Bangkok Post

Bamboo sets date for maiden flight

- KHANH VU

HANOI: Bamboo Airways aims to make its first domestic flight on Dec 29 should it receive its licence to fly, beginning a journey which could see Vietnam’s fifth carrier rival the market leader in size within a year.

“The maiden flight will connect the capital Hanoi with the coastal resort city of Quy Nhon, where parent FLC Group JSC has one of its around 30 hotels and 20 golf courses,’’ Trinh Van Quyet, who is also chairman of FLC, told Reuters in an interview on Monday.

“As well as main cities, we’ll fly to domestic destinatio­ns existing airlines don’t reach,” he said. “Our first internatio­nal flights will connect Vietnam with South Korea and Japan, early in the second quarter.”

“There has been a surge in the number of golfers coming from South Korea to play in Vietnam recently,” Quyet added, saying that direct flights to the United States “is also a Bamboo goal.’’

The launch comes as Vietnam clocks double-digit expansion in both domestic and inbound passenger numbers, at a time of rising incomes in one of Asia’s quickest-growing economies. Meanwhile, the government aims to make tourism a growth driver through visa exemptions and promoting investment in related infrastruc­ture.

Bamboo initially scheduled its maiden flight for October but delayed as it did not have a business licence, which it received earlier this month. But it is still awaiting its air operator’s certificat­e (AOC), without

which it will remain grounded.

“We are processing Bamboo Airways’ request for an AOC. We will issue the AOC when all the requiremen­ts are met,” said Vo Huy Cuong, deputy director of the Civil Aviation Administra­tion.

Bamboo hopes to begin ticket sales at the end of November. It plans to operate initial routes with leased aircraft.

Bamboo signed a memorandum of understand­ing with Airbus SE in March to buy up to 24 A320neo narrow-body jets, and a provisiona­l deal in July for 20 Boeing 787-9 wide-bodies worth $5.6 billion at list prices.

“We will operate 10 planes when we start services and expand to 40 or 50 planes by the end of next year,” Quyet said.

It took domestic market leader VietJet around six years after launch to build a fleet of 50 aeroplanes.

One industry source is sceptical Bamboo could reach such scale in the time frame given.

“It’s impossible to add aircraft as fast as it says it will given regulatory restrictio­ns preventing any airline from expanding its fleet so rapidly in the initial phase, plus slot restrictio­ns and infrastruc­ture constraint­s in Vietnam,” it said.

Quyet said the target was designed to increase plane availabili­ty to guarantee ticket supply. “The risk would be higher if we chose to start with only one to three planes.”

Aviation consultanc­y CAPA said Bamboo would need to overcome “intense competitio­n” from establishe­d players that serve destinatio­ns it is targeting and already have slots at major airports where demand is robust.

“To differenti­ate itself, Bamboo will use its parent’s golf courses, which will number 100 by 2022,’’ Quyet said.

“We will offer packages that no other local airline can,” he said. “Once we do this, we want to do it big and different. Bamboo Airways has a different business orientatio­n and we invest big right from the beginning, not from small to big”.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Bamboo Airways chairman Trinh Van Quyet poses during an interview at his office in Hanoi on Monday.
REUTERS Bamboo Airways chairman Trinh Van Quyet poses during an interview at his office in Hanoi on Monday.

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