The Peterborough Examiner

Bargain airlines boost airports

- ROSS MAROWITS

MONTREAL — Formerly sleepy secondary airports in Canada’s two busiest air markets are in for a new lease on life thanks to the rise of discount airlines and projected growth in travel over the coming decade.

Airports in Hamilton, Ont., and Abbotsford, B.C., that have traditiona­lly played second fiddle to Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport and Toronto Pearson Internatio­nal Airport, were buzzing last week as low-cost WestJet offshoot Swoop launched service between the two, catering to the country’s most price-sensitive passengers.

“It’s been a crazy week,” says Cathie Puckering, chief executive of John C. Munro Hamilton Internatio­nal Airport, which got an additional boost when Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA announced plans last week to enter Canada and offer direct service to Dublin next spring.

After an 80 per cent increase in passengers last year, the airport hopes renewed interest from airlines will help spur a return to its heyday in 2003 when it accommodat­ed one million passengers.

Hamilton, which is also Canada’s top domestic cargo airport, flew nearly 600,000 passengers last year, well short of its capacity to handle more than three million people.

Interest waned after WestJet moved its eastern Canadian base of operations to Toronto Pearson following Air Canada’s merger with Canadian Airlines and Globespan Airways ceased operations to Europe.

Establishe­d in 1940 as a military flight school, civil flights began in 1964 after military activities ended. Management of the airport changed several times before ownership was transferre­d in 1996 to the regional municipali­ty of Hamilton-Wentworth, which in turn contracted a private company to operate it for 40 years.

Airlines are attracted to Hamilton due to fees that are 30 to 50 per cent lower than Pearson’s. Its smaller size cuts the amount of time required for passengers to get to departure gates and allows planes to spend less time on the ground between flights.

“The emerging carriers are looking for partners that share the same philosophy and the same vision in growing the business opportunit­ies,” Puckering said.

Hamilton airport is not only a convenient alternativ­e for people west of Toronto, it has a large catchment area of its own.

More than two million people live within an hour’s drive, and there are nine million Canadians and Americans within two hours drive.

Abbotsford Internatio­nal Airport offers similar advantages, which have allowed the airport to grow especially in the past few years, after the municipali­ty purchased it from the federal government in 1997 for $10, says Mayor Henry Braun.

Traffic increased 38 per cent between 2015 and 2017, reaching 677,000 passengers last year, he said.

The airport expects to surpass one million in a year or two and has the capacity to accommodat­e more than 2.5 million passengers annually.

Braun said the airport is the lowestcost operation in Canada and likely North America. The lack of an airport improvemen­t fee alone saves about $3,000 per Swoop flight.

Braun said the low fares offered by its airlines is stimulatin­g demand from people who don’t typically fly and helping to repatriate some of the millions of travellers who cross the border to depart from Bellingham, Wash.

“We’re not trying to become YVR (Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport),” he said, pointing to Abbotsford’s spartan air terminal.

“We are trying to service the region and we have the capacity to take on way more passengers here, and we’re happy to do that.”

Canada doesn’t have the same history with secondary airports as Europe and the United States.

The country’s low population and proximity to the U.S. have allowed border airports to effectivel­y pick up the slack from larger hubs.

It’s also been only about 25 years since the federal government spun off airports to local operators.

Airports have begun to specialize as the country’s largest airports are getting full because of strong traffic growth, said Canadian Airports Council president Daniel-Robert Gooch.

“The airports are starting to work together and saying how can we structure our offering so that we’re able to serve the needs of this region, maybe in a more co-ordinated way.”

Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport has expanded its offering of turboprop service, and debate continues on the potential constructi­on of an airport in Pickering, east of Toronto.

There are also nearby airports in the Region of Waterloo and London, Ont. that offer year-round service to cities including Toronto and Calgary and seasonal flights to sun destinatio­ns. Among the airlines are WestJet, WestJet Encore, Air Canada, Air Transat and Sunwing.

The key to success for secondary gateways is to keep costs contained and attract a variety of airlines to strengthen their positions as airport alternativ­es, said Rod Hayward, an associate professor of business at University of the Fraser Valley.

“As more ultra low-cost carriers fly into a market you get better schedules, more options and more choices at the airport so it becomes a more credible choice for the consumer.”

 ?? TARA WALTON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A Boeing 737 is on display during Swoop’s media event at Hamilton’s John C. Munro Internatio­nal Airport.
TARA WALTON THE CANADIAN PRESS A Boeing 737 is on display during Swoop’s media event at Hamilton’s John C. Munro Internatio­nal Airport.

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