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Europe's low-cost Wizz Air has high hopes from London's Gatwick airport

 

A Wizz Air flight from Budapest, Hungary lands at Dubai's Maktoum Airport

Wizz Air, which is also making a push into Abu Dhabi in a big way, is targetting more slots at London's Gatwick. 

London: Wizz Air Holdings wants to expand its new base at London's Gatwick airport from just one plane to 20 within a year if it can secure enough takeoff and landing slots.

While the hub will open with a lone Airbus SE A321 jet in October, Budapest-based Wizz sees scope to quickly expand it to employ 800 people, an operation that would support a further 4,000 jobs, CEO Jozsef Varadi said.

Wizz is seeking to leverage the European airline industry's lowest cost base to grab marketshare in London as the coronavirus crisis pushes other carriers to trim their fleets. Varadi said the plan is being frustrated by the suspension during the pandemic of rules that usually force incumbents to relinquish slots the following year if they fail to use 80 per cent of them.

Don't waive

"If airlines are unable to operate slots they should be returned to a pool so that carriers can access them, bring in revenue and contribute to the local economy," Varadi said. Wizz is lobbying authorities including regulators in both the UK and the European Union to drop the waiver as flying resumes, he said


The European Commission has said the measure is temporary and aimed at protecting the industry while also removing the need for airlines to fly empty planes just to hang on to flying rights.

While the suspension applies across Europe, it's a particular issue at Gatwick because British Airways, Virgin Atlantic Airways and Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA all have suspended operations there, leaving a large number of slots at the south London facility in limbo, the CEO said. EasyJet, the biggest airline operator at Gatwick, has resumed service at a slower pace than Wizz.

Gatwick is currently operating at only 20 per cent of its year-ago capacity, Varadi said, compared with 70 per cent at Luton airport, Wizz's original UK hub north of London.

Ambitions

The discount carrier, Europe's third-biggest behind Ryanair Holdings and EasyJet, currently bases 10 planes at Luton with a further 20 flying in from other locations. Gatwick could ultimately support an operation of at least that size, Varadi said.

A higher number of planes would be directly based at Gatwick because the bulk of passengers would be Britons making leisure trips to the continent. That contrasts with Luton, where a majority of passengers are flying in to the UK to work, or visit friends and family.


Virgin CEO Shai Weiss has said his company might lease out its Gatwick slots until the long-haul market in which it specializes revives. Varadi previously ruled out such an arrangement, saying the investment required to build up a new market is too great not to have certainty over access.

Wizz sought to establish itself as a force at Gatwick last year, when it was a contender for slots from failed Thomas Cook Group. Those were bought by EasyJet, while positions vacated by Monarch Airlines in 2017 went to BA owner IAG after Wizz had bid.

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