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SAA launches Guangzhou, cuts back Hong Kong

21 Jun 2019 - by Sarah Robertson
Comments | 0

SAA is to launch its first

new route since the

implementation of its

turnaround strategy, with flights

to Guangzhou commencing

on September 18. However

it has glossed over the news

that, according to GDS listings,

the route comes along with

a reduction of its flights to

nearby Hong Kong.

SAA says Guangzhou is a

strategic route due to the

manufacturing and trading

businesses to which South

Africans will now have direct

access. Guangzhou is known

as the manufacturing hub

of the world, and formal

and informal traders source

the majority of goods sold

in sub-Saharan Africa from

the province, due to Africa’s

poor manufacturing capacity,

says the airline. It is 120km

northwest of Hong Kong with

a new 45-minute fast train line

linking the two cities.

An airline source said the

flights would operate on

Wednesdays, Fridays and

Sundays, with flight SA288

departing Johannesburg

at 17h55 and arriving in

Guangzhou at 13h35 the

next day. SA289 will depart

from Guangzhou on Mondays,

Thursdays and Saturdays

at 22h25 arriving in JNB at

05h40 the next day. The flight,

the only direct service from SA

to Guangzhou, will be operated

by an A340-400 with a 13-hour

40-minute flight time.

SAA ceo, Vuyani Jarana,

has said that China is South

Africa’s largest trading partner

and that the decision to

launch the route was based on

sound commercial decisions.

However, the release does

not mention that SAA’s

Johannesburg-Hong Kong

flights, which currently operate

six times a week, will be

reduced to four times a week.

Marco Tomasicchio, director

of XL International Travels,

says SAA is alternating flight

dates between the two nearby

cities, with the Guangzhou

service departing from

Johannesburg on Wednesdays,

Fridays and Sundays and the

reduced Hong Kong service

departing from Johannesburg

on Mondays, Tuesdays,

Thursdays and Saturdays.

“Adding a direct service to

mainland China, combined with

our current popular flights to

Hong Kong, provides SAA with

immense growth opportunities

to and from mainland China. It

also gives our traders access

to the centre of Chinese

manufacturing,” Vuyani said.

An airline source who

wished to remain anonymous

said Guangzhou was easily

accessible from Hong Kong,

adding that many other

carriers including Singapore

Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Qatar,

Emirates, Kenya Airways and

Ethiopian Airlines all linked

South Africa with Guangzhou

from their respective hubs.

“This decision must be

political,” she said.

Marco agreed asking if

there was any justification

for SAA to have flights to two

airports that are so close

together. “It seems that they

are trying to take advantage

of Hong Kong as a hub to

Asia for both corporate and

leisure travellers while at

the same time trying to lure

more corporate travellers

through the direct flight to

Guangzhou. We will have to

wait to see whether this can

be achieved without a daily

schedule.”

This is not SAA’s first

attempt at linking South

Africa with mainland

China. It launched direct

flights to Beijing in early

2012 but the route was

cancelled by acting ceo, Nico

Bezuidenhout, in April 2015.

At the time, Nico confirmed

that the route had made

an estimated R1bn loss

over the three-year period.

In early 2019 SAA told

media that its only profitable

international route was

Washington.

SAA says it has interline

agreements with China

Southern Airlines, China

Eastern, Air China and

Hainan Airlines. A codeshare

agreement between SAA

and Hong Kong Airlines is

also anticipated to be put in

place this year for customers

travelling beyond Hong Kong.

From an inbound perspective

the codeshare will provide

feeder traffic on SAA from

Japan, Korea, the Philippines

and China.

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