Air Astana’s introduction of three-times weekly
direct services from London Heathrow to Astana provides a brand
new link between the capital cities of the UK and Kazakhstan,
significantly strengthening the relationship between the two
countries.
These first direct links from London - to a
capital city growing in political and economic importance, and
recognized by David Cameron on his visit to Kazakhstan at the end
of last year - reflects a shift of prominence (from Almaty) as
Kazakhstan’s flag carrier marked its 12th anniversary in May this
year. The importance of Astana will be further enhanced when the
city plays host to Expo 2017, under the theme ‘Future Energy’.
Air Astana’s flights from Heathrow’s Terminal 4
are operated by Boeing 757-200 aircraft, configured with 16
business class and 150 economy seats, with lead-in return fares of
£486.
The London-Astana flights now continue on to Almaty, a route
the airline was hitherto flying twice weekly, since 2003. Air
Astana introduced one weekly service from London direct to Astana
at the end of 2013. The new three-times weekly direct service,
which commenced on 2nd June , now operates
Almaty-Astana-London-Astana-Almaty.
The new schedules also enable passengers to
connect on to Air Astana’s expanding network of services to
destinations in Central Asia, the Caucasus, southern Russia and
western China. Cities currently served include Bishkek
(Kyrgyzstan), Dushanbe (Tajikistan), Tashkent (Uzbekistan), Baku
(Azerbaijan), Novosibirsk, Omsk and Yekaterinburg (Russia) and
Urumqi (China). Some 95% of Air Astana’s market from London is
business related.
Now the carrier is planning to widen its
European network with the addition of regular flights to Paris
from autumn 2014 and to Prague in spring 2015, complementing
established European routes from Frankfurt to Astana (daily) and
Atyrau to Amsterdam, six times per week. New summer charter routes
will also commence from this month – to Rhodes from Astana and
from Heraklion and Barcelona to Almaty.
Removal of EU Safety Restrictions
Route expansion has become possible following
the lifting (this April) of restrictions previously imposed by the
European Union owing to the failure of the Civil Aviation
authorities in Kazakhstan to pass the ICAO safety audit. The EU's
Air Safety Committee had always accepted that Air Astana's safety
standards were fully compliant with the highest international
standards, but had nonetheless imposed a limit on Air Astana's
ability to increase its frequency of services to the EU as part of
the sanction imposed on Kazakhstan in 2009. However, with effect
from February this year, Air Astana was released from those
restrictions.
“We are setting about this expansion in a very
careful way,” stressed
Peter Foster, President of Air Astana,
speaking in London today, June 26th. “While we are delighted to be
able to expand our operations into Europe now, we could not plan
for the expansion beforehand because we didn’t have advance
knowledge these restrictions would be lifted. The re-alignment of
flights away from Almaty to Astana is an important first step,” he
added.
Hand in hand with this expansion Air Astana is
preparing to issue an RFP this summer (to leasing companies) as it
seeks to determine a replacement for its Boeing 757s. Among the
narrow- body candidates are the Airbus A321 NEO and Boeing 737
Max. A decision is hoped for in October/November, Foster noted.
Alliance Partnership on the Agenda
Collaboration with European carriers will also
play a significant part in whatever decision Air Astana makes on
its future alliance grouping. Air Astana has enlisted the
expertise of Seabury Group, the global advisory and investment
banking firm to help them with the evaluation into possible
alliances. The airline currently codeshares with three Star
Alliance carriers - Asiana, Austrian and Turkish Airlines. It also
works with Etihad and KLM, part of SkyTeam.
Since its debut on 5 May 2002 the airline has
expanded dramatically with 4,000 personnel and a current fleet of
31 airliners. Today, Air Astana operates an all-western fleet of
Boeing 767-300ER, Boeing 757-200, Airbus A320 family and Embraer
E-190 aircraft, serving 60 routes - 41 international and 19
domestic - from hubs in Almaty, Astana and Atyrau.
With the arrival of five new aircraft so far
this year and a further Boeing 767 aircraft arriving in the coming
months, the average age of the fleet will fall to five years by
the end of 2014, making it one of the youngest in the world.
Air Astana has been profitable in all but one
year of operation and has contributed greatly to the Kazakhstan
economy, with tax payments exceeding US$300 million. The airline
has never received any state subsidy. For the full year 2013 the
airline declared a profit after tax of US$51.4 million. Whilst
that represented a 15.7% decline over 2012, nonetheless, without
the combined effect of a one-off revenue adjustment in 2012 and a
currency exchange loss in 2013, underlying profit would have
slightly exceeded that of the previous year.
Passenger numbers in 2013 increased by 13.5% to
3.7 million and airline revenues by 10.5% to US$967 million.
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