Atlantis wrote:Finally I can give the future plans about long haul operations at Brussels Airport.
Sounds great. Now, this list of long haul priorities is obviously not thought up overnight, but possibly over the last year or so, based on the (then) current situation at BRU. A situation which MUST have taken into acount the fact that SN was a non-allied home carrier back then, willing to code-share with all interesting airlines, but notably with strong OneWorld ties.
Do these plans take into account the fact that SN has rather surprisingly decided NOT go to OneWorld pretty much on its own strength, but rather teamed up with Lufthansa and will thus join STAR before the end of the decade? To me it looks like these 'plans' are drawn up prior to the announcement by SN and are thus already basically worthless as we speek...
Looking just at the list of destinations in the US it seems very irrealistic to expect AA to fly any of these, given the fact they only have a relatively small hub on one end and basically no more connections at the other end. Maybe Boston can still be served on its own merits (O&D on 757 on weekdays only) but especially Dallas can't be nothing but an utopia these days! I mean: AA is likely going to stop NYC once their code-share with SN comes to an end, yet BRU is hoping they'd be opening secondary destinations from BRU?
If anything REALISTIC is to be expected now, it is the opening of transatlantic routes by STAR alliance airlines like UA (ORD), AC (Montreal) or CO (second daily EWR).
Whether BRU really likes it or not, they are going to have to focus predominantly on the STAR alliance airlines now: their home carrier will enter STAR and their second biggest customer is Lufthansa. Add OS, SK, LX, BD and some smaller airlines to it and it becomes cristal clear who is to be their natural partner: more than 2/3rd of all pax are brought in on carriers of this alliance! Now, I can understand the airport though: with SN/LH having such a big grip on them, they just know they are going to be squeezed by the Germans to lower their prices drastically, so BRU is probably desperately trying to diversify their portfolio of customers asap in order to resist this... I think it will be too little, too late for them (partly given their foolish focus on LCC in the past) and SN/LH will thus manage to twist their arm on pricing. Which is obviously good news for these airlines as well as the customers: BRU is at least 30% too expensive these days.