US Airways To Serve Sao Paulo

US Airways has applied for permission to serve São Paulo from its Charlotte hub in South Carolina using B767-200ER equipment from January 10, 2011 with a planned daily rotation.

The move will not be the carrier's first entry into Brazil as it already has non-stop service from its Charlotte hub to Rio de Janeiro, which is operated on a daily basis, also with B767 equipment.

US Airways will increase its presence in the US to Brazil market where there are currently 182 weekly frequencies operated by the following carriers:

Carrier

Weekly Flights

Route Pairs

American Airlines

55

6

TAM

53

6

Delta Air Lines

27

5

Continental Airlines

21

3

United Airlines

14

2

US Airways

7

1

Korean Air

3

1 Extension service

JAL

2

1 Extension service

Total

182

25

Source Flightbase September 14-20, 2010

The leading non-stop city pairs by carrier between the US and Brazil in terms of passenger volume are outlined below:

Route Pair

Passenger Numbers (Two-Way)

Carrier

Share of total US- Brazil market

Miami-São Paulo

167,305

American Airlines

6%

Miami-São Paulo

114,469

TAM

4%

JFK-São Paulo

87,125

American Airlines

4

JFK-São Paulo

87,526

TAM

4

JFK-São Paulo

65,164

Delta Air Lines

2

Source: IATA BSP data (Airport IS) May 09-10

IATA BSP data shows that the US to Brazil market is growing. Between May 2008-2009, according to IATA BSP data just over 2.5 million passengers flew between the two countries. During May 2009-2010 this number had risen to over 3.1 million O+D passengers, 2.8 million of which flew on non-stop services.

The table below illustrates the leading carriers in terms of passengers share between the US and Brazil:

Carrier

Passengers (May 09-10 Two-Way)

Passenger Share

American Airlines

1.745 Million

32%

TAM

762,562

23%

Delta Air Lines

465,865

15%

United Airlines

369,016

12%

Continental Airlines

289,466

9%

Others

251,551

9%

Total

3,103,205

100%

Source: IATA BSP DATA

The leading carrier that does not operate any non-stop service between the two countries is Copa Airlines, which carried over 2% of the total US-Brazil traffic via its Panama hub.

Charlotte is a natural hub for US Airways' Latin American expansion, as it offers shorter sector lengths than Philadelphia as well as a growing European network. The O&D market between Charlotte and São Paulo is smaller, with approximately 5,000 annual passengers flying between the two cities, however US Airways will seek to capture transfer traffic at Charlotte.

Charlotte will be used a transfer point that allows passengers to connect to US Airways' services. In terms of operated flights, Charlotte is US Airways' largest hub, with 4,210 weekly flights to 124 destinations, which provides excellent onward connections for its own passengers and those of Star Alliance partner TAM. US Airways passengers will also be able to connect onto TAM's flights in São Paulo.

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…