Fwd: LAX loses some flights to SFO, beats expansion drums

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--- In BATN@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "2/23 Los Angeles Times" <batn@...> 
wrote:

Published Friday, February 23, 2007, in the Los Angeles Times

Cramped and old, LAX is losing international flights to newer 
airports
Cramped facilities push Pacific Rim carriers to newer airports.

By Jennifer Oldham
jennifer.oldham@...

Eight times a week, travelers arrive at Los Angeles International
Airport after a long journey from Sydney, Australia, eager to stretch
their legs and spend money at tourist attractions, hotels and
restaurants.

These visitors, about 380 a day who spill out into the sunshine from
Qantas Airlines flights and make Southern California their
destination, stay in the area three weeks on average, according to 
the
U.S. Department of Commerce.  They contribute $183 million a year to
the region's economy.

Come next month, Qantas will be taking these flights, and their
multimillion-dollar economic benefit, to San Francisco, although its
other 42 weekly flights from Sydney and elsewhere to LAX will
continue.

The move is just one example of a little-noticed shift in lucrative
international air service away from crowded LAX to newer facilities 
in
San Francisco, Las Vegas and New York.  Since 2000, LAX has lost 12%
of the seats on its weekly international departures, while other 
major
U.S. gateways posted gains in service to foreign destinations.

Economists blame the shift on LAX's cramped and outdated terminals 
and
lawmakers' inability to agree on a plan to modernize the airport 
while
other cities have built gleaming new concourses.  And newer, more
fuel-efficient aircraft give carriers more choices of cities to
patronize.

The trend is alarming local officials, who say San Francisco
International Airport may soon eclipse LAX as the highly coveted
premier gateway to the Pacific Rim.  This could endanger the $4
billion a year that international visitors pump into the Southland's
economy.

"Everyone assumed that LAX as a gateway would be there by the very
fact that it's in L.A.," said Michael Collins, executive vice
president of LA Inc., the city's convention and visitors bureau, 
which
has received $33 million from the city's airport agency since 2001 to
stimulate travel at LAX and Ontario International Airport.

"The issue that we're wrestling with is that the options for carriers
-- the choices they have now -- are virtually twice as many as they
had in 1995," Collins said.  "The intensity of the competition has
really increased."

For several decades, airlines plied international routes from their
biggest hubs.  Now, with the help of fuel-efficient aircraft, they're
just as likely to favor smaller cities and different routes.  For
example, Korean Air started flying nonstop last fall from Seoul to 
Las
Vegas, bypassing LAX.  (The carrier still has LAX service.)  This
trend is expected to accelerate when new aircraft with longer ranges
come into service in the next few years.

Many large airports around the U.S. are already enjoying record
spending by international travelers, at least some of it at LAX's
expense.

Since 2000, service from LAX to Tokyo has plummeted 33%, for example.
United Airlines slashed one out of every three nonstop weekly
international departures, while more than doubling service at hubs in
Denver, Chicago and Washington.

Travel wholesalers who plan itineraries for overseas groups say LAX's
outmoded facilities are increasingly prompting operators to bring
U.S. tours through other cities.  Jeff Karnes, regional vice 
president
at New World Travel, said major improvements in such airports as San
Francisco's and Las Vegas' have "definitely had an impact on
L.A. being their first choice as a West Coast gateway."

Not everyone is unhappy with the decline in international business at
LAX, particularly critics who want to see the facility's growth
limited, if not reversed.

"The bottom line, as far as the general residency are concerned, is
that they are very happy to see as many flights go elsewhere -- the
more the merrier," said Roy Hefner, a Westchester resident who is on
an airport committee that studies noise and other issues.

While Los Angeles officials and residents spent the last decade and
$150 million arguing about how to modernize LAX, San Francisco built 
a
cavernous, $1-billion international terminal.  The 6-year-old 
facility
is more than twice the size of the 22-year-old Tom Bradley
International Terminal at LAX and has twice as many gates.  It boasts
floor-to-ceiling windows, restaurants and boarding-area seating for
hundreds of passengers.

LAX officials say they realize they must build new facilities before
the scales tip and San Francisco becomes the airport of choice for
carriers serving foreign destinations.

"The strategy for us is that we're ready facility-wise, so we do not
lose our share of some of the Asian markets," said Samson Mengistu,
acting executive director of Los Angeles World Airports.  "When we
were in China, they were telling us they may have 200 to 300 million
Chinese people in the next 10 years flying internationally.  We need
to be able to compete and get a fair share of that growing market."

The city's airport agency began a $723-million update to the Bradley
terminal this year, but it won't be done for three years and will not
enlarge the building, industry watchers note.

Meanwhile, San Francisco officials are aggressively marketing their
international terminal to carriers in hopes they can lure business
travelers who currently connect on flights at LAX to the Bay Area.

"We really want to be the airport of choice for business travelers,
especially those going to Asia," said John Martin, the San Francisco
airport's director.  "We have a geographic advantage being an hour
closer than Los Angeles."

LAX does have some advantages, including better weather than San
Francisco and considerably lower fees.  At LAX, airlines pay about $6
per boarded passenger, compared with about $14 in San Francisco -- a
consideration for the cash-strapped industry.

LAX also served twice as many international travelers last year.  But
it has been losing ground in the Asian market to San Francisco since
1998.  That year, San Francisco had one flight to Asia for every 
three
from LAX.  Last year, the Bay Area facility boasted one flight to 
Asia
for every two at LAX.

Airlines are paying attention to San Francisco's growth potential.
Qantas is boosting its service at San Francisco from three flights a
week to five starting next month -- by taking two Boeing 747-400s 
that
currently serve LAX four times a week each and moving them up north.

"It was always our intention to grow our San Francisco service," said
Wally Mariani, a senior executive vice president at Qantas, adding
that the airline is also enjoying gains in passengers at LAX, where 
it
is one of the largest international carriers.

Start-up carriers also are increasingly choosing between Los Angeles
and San Francisco, which offers half off its landing fees to airlines
providing nonstop flights to new international markets.  Jet Airways
recently announced that it will fly this fall from Mumbai, India, to
Shanghai to San Francisco, pending U.S. approval.

"The Bay Area has a slightly larger Indian population than we do, but
in terms of air freight, we're much larger," said Jack Kyser, chief
economist at the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp.  "We
have to get more aggressive in telling them this is where the 
business
is."

Officials agree that one of the deciding factors for international
carriers choosing among LAX and other airports is likely to be their
readiness for the world's largest aircraft, the Airbus A380, expected
to start service next year.  Some industry observers said Airbus'
decision to take the 555-seat plane on its first U.S. test flight 
next
month to New York instead of Los Angeles, as company executives
promised last year, reinforces continued frustration with LAX's aging
infrastructure.

By the end of this year, LAX plans to have two terminal gates that 
can
accommodate the aircraft.  San Francisco has six.  And some carriers
say they will not be satisfied with the remote gates on LAX's western
edge.

"We're looking at San Francisco," Qantas' Mariani said, "and any 
other
airport that will be able to handle the A380 at any gate, without any
fuss."

Competing for passengers

The number of seats on international flights departing from Los
Angeles International Airport has fallen by 12% since 2000.  Some
other major U.S. facilities have seen increases.

Number of seats on international flights per week (Week of Feb. 12-
18)
International airport  /   2000 /   2007 / %change
JFK (New York)         / 235888 / 252896 /   +7.2%
O'Hare (Chicago)       / 136351 / 146157 /   +7.2%
San Francisco          /  94375 /  99245 /   +5.2%
LAX                    / 240172 / 211694 /  -11.9%
Miami                  / 249748 / 195740 /  -21.6%

Sources: SH&E NetWorks and OAG schedules


[BATN: See also:

LAX expansionists fret about A-380 threat from SFO 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/28389

Los Angeles agrees to scrap most of $11b LAX overhaul 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/27669

LA scraps LAX expansion plan, settle lawsuits 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/27664

LAX's expansion-pushing director to pursue other opportunities 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/26604

Mayor Villaraigosa reaches out to foes of $11b LAX expansion 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/25470

LAX expansion an issue in LA Mayor's race 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/24333

$11b LAX expansion includes people mover to Green Line 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/22522 ]

--- End forwarded message ---

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