Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

United increasing Europe flights

Airline planning to update passenger capacity, destinatio­ns

- DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS — Buoyed by full planes across the Atlantic this summer, United Airlines is planning another increase in its summer service from the United States to Europe next year.

United Airlines Holdings Inc. announced Wednesday that it will resume seasonal flights from Newark, N.J., to Stockholm, which it dropped in 2019, and launch new summer service from Newark to Malaga, Spain. However, the airline will drop Bergen, Norway — one of nine routes it added this summer — after disappoint­ing results.

Overall, the airline expects to increase passengerc­arrying capacity across the Atlantic next summer by up to 30% over pre-pandemic 2019. That increase includes United’s previously announced plan to resume flying to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, a destinatio­n it abandoned in 2016.

United and other airlines have been forced to cancel some flights this year because of limits imposed by airports in London and Amsterdam, which are struggling with staffing shortages. Patrick Quayle, the airline’s senior vice president of network planning, said that after talking with airport officials, United is confident it can operate the planned 2023 European schedule.

United, American Airlines Group Inc., and Delta Air Lines Inc. were boosted this summer by strong demand and high fares on flights to Europe, as Americans took advantage of fewer covid19-related travel restrictio­ns. Those internatio­nal trips likely figured in American’s move Tuesday to raise its forecast of third-quarter revenue, although the airline did not break out results by region.

Asia and the South Pacific have been slower to come back, although United has gradually added flights to Australia and other destinatio­ns. China, however, remains largely closed off to foreigners, with cities still imposing new lockdowns based on the smallest numbers of covid-19 cases, and Japan just ended border restrictio­ns that had been in place for more than two years.

Quayle said United “will just follow the government process” when China reopens and will phase in the resumption of flights to Japan. With those “notable exceptions,” he said, “everything else across the Pacific is going to be running fullsteam this winter.”

 ?? (AP) ?? A United Airlines jetliner taxis for take off from Denver Internatio­nal Airport in this file photo. Planes from the U.S. to Europe were packed this summer, and United Airlines figures the same thing will happen next year.
(AP) A United Airlines jetliner taxis for take off from Denver Internatio­nal Airport in this file photo. Planes from the U.S. to Europe were packed this summer, and United Airlines figures the same thing will happen next year.

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