KQ: Kenya airways- Wateja wa tanzania ni 3.9% ya wateja wote, + mengineyo

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Points za muhimu kama hauna haja ya kusoma hiyo habari yote::

*Ethiopia wametuosha kabisa KQ, jamaa tulianza pamoja lakini sahii twaangalia kwa macho tu, hatuwezi wagusa.

*Market ya Tanzania iko katika top 4 ya abiria wanaobebwa na KQ, Lakini ukijumlisha abiria wote wanaobebwa na KQ, market ya tanzania ni chini ya asilimia nne tu ya abiria wote, kwahivyo watanzania kwanzia leo mkome kutishia Kenya eti mkiifukuza KQ kutoka tanzania itafilisika na kuanguka.. tutapata loss lakini si kiasi kikubwa, itakua kama 8% loss ivi...

*KQ ilibebaba abiria 4.5Million mwaka jana... Yani abiria waliobebwa na KQ ni wengi kuliko abiria waliobebwa na ndege zote zinazotua Dar+Zanzibar ukijumlisha

*Ndege za KQ hua zimejaa angalau wastani wa asilimia 70%

*Abiria wa kwenda mombasa-Nairobi wamepungua 13% lakini hata hivyo, route hii ndo route enye abiria wengi zaidi

12 Jan 2018 // Airline Analysis // No Comments »

Kenya Airways grows traffic 71% in 10 years to 4.46 million annual passengers; load factor back above 70%; confirms New York JFK launch
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It would appear that Kenya Airways is in an improving state at the moment. While for the last financial year (FY16/17) it posted an 8.5% reduction in turnover to 106,277,000,000 KES (€855 million), its operating profit increased by an impressive 122% according to the airline’s last annual report, with it moving into the black by producing a 897,000,000 KES profit (€7.2 million – €32.9 million loss in FY15/16). These positive financial indicators hopefully mean that it is in a more stable position to take on the risks associated with new route decisions. Currently the airline has a fleet of 32 passenger aircraft when referencing ch-aviation, with this total being made-up of: two 737-700s; eight 737-800s; seven 787-8s; and 15 E190s. The airline also has two 737-300s for freighter services, meaning in total there is currently 34 aircraft in its fleet, with the average age of the units being 6.4 years.

Passenger numbers now above 4.4 million
In FY16/17 Kenya Airways carried 4.46 million passengers, an increase of 5.4% when compared to its total for FY15/16. In the same period, the airline increased its average load factor across its network from just above 68% to 72%, the first time that the carrier has passed the 70% threshold since FY11/12, with last year’s result being the best that the airline has recorded since FY07/08 when it achieved a load factor of just under 74%.


While the 5.4% increase in passengers numbers is indeed an improvement from the 1.2% rise that was observed between FY14/15 and FY15/16, it is only the fourth best year for growth in the period analysed. From FY10/11 to FY11/12, traffic went up by over 26% from 2.89 million to 3.64, while a surge of above 12% was encountered from FY13/14 to FY14/15, and a 6.2% incline was recorded between FY07/08 and FY08/09.

Mombasa leads despite cutbacks
While the distance between Nairobi and Mombasa by road is around 480 kilometres, the time it takes to drive the route can still take up to nine hours, meaning that flying is the most viable option for travel between Kenya’s two largest cities. It is therefore of no surprise that the Mombasa route is the #1 for the nation’s flag carrier from the capital, with Kenya Airways offering between eight and nine daily flights on the city pair. While it is the number one route, the link has saw annual seat capacity reduced by close to 14% between 2016 and 2017, the worst performance recorded of the airline’s top services from the capital. One factor for Kenya Airways choosing to reduce its frequency on the route from around nine to 10 daily flights is due to the increased competition on the sector, particularly with the arrival of LCC Jambojet, a subsidiary of Kenya Airways, with it offering up to six daily flights. Along with Mombasa, the domestic link to Kisumu (fifth largest route) has also seen a capacity drop, along with Bangkok Suvarnabhumi (all highlighted in red).


Of the routes in the top 12, three are the airline’s long-haul connections to Europe, namely Amsterdam, London Heathrow and Paris CDG, with two being domestic, two in Asia and one in the Middle East, and remaining four being in other African countries. While the airline did add Victoria Falls to its network in 2017, the carrier has cut service to three airports since the beginning of 2016, namely Malindi (ended 7 August 2016), Gaborone and Abuja (both 13 November 2016). The carrier’s next route launch from Nairobi is to New York JFK in October, a route it will operate daily on 787-8s, with this inauguration date being 18 months after the airline’s first flight to Victoria Falls.

JFK demand analysed
When referring to OAG Traffic Analyser data, in 2017 there was around 23,800 indirect passengers between Nairobi and JFK, with a US/African traffic origin split of 52/48, showing that there is more demand for the route from the US end of the city pair. The top three hubs for connecting traffic between the two airports last year were Dubai (34% of traffic – all on Emirates), London Heathrow (16% – majority on British Airways) and Doha (13% – all Qatar Airways). So with two of the three top airlines serving indirect passengers being oneworld members, this is certainly an interesting move by the SkyTeam carrier which will surly be aiming to capture that demand. Interestingly Amsterdam, a SkyTeam hub for KLM, which has a Kenya Airways service from Nairobi, was fourth in the rankings for JFK-bound traffic in 2017 (9.7% – demand split between KLM and Delta Air Lines).

Leaving it too late to compete with Ethiopian?
Kenya Airways, a SkyTeam member, has a well established hub at Nairobi, with it surely hoping to fill some capacity on its JFK service with feeder traffic. Another airline which is not too far away geographically, which also has a strong based operation in East Africa, is Ethiopian Airlines (Star Alliance), a carrier with already well established services into the US including New York (Newark), along with a strong, global non-African route network. In FY07/08, Ethiopian Airlines transported just over 2.50 million passengers, 100,000 less than Kenya Airways during that financial period. In FY15/16, when Kenya Airways flew 4.23 million people, Ethiopian Airlines greeted just over 7.50 million, 3.3 million more than the Nairobi-based operator, showing that the Star Alliance member has been more ambitious with its growth in recent years.

Back in 2007, Kenya Airways offered just under 540,000 departing seats on non-African routes from Nairobi, with Ethiopian Airlines’ non-African network supporting 760,000 seats, around 41% more than its East African neighbour. In 2017, the Addis Ababa-based carrier was offering 2.55 million one-way seats to points outside of its home continent, a whopping 311% larger than that being flown by Kenya Airways, with it only providing 620,000 seats.

Outside of Africa, Kenya Airways will be operating to eight airports in 2018, namely Amsterdam, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Dubai, Jeddah, Heathrow, Mumbai, New York JFK and Paris CDG. In terms of the airline’s turnover, it intercontinental routes accounted for 48% of the money taken by the carrier in FY16/17 according to the airline’s financial report, down from 49% in FY15/16. The only one of these city pairs that Ethiopian Airlines does not serve from Addis Ababa is Amsterdam, and while the Star Alliance carrier does serve Newark, the route is via Lomé in Togo, meaning Kenya Airways will be the only carrier offering non-stop services to the Big Apple from East Africa in 2018.

Kenya Airways has now entered the ultra-long-haul market with the announcement of flights to New York JFK from 28 October 2018. In FY16/17 Kenya Airways transported 4.46 million passengers with an average load factor across its network of above 72%. The number of people flown by the airline has increased by 71% since FY07/08.



Kenya Airways traffic grows 71% in 10 years to 4.46 million passengers
 
3.9% tu na hapo ujue yule jamaa wa hapa kazi tu na ma'yes man' wake hawapo. Haya, noted!
 
Kafrican, uzi wote huu wa nini, mbona unajiabisha mazee. Hivi unafikiri wateja wanao panda KQ kuja Tanzania ni Watanzania wenye passport za Tanzania tu, Tanzania receive people from all over the world, some of those people uses KQ to enter the country. Namba za visitors wa 2017 hazijatoka bado lakini Tanzania tuna tegemea kupata around 2 million visitors. If we where to block KQ kama tulivyo fanya2015, (mpaka Kenyatta akakimbia mbio ndefu kumshinda Geoffrey Kipkorir Kiruimbio kuja kuomba msamaha), mgejua kama kweli Tanzanian market ni 3.9%. Ingekuwa vizuri haya maneno unayasema hapa wangeyasema KQ wenyewe kama Tanzania market ni ka-sehemu kadogo na wala hatutapoteza usingizi wetu, najuwa hawana ubavu huo. 2015 tuliwaabia travel agents around the world avoid going through Kenya if you want to visit Tanzania, KQ hawakuamini maneno hayo, walijuwa statements kama hizo ni mbaya kwa biashara yao.
 
Cough cough.....tupo, pole na jua la kajiado 😀😀
Nilijua ukisikia kafununu ka jina la mkulu kutajwa utakuja. My friend Kajiado County si kwa jua siku hizi. Huko ni viwanada tu, under Nairobi Metropolis ambaye imeoverlap hadi ndani ya Kajiado County. Miji ya Ngong, Rongai, Kitengela ni full bata siku hizi. Dah lazima nitatembea huko hivi karibuni.
 

Najuwa the main suppler wa hivyo viwanda ni Tanzania, kwahiyo sina wasiwasi (win-win). Nadhani unapishana na maroli mengi ya Tanzania kwenye hiyo barabara.
 
Najuwa the main suppler wa hivyo viwanda ni Tanzania, kwahiyo sina wasiwasi (win-win). Nadhani unapisha na maroli mengi ya Tanzania kwenye hiyo barabara.
Hamna presha iwe customer, supplier bora hela zinapigwa na uchumi unaimarika na wakazi wa Kajiado County wanabakia na chenji.
 
Watanzania wataipanda KQ wakisafiri Marekani wapende wasipende.
 


Hizo namba ni pamoja na KLM au bila ya KLM? Kwa maana nilishawahi kukata tiketi KLM siku ya safari nikapanda Kenya Airways!
 
Hivi nikitaka kumuunfa mkono kenyata kwa kazi nzuri na mimi ni mtanzania nafanyaje?
 
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