Home Economy Air Algérie Adds Airbus A330 Flights To Johannesburg

Air Algérie Adds Airbus A330 Flights To Johannesburg

by Hope Jzr
0 comment
A+A-
Reset

Source : https://simpleflying.com/air-algerie-airbus-a330-johannesburg/

North Africa’s Air Algérie has revealed three new African routes, per its latest schedule filing. Algiers to Addis Ababa, Johannesburg, and Libreville are coming. None has been operated regularly by any airline before. While each has minimal local demand, they were Algiers’s three largest unserved sub-Saharan African markets.

Three new Algiers routes

Details of the trio are as follows. Curiously, Algiers to Addis Ababa is 2,934 miles (4,721km) apart, making it only 2% shorter than the 3,000 miles (4,828km) considered to be long-haul.

Algiers to… Start date Flights Aircraft Find flights
Addis Ababa March 27th 2x weekly A330-200 Click here for Algiers-Addis flights
Johannesburg March 26th 2x weekly A330-200 Click here for Algiers-Johannesburg flights
Libreville March 26th 2x to 3x weekly 737-800, 737-600 Click here for Algiers-Libreville flights
Air Algerie's new Africa routes
Image: GCMap.

 

All are tiny markets

All three routes are tiny. According to booking data, Algiers-Addis Ababa had barely 3,500 roundtrip point-to-point passengers in 2019, a minuscule amount for what is virtually a long-haul route. No wonder Algiers, like all capitals of North African nations except Egypt, has been ignored by Ethiopian Airlines, even with its myriad onward connecting flights. But it was Libreville that was smallest, with fewer than 3,000 P2P passengers.

With about 9,000, Algiers-Johannesburg was the largest but still very small. Indeed, it is essential that, where possible, there’s a strong foundation of P2P demand to offset lower-yielding and higher-cost transit traffic. That doesn’t exist in the case of the three new routes, clearly undermining the business case.

Air Algerie 737-600Photo: Konstantin von Wedelstaedt via Wikimedia .
What about connections?
The three routes will rely on transit passengers. Analyzing Air Algiere’s schedules for mid-July using OAG data and assuming no more than a five-hour wait in Algiers shows where passengers can connect over Algiers. In the case of Addis Ababa, two-way connections are available to/from Geneva, Marseille, Milan Malpensa, Paris Orly, Paris CDG, and Rome. Johannesburg will connect to/from Brussels, Frankfurt, Istanbul, London Heathrow, Metz/Nancy, Milan Malpensa, Paris CDG, and Paris Orly. For Libreville: Basel, Brussels, Geneva, Lyon, Metz/Nancy, Milan Malpensa, Paris CDG, Paris Orly, and Rome. Consider Addis Ababa to Rome. On Saturdays, Rome-bound passengers will leave Ethiopia at 03:30 and arrive in Algeria at 08:25. They’ll wait for 2h 5m before flying to the Italian capital. On Mondays, those flying to Addis Ababa will depart Rome at 14:30 and arrive in Algiers at 15:20. They’ll take off to Ethiopia at 20:00.
Flying via Algiers adds 21% more miles to the journey. In contrast, flying EgyptAir over Cairo adds 9%, Turkish Airlines via Istanbul adds 12%, while it’s 29% with Qatar Airways over Doha. Of course, there are significant differences in passenger awareness, frequency of service, wait times, and product quality among these different options, influencing pricing and the potential market they’ll capture.
Nine sub-Saharan African airports
OAG shows that Air Algérie will serve nine airports in sub-Saharan Africa from Algiers next summer. There’s Abidjan, Addis Ababa, Bamako, Dakar, Johannesburg, Libreville, Niamey, Nouakchott, and Ouagadougou. Now that Addis, Johannesburg, and Libreville are coming, Algiers’s largest three unserved markets are now Luanda, N’Djamena, and Accra.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

Quick Links

About Us

A team of volunteers under the supervision of HOPE JZR founder of the site, animated by the desire to sow hope by proposing effective solutions to existing problems through your contributions in the different sectors in order to converge all towards a new Algeria, an ALGERIA ALGERIAN, plural and proud of its cultural diversity. FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT MENU «ALGERIAN ALGERIA»

Who We Are

Hope JZR, founder of the site and also owner of the eponymous YouTube channel, has gathered around his project a team of volunteers from the national territory and the diaspora with profiles as diverse as they are varied, a circle of patriots that only holds, to you and your enthusiasm to expand. Indeed, we invite you, all compatriots with a positive and constructive mindset to join us, through your contributions, in this adventure of defense and construction of a new Algeria.

What We Do

We work continuously and scrupulously to provide the public with reliable, objective and eminently positive information. Faithful to the founder’s credo of “sowing hope”, our ambition is to create an enthusiastic dynamic (without pouring into euphoria), federating competencies in the service of their homeland. Our publications, as you will notice, will always highlight positive performances and achievements in different fields, and also reflect our critics whenever we see problems affecting the lives of our fellow citizens, providing adequate solutions or calling for our elites to help solve them.

Our Mission

Our unique goal is to make this platform the first in Algeria to be devoted exclusively to positive information that sows hope among our youth and entice them to participate in the development of our country. The building of this new Algeria of which we dream and to which we aspire will be a collective work of all citizens jealous of the greatness of their nation and its influence. It will be the guarantor of the preservation of its independence and sovereignty and will honor the legacy and sacrifice of our valiant Chouhadas.

© 2023 – Jazair Hope. All Rights Reserved. 

Contact Us At : info@jazairhope.org

Letest Articles