April 7, 2006
Discount airlines
creep northward
Jazz not plotting Iqaluit
routes, yet
JOHN
THOMPSON
Flights from Iqaluit to
Ottawa could become much cheaper if Air Canada Jazz decides to follow its recent
expansion into Yellowknife with a similar service in the eastern Arctic.
Two weeks ago Air Canada
announced that its discount airline will provide flights between Edmonton and
Yellowknife, starting July 3, with fares below $500 return.
That undercuts the return
fares of their competitors, First Air and Canadian North, by almost $400.
This February, Air Canada
registered Jazz as a company in Nunavut, raising the possibility of future expansion
east. Companies must register themselves in order to do business in the territory.
But Air Canada officials
downplayed the move, saying they have no immediate plans to offer flights into
the smaller, more remote market in Nunavut.
After Jazz's introduction
of a Yellowknife flight, both First Air and Canadian North responded by offering
temporary seat sales for the same route that matched the price cuts.
The cheapest Jazz flights
offer bare-bones services, with no choice of seating or in-flight meal.
Jim Ballingall, First Air's
vice-president of marketing and sales, said his company has an edge over Air
Canada because of its northern investments. The company has spent $150 million
on infrastructure and maintenance to support its northern operations, he said.
"It's going to be
hard to compete against us," he said. "We've been doing this for over
60 years."
First Air also has political
clout, Ballingall said, because it spends $40 million across the North annually,
and has 250 employees in Nunavut, making it the second largest employer in the
territory.
He said that should create
loyalty among customers - particularly their largest one, the Government of
Nunavut.
"Now I'd hope the
territorial government would look hard and fast at northern carriers that call
the North home," he said.
If not, he pointed to the
creature comforts of three feet of leg room, complementary drinks and a meal.
"We might lose the
odd customer, but eventually they'll come back," he said.
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