Frustrated Westport
residents said today the Greymouth-based Air West Coast had operated a good
service to Wellington, before Air NZ undercut it, forcing it out of business.
Air West Coast, owned by the Gloriavale Christian Community, started flights
out of Westport in 2002. In February 2007, Air NZ began twice daily services to
the town, and 16 months later Air West Coast pulled the pin. Air New Zealand
subsequently duplicated this service which could not economically sustain two
operators. Accordingly, Air West Coast will withdraw its Westport service Air
West Coast's Fervent Stedfast said at the time. It discontinued the Greymouth
air service soon after. Westport has suffered hundreds of mining job losses
since then, and the Holcim cement plant is earmarked to close. However, Air
NZ's decision —which caught everyone off guard — has left a bad taste in
people's mouths. Westport resident Bruce
Hamilton said Air NZ flights did not leave until too late, at 9.10am, meaning
people arrived in Wellington too late for meetings. As a result, people had
been driving to Nelson to catch a plane for some time. The previous flights by
Air West Coast at least gave them a decent day in the capital, Mr Hamilton
said. They (Air NZ) destroyed a perfectly good service. He suspected everyone
would now fly from Nelson, which was taking business out of the West Coast and
giving it to Nelson".
Source : Greymouth
Star
While I have no doubt
competition from Air New Zealand was a factor leading to Air West Coast pulling
out of Westport, it was not the only factor. When Eagle Air, who operate the
service to Westport, had made more control of their operations they were
wanting to improve services to Kaitaia and Westport moving them from a single
flight to two flights a day. Certainly this is what the town's leaders wanted,
an improved Air NZ service rather than a smaller airline. This was the concern
when Air West Coast started in 2002. Initially the service saw flights from
Westport to Christchurch and Wellington but the Christchurch flights were never
supported and were dropped.
Most of the traffic
on Air West Coast came from Greymouth. People from Greymouth or Hokitika
wanting to fly to Wellington had to go from Hokitika via Christchurch so a
direct flight (with a brief stop over in Wellington) was preferable. About the
time Eagle doubled their Westport service Air West Coast looked to introduce a
19-seat Dornier 228 to the run. But as it was being introduced Air West Coast
was expressing a warning... The Greymouth Star of 8 March 2007 reported that
"Air West Coast has bought a bigger plane (the 19-seat Dornier 228) to
match Air New Zealand Link operator Eagle Air, but may pull out of Westport if
patronage doesn’t improve... We believe that there will be enough traffic out
of Greymouth to fill up the plane. (But) We’ll stick with Westport for a wee
while to see how it goes by putting on this big plane, and see how the customer
acceptance is and we’ll evaluate it as we go."
I flew Air West
Coast twice, one southbound in the Chieftain... with no passengers for Westport
and once northbound in the Dornier... we had about 14 passengers and stopped to
pick up 1 at Westport.
On the 27th of June
2008 Air West Coast stopped calling at Westport on the flights to and from
Wellington. Chief executive Fervent Stedfast said "Air West Coast
established a morning and evening return air service to Wellington to benefit
Westport people. Air New Zealand subsequently duplicated this service which
could not economically sustain two operators. Accordingly Air West Coast will
withdraw its Westport service. The airline had been running Monday to Friday
from Greymouth-Westport-Wellington in the mornings, returning in the evenings.
However, patronage had been slow and some days it did not come into Westport
because there were no bookings. It would still be flying Greymouth to
Wellington as it had no competition in Greymouth."
Six weeks later the
Greymouth to Wellington service ceased with Air West Coast citing increased
costs, including a massive increase in fuel costs over the previous year,
eventually making the venture uneconomic. From what I understand the overheads
to have all the CAA regulations meant were also a huge expense for Air West
Coast.
Air West Coast
operated a single route - northbound to Wellington in the morning and a return
service to the Coast in the late afternoon. That meant the plane and pilots
were sitting around doing nothing all day... not a good scenario for an
expensive machine. Potential airline operators beware!
For more on Air
West Coast see : http://3rdlevelnz.blogspot.co.nz/2011/05/air-west-coast-flying-on-wing-prayer.html
Soon after Coastair
started services from Christchurch to Westport via Greymouth if there were
passengers offering. The service built really slowly but was building until Air
New Zealand introduced a twice daily Monday and Friday service between Christchurch
and Westport. There was a lot of cries about Air NZ with this but they had been
in dialogue with Solid Energy for sometime about providing a service. Solid
Energy staff were not allowed to fly in unpressurised aircraft after the fatal
Air Adventures' Piper Chieftain crash at Christchurch. Air NZ only started the
service when Solid Energy guaranteed a set number of seats per flight. Sadly
this was the end of Coastair and Westport has never been connected with a
flight to Christchurch since.
For more on Coastair
see : http://3rdlevelnz.blogspot.co.nz/2010/04/coastair-tried-to-find-niche.html
The final factor is
Westport folk haven't always used the air services offered and ultimately this
is the issue now. Capital Air Services pulled out of Westport in the 1970s
because people were not using their service. Air New Zealand's Friendship
service through Westport was reduced to three flights a week in the early 1980s
when people were not using it! Air New Zealand's current service uses aircraft
that are getting older and therefore less reliable and are becoming
increasingly uneconomic. There is nothing available to replace them other than
upgrading to 50 seaters. If the economics don't stack up for current flights
they are not going to stack up for Air New Zealand's Q300s. It will be
interesting to see who picks up Westport how they open the next chapter in
Westport's aviation history.
Westport News, 4 April 1984 - This was after Westport regained a Sunday service... Before that happened the add used to say "Use it or Lose it!" |
What about golden bay aie because they operate flights to karamea and do offer a karamea to wellington service?
ReplyDeleteWestport could nicely tie into Golden Bay Air's services but using what???
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