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C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Introduction to Tourism Transport
SVEN GROSS LOUISA KLEMMER
COMPLIMENTARY TEACHING MATERIALS
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Introduction to Tourism Transport
COMPLIMENTARY TEACHING MATERIALS
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Chapter 2
Airplanes
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Selected Criterions of Air Traffic Classification
Source: Adapted from Conrady, Fichert & Sterzenbach, 2013
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Business ModelsNetwork Carriers: fundamental type of an airline business model• aspects: global player, fleet, hub-and-spoke network, target group, product/ service offer, multi-channel
distribution, frequent flyer programme, yield management
Leisure Carriers: founded specifically for the holiday air traffic and the package holiday business
Low-Cost Carriers: no single business model • typical aspects: strategic flight planning, fleet, service concept, human resource management,
administration, simple branding, simple pricing system, little competition, ancillary services & revenues
Regional Carriers: • conduct scheduled flights in a point-to-point system between peripheral locations with low traffic density
• provide feeder flights between peripheral locations with low traffic density and the hubs of the Network Carriers
Business Avi ation: any use of an aircraft by a corporation, a company, or another organization for the pur pose of transporting its em ployees and/or property not for compensation or hire and employ ing professional pilots for the op eration of their aircraft
Air Taxi: single seats are sold for flights that are operated according to the client needs
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Nine Freedoms of the Air
Institutional Framework
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Institutional FrameworkMulti- & bilateral Agreements
• Open-Skies-Agreement: e.g. between the US and Europe• airlines can fly from any point in the EU to any point in the US• before the agreement: only possible from the respective homelands
• bilateral agreements: • contracting states grant each other certain air traffic rights, mostly the 3rd to
5th freedom of the air• more than 4,900 agreements • the following questions must principally be re solved:
• Which airlines are allowed to carry out air traffic between the two states?• Which airports are allowed to be approached in international traffic?• How often are the individual routes allowed to be operated and which
capacities are allowed to be offered in international traffic?• Which tariffs are allowed to be applied in international traffic?
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Source: DLR, 2012
Worldwide Demand in 2011
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Demand
Development of the Passenger Volumes in the EU27
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
800,000
900,000
175,797 170,974 162,232 162,751
305,000
346,065 345,010317,503 342,032
350,000
Number of passengerstransported(thousand) Domestic Cross-border within EU-27 Cross-border outside of EU-27
+5.8 %
Source: Adapted from DLR, 2012
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
DemandTop 10 Domestic Air Transport Markets in 2011, measured in source-destination pas sengers (million)
USA China Brazil Japan India Australia Indonesia Spain Canada Russia0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700639.4
287.6
92.4 81 65.5 53 41.6 37.8 35.7 33.9
Source: Adapted from DLR, 2012
C A B I T O U R I S M T E X T SC A B I T O U R I S M T E X T S
Supply
The 10 Largest Airlines Worldwide
Source: Airline Business, 2010