Showing posts with label flights HCMC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flights HCMC. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Grand celebrations, floods cause scarcity of air tickets

VALC gets fourth ATR72-500

HCMC - Air tickets for flights between HCMC and Hanoi have become scarce as demand for air travel on this route is rising because of the ongoing 1,000th birthday festival of Thang Long-Hanoi and flooding impacts in central Vietnam.

Vietnam Airlines on Thursday started to increase flight frequencies between the two biggest cities of Vietnam, especially those from HCMC to Hanoi, where the grand celebrations are taking place until October 10. For this reason, the airline adds 13 flights to this route until Monday.

The national flag carrier operated two more flights from HCMC to Hanoi on Thursday, five on Friday, one on each of Saturday and Sunday, and four more services from Hanoi to HCMC on October 11.

Besides the millennial celebrations, Vietnam Airlines has decided to increase frequencies because flooding in certain parts of central Vietnam has impacted travel by road and rail in the region, pushing the demand for air travel higher.

Vietnam Airlines said that with the extra services, it operated 32 daily flights on average on the HCMC-Hanoi route until Monday and offered 8,860 seats a day to the market.

Jetstar Pacific will not increase flight frequencies on the HCMC-Hanoi route as this low-cost carrier cannot arrange its aircraft reasonably on the fact that the demand is much higher for air travel from HCMC to Hanoi than the opposite direction on the same days.

A Jetstar Pacific executive told the Daily on the phone on Thursday that it had sold out all the air tickets for its flights from HCMC to Hanoi until October 9, and the tickets for the services on October 10 are running out. Almost all the tickets for the flights on the opposite direction on Monday and Tuesday have been booked.

Jetstar Pacific operates 10 flights between HCMC and the capital city, using Airbus A320s with 180 seats and Boeing 737-400s with 168 seats. The country’s second largest airline now has one Airbus and five Boeing aircraft.

Air Mekong cannot give much help in the air ticket shortage as the start-up airline will launch services this Saturday, with around two flights for the HCMC-Hanoi route using Bombardier CRJ-900s configured with 90 Deluxe and Economy-class seats.

The private airline is expected to receive an air operator certificate (AOC) from the Civil Aviation Administration of Vietnam in Phu Quoc Airport in the Mekong Delta province of Kien Giang on Friday, and announce its maiden services on Saturday.

Initially, Air Mekong will conduct 26 daily flights by four Bombardier CRJ-900s before increasing frequencies to 34 daily services flights on 10 domestic air routes to the airports in HCMC, Hanoi, Phu Quoc, Con Dao, Pleiku, Buon Ma Thuot and Dalat, and the central city of Danang.

* Vietnam Aircraft Leasing Join Stock Co. (VALC) on Thursday took delivery of a fourth ATR72-500 plane in France’s city of Toulouse as part of a batch of five aircraft of this type the local company already ordered from manufacturer ATR.

VALC will get the fifth ATR72-500 in December this year in the US$100 million-plus deal between the company and French Avion de Transport Regional (ATR). All the aircraft will be leased to Vietnam Airlines.

Tran Long, general director of VALC, said the company was completing procedures to receive 10 Airbus A321-200s from the European aircraft maker in 2012 and 2013. Again, these planes will be put into service by Vietnam Airlines.

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Sunday, September 12, 2010

Typhoon causes flight cancellations

HCMC - Typhoon Mindulle has forced Vietnam Airlines and Jetstar Pacific to cancel around 17 domestic flights from HCMC and Hanoi to central and Central Highlands regions and vice versa.

Vietnam Airlines said that it had to call off eight flights between the country’s two major cities and Vinh on Tuesday because of the storm. In addition to its daily schedule, the flagship carrier will operate extra services on these routes on Wednesday to transport 641 stranded passengers.

Low-cost carrier Jetstar Pacific was unable to run its daily service between HCMC and Vinh on Tuesday and would plan more services on this route on Wednesday to transport more than 100 affected passengers.

Vietnam Airlines’ flight cancellations as a result of the typhoon, also known in Vietnam as Storm No. 3, were many more than the only one flight by Jetstar Pacific because the national carrier’s flights to the central and Central Highlands regions of Vietnam are much more than the latter’s.

On Monday afternoon and evening, Vietnam Airlines aborted eight flights between HCMC and Hue as well as Hanoi and this former imperial capital, leaving more than 870 passengers grounded. The airline carried these passengers on its daily and extra flights on Tuesday.

Vietnam Airlines reported the biggest number of affected passengers for HCMC-Hue flights, with more than 500 passengers unable to board its four flights on Monday. There were 253 for the Hanoi-Hue route and 125 for the HCMC-Buon Ma Thuot flight cancellations.

Vietnam Airlines said it had prepared enough aircraft and staff for the extra services. However, it called for passengers to get updates on its website at www.vietnamairlines.com or by dialing (04) 38 320 320 for those in Hanoi, (08) 38 320 320 in HCMC and (0511) 3832320 in Danang.

The typhoon that centered offshore Ha Tinh Province at mid-day on Tuesday caused fierce winds and widespread devastation along the north-central coast.

The storm that was centered 90km from the shore caused heavy rain and strong winds up to grades 10 and 11 in Ky Anh and Loc Ha Districts of Ha Tinh. The powerful storm uprooted trees and unroofed many houses. 

Chairman of Loc Ha District Bui Le Bac said local residents, including old people, women and children had been evacuated. Military, police, and volunteers had been mobilized to help move people’s possessions and check the dyke system.

Border police have succeeded in contacting and supervising over 44,000 boats and ships to move to safe areas.

The Steering Committee for Flood and Storm Control on Tuesday sent a delegation headed by Dao Xuan Hoc, deputy minister of agriculture and rural development, to the north- central provinces of Quang Binh and Ha Tinh to oversee emergency response there.

Cao Duc Phat, head of the steering committee and minister of agriculture and rural development, on Tuesday urged the authorities of affected provinces to keep in contact and guide fishing boats as well as call on residents to reinforce their houses.  All local rescue teams should be on standby.

Phat also warned that the storm might trigger flash floods like what storms did in the past, so an emergency plan should be in place to deal with floods and the aftermath.

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