Czech Airlines Enters International Markets From Bratislava

Czech Airlines is to resume international flights from Bratislava’s Milan Rastislav Štefánik Airport in Slovakia, more than 15 years after its predecessor ČSA - Československé Aerolinie was rebranded and established as the national carrier of the Czech Republic following the split of Czechoslovakia into two separate states. Up until then CSA had operated from dual hubs in Prague and Bratislava and had offered connections to a variety of European destinations from the two cities.

While Czech Airlines, now a member of the SkyTeam global airline alliance, has managed to build a strong network in the Czech Republic, no airline in Slovakia has been able to mirror this success. A string of local carriers including Slovak Airlines, Air Slovakia and Sky Europe have tried and failed, despite a range of different strategies. These have included working with point-to-point traffic into the Slovakian capital, developing the city as a regional hub for connections between the UK and India and pushing MR Štefánik Airport as a viable low-cost alternative for traffic to the Austrian capital Vienna, located just 40 miles (63km) away.

MARKET ANALYSIS: BRATISLAVA MR ŠTEFÁNIK AIRPORT (non-stop weekly flights)

Airline

Destination

Flights

Seats

Armavia

Yerevan Zvartnots International

2

100

Belle Air

Tirana Rinas Mother Teresa

2

324

Czech Airlines

Prague Ruzyne International

16

736

Danube Wings

Kosice Barca

10

720

El Al Israel Airlines

Tel Aviv

1

220

LOT Polish Airlines

Warsaw Chopin

4

220

Ryanair

Alghero Fertilia

2

378

Alicante El Altet

3

567

Bergamo Orio al Serio

5

945

Birmingham

3

567

Charleroi Brussels South

4

756

Dublin

5

945

Edinburgh

3

567

Girona Costa Brava

2

378

Las Palmas Gran Canaria

2

378

Liverpool John Lennon

2

378

London Luton

7

1,323

London Stansted

14

2,646

Malaga Pablo Ruiz Picasso

2

378

Palma de Mallorca Son Sant Joan

4

756

Paris Beauvais-Tille

4

756

Rome Ciampino

3

567

Trapani Birgi

2

378

TOTAL

102

14,983


As the table above clearly illustrates, Ryanair is the largest operator from Bratislava, offering almost 70 weekly flights to 17 different destinations. It does not currently have any aircraft based in the Slovakian city and instead aircraft fly from its other bases, mainly in Spain and the UK. Armavia, Belle Air and LOT Polish Airlines offer connections to other regional capitals, while Czech Airlines currently has a flight to its Prague base, a route that is operated up to three times daily every weekday. Danube Wings offers a domestic link to Kosice as well as seasonal flights to Dubrovnik, Split and Zadar, while Smart Wings has peak summer flights to Rhodes and Tel Aviv. Russian carrier UTair is also due to open a new flight to Russia, serving Vnukovo Airport in Moscow.

There is clearly scope for a new entrant into the Slovakian market and Czech Airlines will initially base a single Boeing 737-500 at MR Štefánik Airport to operate 24 weekly flights to six European destinations from June 23. Subject to the success of these additional routes, a second aircraft could be introduced in the future, a source at the carrier confirmed to The HUB.

MARKET ANALYSIS: CZECH AIRLINES EXPANSION FROM BRATSLAVA (non-stop weekly flights)

Destination

Start Date

Flights

Seats

Amsterdam Schiphol

June 23, 2011

Four

456

Barcelona El Prat

June 25, 2011

Two

228

Brussels

June 24, 2011

Three

342

Larnaca

June 25, 2011

Three

342

Paris Charles De Gaulle

June 23, 2011

Seven

798

Rome Fiumicino

June 23, 2011

Five

570


The airline is focusing its operations on major airports, including the three European hubs of its fellow SkyTeam alliance members, Air France, Alitalia and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. According to Jiří Marek, Vice President for Sales and Marketing, Czech Airlines, the initial network is based around “the most frequent routings of passengers on Czech Airlines’ transfer flights from Bratislava via Prague on to the airline’s network,” as well as key markets not currently served from the city. Interestingly, four of the selected destinations are already served by Ryanair, albeit not directly, with the low-cost carrier using alternative airports (Girona for Barcelona, Charleroi for Brussels, Beauvais for Paris and Ciampino for Rome).

For more of this week's news and analysis please click here to read The HUB.

Richard Maslen

Richard Maslen has travelled across the globe to report on developments in the aviation sector as airlines and airports have continued to evolve and…