croatians holidaying a lot in the Montenegrin coast?
DeleteMnoge Rvatice dolaze da ga prime. Zene uvek vole divljake. Ako pratis estradu sve ti je jasno.
DeleteEkstradu
DeleteJeli postoji u splitu technical Support za croatia ? Pozz
ReplyDelete