dougzz wrote:Dressing this up in COVID-19 is dishonest. Flybe has been a basket case for years. When they wanted the £100 million and APD cut the virus was a non story.
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If Virgin were ever serious about it why only 30%?
With COVID-19, I think the drop off in travel was probably one of the last straws combined with the government being unwilling to lend it money. You're right though in saying that Flybe as a business has been a basket case for yearsthanks to poor and it was never going to be an easy job for Connect Airways or whoever to turn it around.
As for the 30% stake, my guess is because when you look at what happens with other businesses within the Virgin empire in recent years, the Virgin Group/SRB have tended to go for minority stakes and earn money from brand licencing. VS would have been minority owned by SRB now had he not cancelled the sale of some of his remaining stake to Air France-KLM. I'm not saying it's the right approach, but it seems SRB doesn't go for sole/majority stakes in businesses anymore.
duggy83 wrote:getinjonathan wrote:BBC Breakfast are reporting that Exeter and Southampton are considering an extension of their runways so as to accept larger aircraft which might appeal to Ryanair, Easyjet etc...
Not sure where they got this from, Exeter already has a longer runway than Bristol (which is a major easyJet and Ryanair base already, and has transatlantic TUI 787 flights as well) and has even been used as storage for 747s and had Concorde visit back in the day! It isn’t the runway getting in the way for sure here!
SOU needs a longer runway more than EXT as its runway is only 5,600ft, but that's easier said than done at SOU as there's a motorway to the south of the runway and Eastleigh Works railway yard to the north. The problem with both SOU and EXT is that they're competing with LGW and BRS respectively (along with BOH and NQY/CWL respectively) as there's an overlap in their catchment areas.
I genuinely fear for the futures of SOU and EXE airports as they were two of the airports most heavily reliant on Flybe.
Another ghost town airport now is Belfast City (BHD) as Flybe accounted for approx. 80% of traffic (around 2.5m passengers last year which will probably drop to around the 500k mark), with the rest coming from BA, Aer Lingus, KLM, Eastern and Loganair. What doesn't help BHD is its runway, annual traffic movement and passenger numbers and curfew after 9.30pm. Little wonder Ryanair eventually ended up at BFS a few years later after withdrawing from BHD.