Indonesia's booming budget airlines gear up to spread wings even further

JAKARTA -- Indonesia's low-cost carriers are gearing up for further expansion 
to take a larger share of the country's growing air transportation market.

Most budget carriers serving domestic routes have ordered more airplanes to 
increase flight frequency on existing routes and to serve new routes.

Lion Air, for example, which is the largest player and currently operates 87 
Boeing aircraft, will take delivery of 12 B737-900 extended range twinjets this 
year. “We recently opened the Jakarta-Jayapura-Merauke night flight and will 
soon open three more domestic routes,” Lion Air general affairs director Edward 
Sirait told The Jakarta Post recently.

The new domestic routes are Surabaya-Ambon, Surabaya-Palu and Batam-Denpasar. 
At present, Lion serves 36 destinations, including Singapore as well as Kuala 
Lumpur and Penang in Malaysia.

He also said that Lion's regional subsidiary, Wings Air, would take delivery of 
six turbo-prop aircraft ATR-72s, increasing its fleet to 31 aircraft. “The new 
ATRs will enable us to strengthen our city hopper routes in Java, Sumatra and 
Kalimantan this year,” he said.

Existing city hopper routes that Wings will add more flights to are 
Medan-Gunung Sitoli, Medan-South Tapanuli, Malang-Denpasar and Malang-Bandung, 
he said.

In the next few years, the airline will have 60 ATRs to help strengthen its 
short-range network in Sulawesi, Maluku, Nusa Tenggara and Papua.

Edward also said that the airline would have 178 airplanes by 2016, enabling 
the airline to connect to more than 60 destinations in the country and ASEAN.

“Connectivity is the key in the country's airline industry. The synergy between 
Lion and Wings will help our passengers go to any place across Indonesia,” he 
added.

>From January to March 2012, the number of Lion and Wings passengers had risen 
>10 percent from 7.7 million to 8 million, he said. Next year, Lion will also 
>kick off Batik Air, a new full-service airline that will fly to Australia, 
>South Asia and East Asia.

In addition, national flag carrier Garuda Indonesia's budget airline Citilink 
will take delivery of 11 Airbus 320s, increasing its fleet to 20 aircraft by 
the end of this year, Garuda's marketing director Elisa Lumbantoruan said.

“With 20 new aircraft, Citilink will be able to connect Jakarta with other 
cities such as Padang, Pekanbaru and Yogyakarta,” he told the Post.

Currently, the airline operates nine aircraft: one B737-300, five B737-400s and 
three A320s and serves nine domestic routes, including Jakarta-Denpasar, 
Jakarta-Surabaya, Jakarta-Banjarmasin, Surabaya-Makassar and Jakarta-Medan.


“Based on Garuda's Quantum Leap Programme, Citilink will operate 50 aircraft by 
the end of 2015,” he added.

He also said that its flight permit (SIUAU) authorized the airline to fly 70 
domestic routes and 16 international routes, which illustrated its seriousness 
in taking on the low-cost carrier market.

Based on recent Garuda Indonesia data, Citilink carried 577,424 passengers in 
the first quarter of 2012, a 55.44 percent increase from the 371,486 in the 
same period last year.

Indonesia AirAsia (IAA) added five new A320 aircraft in 2012, increasing its 
fleet to 21 aircraft by the end of this year.

The second A320 plane was delivered last week, enabling the airline to serve 
more passengers on both established and new routes this year, spokesperson 
Audrey Progastama said.

“We are focusing on domestic routes this year because the domestic demand is 
very high,” Audrey told the Post.

She said the airline had opened the Bandung-Surabaya, Bandung-Penang, 
Bandung-Pekanbaru, Surabaya-Denpasar and Yogyakarta-Denpasar routes to 
strengthen its presence in the domestic market.

IAA carried 1.27 million passengers from January to March this year, a 16 
percent increase from the 1.09 million in the same period last year, she said.

The low-cost carrier business model has become the darling of the industry and 
competition among players is getting tighter as demand keeps increasing every 
year.

According to recent Transportation Ministry data, Indonesia saw a 16.78 percent 
increase in airline passengers last year, up from 58.39 million in 2010 to 
68.19 million in 2011.

Lion Air dominated the market by serving 24.97 million domestic passengers, or 
41.59 percent of the total domestic market, while its inter-national passengers 
totaled 961,800, taking 11.8 percent of the international market for Indonesian 
airlines.

Citilink transported 1.6 million passengers last year, or only 2.3 percent of 
the domestic market. It booked a 45 percent jump in passengers from 1.1 million 
in 2010. AAI became an international carrier in Indonesia only last year. It 
carried 3.38 million passengers, or 41.58 percent of the international market, 
making it the strongest local-international player in 2011. 


http://www.chinapost.com.tw/business/as ... ooming.htm

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