Philippine
Airlines will begin services to three new destinations in Australasia
while temporarily reducing frequencies to the Middle East and merging
two trans-Pacific flights as the flag carrier restructures its route
network in response to market forces and trends in the global economic
scene.
On October 28, 2001, PAL will restore a direct link between Manila and
Melbourne, Australia. The service will be an extension of the current
three-times-a-week operation to Sydney, which will now be routed
Manila-Melbourne-Sydney-Manila.
Widebody Airbus 330-300 aircraft will continue to be deployed on the
Australia route.
Also during the last quarter of the year, PAL will launch services to
Bangkok and Shanghai.
The frequencies, timetables and aircraft types for both sectors are in
the process of being firmed up, although PAL is eyeing a daily A330-300
service to the Thai capital and a five-times-weekly Boeing 737-400
operation to the Chinese financial hub.
Meanwhile, PAL will cut frequencies between Manila and Saudi Arabia from
six to three times weekly starting August 17, 2001.
The affected flights are those to Dammam, PR 656, and its return service
to Manila, PR 657, which are operated every Monday, Wednesday and
Friday.
PAL will continue operating its three-times-weekly service to Riyadh (PR
658 / PR 659), scheduled every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday.
The reduction in the Saudi frequencies is temporary and is part of the
effort to rationalize PAL’s route structure and deployed capacity in
view of the worldwide economic slowdown.
Carriers throughout the world have been reviewing their routes in
reaction to the downturn in major travel markets. Recent developments
include the cancellation of flights by Northwest Airlines between Manila
and Osaka, United Airlines between Hong Kong and New York, Swissair
between Zurich and Shanghai, and KLM between Amsterdam and Ho Chi Minh.
PAL intends to restore the Dammam service as soon as economic conditions
are favorable. In the meantime, the flag carrier continues to carry out
its mandate of serving the traveling public, particularly Filipino
workers, bound for the eastern Saudi oil city.
Passengers who have been ticketed will be endorsed to other carriers
serving the route. Those whose flights do not have convenient
connections will be provided with hotel accommodation in the transfer
point.
PAL is also in talks with two Middle East carriers on establishing
code-share arrangements with them on the Dammam route. This will allow
PAL to offer seats to passengers on flights operated by the partner
airline.
And in December, PAL will operate a number of special flights to Dammam
to carry the expected heavy traffic of Filipino expatriates vacationing
home for the Christmas holidays.
In another move consonant with its route-restructuring strategy, PAL
will fold its Manila-Honolulu return service into its afternoon flight
to Los Angeles, creating a new trans-Pacific service between Manila and
Los Angeles with a stop in Honolulu both ways.
The new product (PR 108 / PR 109), to be offered three times a week
starting September 15, 2001, provides added value to passengers by
giving them the option of breaking their journey in the Hawaii capital
at no additional cost.
Meanwhile, PR 102, the popular daily direct service to Los Angeles with
convenient evening departures from Manila, will continue to operate to
serve passengers desiring non-stop Boeing 747-400 service. |