What is the fallout from the Hong Kong Express ‘golden week’ cancellations debacle?
City’s sole budget carrier endures a tough week, with manpower shortage exposed
How many local budget airlines are there in Hong Kong?
Launched in October 2013, Hong Kong Express is the city’s sole budget airline, with a fleet of 21 planes. Jetstar Hong Kong, another budget carrier, had been trying to get off the ground since 2012, but Hong Kong authorities finally rejected its licence application in 2015. And the city’s first low-cost carrier Oasis Hong Kong, which operated long-haul flights from Hong Kong to London and Vancouver, shut down in 2008, after only 18 months.
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But despite being the city’s only low-cost airline, HK Express faces increasingly fierce competition from regional budget rivals operating in Hong Kong, such as Singapore’s Tiger Airways, Japan’s Vanilla Air and China’s Spring Airlines. And the competition may soon get fiercer, with Hong Kong’s flagship carrier Cathay Pacific Airways considering joining the game by offering discount fares that could match those of low-cost operators.
What happened last week, and what did it expose?
HK Express cancelled 18 flights between Hong Kong and three cities in Japan and South Korea from October 1 to October 8, affecting thousands of passengers travelling during the Chinese National Day “golden week” holiday.