AFTER years of vigorous lobbying for Bilateral Air Service Agreements (BASA) and Fastjet’s resolve to expand to open destinations in Africa, Fastjet finally got cleared to operate daily passenger flights between Dar es Salaam and Nairobi starting in the next ten days.
According to Fastjet statement, prior to
this, the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA) had firmly denied the
airline the licence, a move seen by business analysts as a move to
protect Kenya Airways as Fastjet already operates the routes that Kenya
airways operates.
The tussle pitted the Tanzanian and
Kenyan aviation authorities leading to Tanzania Civil Aviation (TCAA)
scaling down from 42 to 14 a week, a matter that was later resolved.
Fastjet, a local budget airline has been
upbeat opening domestic and international routes, the latest being the
Dar-Zanzibar-Johannesburg. The company is to introduce flights between
Zanzibar and Nairobi and Dar es Salaam and Mombasa later in 2016.
The Nairobi-Dar route is currently
dominated by Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airways, Fastjet plans to cash
in on development domestic and international routes through increasing
its destinations from Dar es Salaam by focusing on growing its fleet.
The new development is hoped to increase
competition especially since Fastjet is budget airline with
international connections to Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa and now
Kenya.
Fastjet counts on punctuality and
reliability in the six-month period in review this year showing that 94
per cent of flights arrived on time (earlier than or within 15 minutes
of schedule) with less than one per cent of flights cancelled.
Fastjet is a low-cost airline model,
operating a modern, fuel efficient fleet on a short haul, point to point
network. Since Fastjet Tanzania was launched on 29 November 2012 it has
carried more than 1.5 million passengers with over 75,000 passengers
carried in August 2015, a year on year increase of 17 per cent and a new
monthly record for Fastjet.
Both passenger volume and capacity
increased by 56 per cent for the six months ended 30 June 2015 compared
to the same period in 2014, whilst load factor remained unchanged at 70
per cent.
Aircraft utilisation increased over the
period to reach 11.2 block hours per aircraft per day by August 2015.
This is an optimum figure for the current fleet size and more aircraft
are required in order to expand the network.
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