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Kenya Airways to resume Guangzhou; we examine this market and connections over Nairobi

Kenya Airways to resume Guangzhou; we examine this market and connections over Nairobi

Kenya Airways’ Nairobi – Guangzhou, via Bangkok, is expected to return to normal from the week starting 25 October. According to its booking engine, it will then operate its normal daily service using 234-seat B787-8s.

China – Africa had almost 2.5 million passengers last year, OAG Traffic Analyser using MIDT data shows, with PDEW of around 3,400. This was slightly down over 2018 .

Guangzhou, the so-called ‘African capital’ of China, is the most demanded city in China and wider Asia to/from Africa. Source: OAG Mapper. Guangzhou is a long-standing Kenya Airways destination

Kenya Airways had almost 171,000 seats to/from Guangzhou last year, flat in the recent past. It was the third-largest African airline from Guangzhou, following Ethiopian Airlines with 348,000 seats to/from Addis Ababa and EgyptAir 247,000 to/from Cairo.

Kenya Airways has served the Southern China city via Bangkok for years, primarily using B787-8s and previously B767-300ERs, B777-200ERs, and B777-300ERs.

Guangzhou was served non-stop between 2013 and 2015. Between 2015 and 2017, it operated via Hanoi three-weekly and via Bangkok on the other four days.

Since then, it has been exclusively via Bangkok, as it was pre-2013.

That Kenya Airways’ Guangzhou capacity remained flat contrasts with its total Asia capacity, which fell by over one-quarter between 2015 – the highpoint of its Asia seats – and last year.

This was mainly from Delhi, Hanoi, and Hong Kong ending in 2014, 2017, and 2018 respectively, pushing the airline’s Asia seats back to 2011 levels.

This also reflects the many problems that afflicted the carrier before coronavirus began, with its Asia operation faring worse than its total . Source: OAG Schedules Analyser. Kenya Airways’ Guangzhou had est. 81% seat load factor last year

Kenya Airways carried an estimated 138,545 from Guangzhou and Bangkok to Nairobi and beyond last year, achieving an approximate seat load factor of 81% – higher than its system average. But SLF is, of course, just one part of the performance puzzle.For this article, the ~49,000 who utilised the carrier’s fifth freedom rights between the Chinese and Thai cities are not included. This article just looks at Africa traffic.Interestingly, Kenya Airways’ fifth freedom traffic was higher than the total ~38,244 that flew to/from Nairobi itself, combining local traffic with passengers connecting over Bangkok/Guangzhou to the Kenyan capital.In all, ~77,276 flew between Guangzhou and Nairobi and wider Africa, against ~61,269 for Bangkok.It is noteworthy that ~28,447 were carried combining both those who bridged Bangkok and […]

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