JetBlue is coming to Canada for the first time, with flights into Vancouver scheduled for summer of next year.

bill barilko

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U.S. airline JetBlue expands into Canada for the 1st time

Airline heading to Vancouver in 2022 says it wants to shake up market 'dominated by high-fare carriers'



U.S. airline JetBlue is coming to Canada for the first time, with flights into Vancouver scheduled for the summer of next year.

"We're delighted that JetBlue has selected Vancouver as its first Canadian destination with service from YVR to New York City and Boston," Tamara Vrooman, president and CEO of the Vancouver Airport Authority, said in a statement.

Vrooman said JetBlue's decision to come to Vancouver was a vote of confidence in the region that will attract business and leisure travellers "when the time is right to fly again."

JetBlue's move into Canada was part of an announced expansion that also included six other destinations in the U.S. and Honduras.

"Almost since day one, both our customers and crew members have been asking us to add flights to the middle of the country and into Canada," said Scott Laurence, JetBlue's head of revenue and planning.

"We can't wait to shake up the status quo in these markets currently dominated by high-fare carriers."

JetBlue weathered pandemic: expert
Prof. David Gillen of the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia, said JetBlue should be able to pull that off.

"It would certainly be a low-fare carrier as far as Canadians are concerned," said Gillen, who is also the director of the Centre for Transportation Studies at UBC. "I think that they're going to offer a real competitive alternative."

Gillen said JetBlue's best Canadian analogue is WestJet — what he calls a "high-value carrier" — not as cheap as true no-frills carriers, but generally cheaper than Air Canada or airlines like it due to a simpler organizational structure, a simpler fare structure and a more homogenous fleet.

He said JetBlue has weathered the pandemic well, but the move into Canada caught him off guard.

Expanding into this country can be troublesome because costs such as fuel taxes and airport charges are more expensive, and because there's a lot of work involved in crossing an international border, he said.

On the other hand, Gillen said moving into Vancouver made more sense than Toronto, because Air Canada and United Airlines have a lock on traffic moving between Toronto and the U.S. northeast.

The flight into New York City, in particular, should allow JetBlue passengers out of Vancouver to tap into a broader network of connecting flights, he said.
 

bill barilko

Senate Member
Mar 4, 2009
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Sorry I missed posting this scintillating news from earlier in the month/year-no doubt all of a piece with the coming opening of a Simit bakery in my hood.


Turkish Airlines to launch non-stop Istanbul-Vancouver flights May 2
Airline had aimed to launch this route in June, 2020, but the pandemic postponded the flights


British Columbians' long wait for scheduled, non-stop, commercial flights between Vancouver and Turkey is almost over.

Turkish Airlines plans to launch thrice-weekly, direct flights between Istanbul and Vancouver starting May 2, Turkish consul general Taylan Tokmak confirmed to BIV on April 8.

The news comes despite the Canadian government advising Canadians to avoid all non-essential travel outside the country. The B.C. government advises British Columbians to not even leave their home community, unless the travel is essential.

Turkish Airlines had planned to launch the non-stop Istanbul-Vancouver route in June, 2020, but the COVID-19 pandemic postponed the flights.

"We believe that it will be a popular route, drawing passengers from Calgary," Tokmak said. "With this connection, B.C. will be linked to 300-plus destinations via the İstanbul hub."

Istanbul Airport opened in 2018, and increased its passenger volume substantially in 2019, after all commercial passenger flights from the older Istanbul Atatürk Airport were shifted to the new airport.

Travel time to countless destinations from Vancouver is likely to shrink thanks to non-stop routes from Istanbul Airport to Iran, Russia and other countries.

Pre-pandemic, a major stumbling block for any airline wanting to fly non-stop between Vancouver and any Turkish city was the air agreement between Canada and Turkey.

That agreement limited domestic carriers to fly to and from a maximum of two cities in each country.

Turkish Airlines already flies to Toronto and Montreal, and did not want to eliminate either route.

The Turkey-Canada air agreement was amended in February, 2020, to allow access to third cities in each country.

BIV reported in October, 2018, that Turkish Airlines posted a notice to the investor relations part of its website saying that it “has decided to start operating scheduled flights, based on market conditions, to Vancouver, Canada.”

The notice was a heads-up to investors, given that slightly more than half of the venture’s shares trade on the Borsa Istanbul stock exchange. The Turkish government holds the remainder.

B.C. exported $151.4 million worth of goods to Turkey in 2018, according to BC Stats. About 81% of that was $123.3 million in coal and solid fuels manufactured from coal.

Canada was the source of approximately 0.4% of imports into Turkey in 2018. Approximately 1.1% of exports from Turkey were destined for Canada in that year, according to BC Stats.

Back in 2016, the Vancouver Turkish Canadian Society (VTCA) launched a petition on Change.org, calling for an airline to launch non-stop Istanbul-Vancouver flights. The petition closed with 1,549 supporters.

Tolga Tosun, who was then president of the VTCA, told BIV in November 2018 that he believes that if non-stop flights between Istanbul and Vancouver launch, they will be packed with people, and business and cultural exchanges will flourish.