Air Seychelles has unveiled a major fleet and
network expansion that will see the airline introduce a second
Airbus A330 aircraft, commence non-stop services to Düsseldorf
(Germany) and Durban (South Africa), and significantly strengthen
its existing regional network in early 2017.
The airline plans to establish the air bridge
between Seychelles and Germany on 30 March 2017 by launching a
twice-per-week service to Düsseldorf, in western Germany.
To further strengthen its European network, Air
Seychelles will also upgrade its Paris service from three to four
flights per week with effect from 28 March 2017.
Effective
30 March 2017, the Seychelles flag carrier will also commence a
twice-weekly service to South Africa’s port city of Durban, an
important trade hub that is home to over three million people,
complementing its existing five-a-week service to Johannesburg.
“Both
stakeholders, the Government of Seychelles and Etihad Airways
fully support the airline’s plan to develop its European network
by establishing a non-stop connection to Germany, a
strategically-important market that is currently the
second-largest source of inbound tourism after France,” said Roy
Kinnear, Chief Executive Officer of Air Seychelles. “More than 29,200 people from Germany have visited Seychelles so
far this year, representing an increase of 9% over
2015, demonstrating the importance of opening up air links to this
part of the world. Together with the new service to
Durban, additional flights to Paris and increased regional
capacity, these developments will lay the foundations for solid
long-term growth of the Seychelles national airline and country's
economy.”
The airline’s second Airbus A330 aircraft is
scheduled to be delivered in the last week of March 2017 and will
have a two cabin configuration with 18 Business Class and 236
Economy Class seats.
“The addition of a
second wide-body A330 to our fleet is set to open up significant
growth opportunities, enabling Air Seychelles to extend its
network footprint in Europe and the Indian Ocean region,” Mr
Kinnear added.
“The new Düsseldorf service is an exciting and much-awaited
development that will provide travellers in Germany and the wider
catchment area of Belgium, Holland and Scandinavia with attractive
new travel options to Seychelles. The German market has
traditionally been a key source of leisure tourism for Seychelles
and our Düsseldorf service has tremendous potential for driving
passenger growth and stimulating the tourism economy of our
islands.”
In addition to capturing point-to-point traffic
flows, the Düsseldorf flight schedule has been carefully timed to
give international travellers seamless connections over Seychelles
to Antananarivo, the capital of Madagascar, Mauritius and
Johannesburg.
Mr Kinnear said that Air Seychelles will
further strengthen its presence in Europe by developing its Paris
service and codeshare network.
“To maximise aircraft
utilisation of our wide-body fleet, we are going to deploy an A330
on an additional fourth weekly frequency to Paris, which combined
with Düsseldorf, will provide an unprecedented 3,048 return seats
between Seychelles and Europe each week. We have developed
strong codeshare partnerships with airberlin, Alitalia, Air
Serbia, Etihad Airways and Air France, widening our reach to over
35 cities in Europe, and will continue to strengthen our
relationships in the months to come,” said Mr Kinnear.
In addition to
flying to Europe, the Airbus A330 will be used to increase
capacity on the airline’s five-per-week regional services to
Johannesburg, Mauritius and Mumbai which are currently operated on
a narrow-body A320.
The introduction of a second wide body
A330 will facilitate the upgrading of capacity on South Africa’s
largest city Johannesburg on Thursdays and Saturdays, Mumbai on
Saturdays and Mauritius on Sundays, increasing the combined seat
capacity on these routes by 23 per cent.
This development
will allow Air Seychelles to allocate an Airbus A320 to launch
flights to Durban, the second point served by Air Seychelles in
South Africa, offering 14,171 seats to and from Seychelles each
year as well as quick connections over Seychelles to Düsseldorf
and Mumbai.
“South Africa has strong
trade, people and diplomatic ties to Seychelles that we can
develop in the future with the establishment of a Durban service,”
added Mr Kinnear.
See other recent
news regarding:
Air Seychelles,
Seychelles.
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