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Passenger volumes at the Ottawa International Airport are expected to return to pre-pandemic levels this year, led by new offerings from Porter Airlines and Air France, an airport official says.

Last year, almost 4.1 million passengers travelled through Ottawa’s airport, a 37 per cent increase from 2022. Despite that growth, numbers have not yet returned to pre-pandemic levels, which saw more than 5.1 million passengers travelling through YOW in both 2018 and 2019.

Exceptional growth by Porter to a number of ‘new for them’ destinations such as Vancouver and Edmonton in the west and various destinations in the U.S. utilizing their new Embraer E195-E2 jets, along with a great lineup of sunshine destinations with mainline and charter carriers, were contributing factors to our growth,” YOW spokesperson Krista Kealey told OBJ this week.
Domestic travel at YOW grew by 18 per cent in 2023, but flights to and from destinations outside of Canada saw the biggest bump.

In 2022, only 93,000 passengers on flights between destinations outside of the U.S. and Canada came through Ottawa. The numbers were even worse in 2021, at the height of the pandemic, at 15,597 passengers. Last year saw nearly 317,000 international passengers through Ottawa, an increase of 240 per cent.

Kealey said international growth was led by Air France, which introduced a new direct route to Paris in June.


Transborder travel between Canada and the United States also saw a spike of 202 per cent. The airport recorded over 576,000 passengers in 2023, compared to 190,000 in 2022.

“We’re at about 80 per cent of pre-pandemic volumes, and tracking to reach our pre-pandemic peak of 5.1 million in 2024,” says Kealey.

This year, Kealey said Air France is expected to boost the frequency of its Ottawa-Paris route from five times weekly to daily this summer, contributing to more growth.

Porter Airlines, which Kealey called “YOW’s fastest growing carrier,” also intends to continue expanding its offerings throughout the year, she said.

While leisure travel is recovering well at YOW, business travel continues to lag, particularly from the federal government.

“This doesn’t just pertain to outbound travel by federal officials, but also to those willing to come to Ottawa-Gatineau for in-person meetings,” says Kealey. “The challenge persists, particularly when the individuals they wish to meet are frequently working from home.”

So huge news and hopefully more involvement with new direct routes internationally would be huge.
 
This is just exceptionally good news for YOW
https://obj.ca/porter-eyeing-direct-flights-from-ottawa-to-california-caribbean-ceo-says/



Porter eyeing direct flights from Ottawa to California, Caribbean, CEO says​


David Sali
David Sali

  • April 11, 2024
  • 3:02 PM
  • ET


Porter aircraft

Porter Airlines plans to add direct flights from Ottawa to Florida’s Gulf Coast, California, the Caribbean and other destinations over the next two years as it looks to cement the capital’s status as a major hub for the carrier, Porter CEO Michael Deluce said Thursday.
“We want to be the hometown airline in Ottawa,” Deluce told Mayor Mark Sutcliffe during a question-and-answer session at City Hall as part of the Mayor’s Breakfast series. “We will continue to put faith in Ottawa as a market. It is our most important growth city across our entire network.”
Deluce said Porter is targeting cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and Las Vegas as well as the west coast of Florida and the Caribbean for its next direct routes from YOW.

In a followup interview after the event, Deluce would not divulge any timelines for such moves, saying only that the airline will continue to announce new destinations from Ottawa on a “regular basis.”
“You’re going to see a continued strong pace of new markets over the next six months, 12 months, 24 months,” Deluce told OBJ. “We’re excited.”
Porter has served Ottawa International Airport, known by the call letters YOW, since the airline was launched in 2006.

But the Toronto-based company has stepped up its service to the capital significantly over the past 12 months, introducing new non-stop flights to Halifax, Moncton, Fredericton, Charlottetown, St. John’s, Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, with Winnipeg soon to join that list.
Deluce said the airline is poised to hit a major milestone later this year, when it expects to become YOW’s No. 1 carrier in terms of daily flights and passenger traffic.
By the end of the summer, Deluce said, almost half of the travellers passing through Ottawa’s airport will be flying with Porter.
The carrier “has made a hub out of Ottawa,” he told Sutcliffe, adding the nation’s capital “has long been the most underserved major city in Canada on a seats-per capita basis.”

More flight options​

The aviation industry veteran noted that airports that become major hubs benefit from an influx of passengers who use the terminal as a connecting point to other destinations.
As an example, he cited Calgary International Airport, which serves a metropolitan area with roughly the same population as Ottawa, yet saw nearly four times as many passengers pass through its gates in 2019 – 18 million compared with five million at YOW.

“Cities that are hubs, where there is a lot of connecting traffic, are where you have the best service,” Deluce added.
“What you start creating are flows of passengers … through Ottawa. Local traffic benefits. Ottawa residents, people coming to visit Ottawa, have more flight options. You get stronger local traffic and you get a much higher share of that local traffic, which is what we’re seeing.”
Sutcliffe said Porter’s push to add more flights to and from YOW will help alleviate a major pain point for Ottawa business travellers, who have long lamented the lack of direct flights to key destinations such as Silicon Valley.
“I think many residents of Ottawa and many business owners have felt for a long time that Ottawa has been overlooked by the airline industry,” he told OBJ in an interview after the event. “The fact that Porter views Ottawa as a hub I think is a huge milestone for the city. It’s going to bring more people and more traffic to our city.”
Mark Laroche, president and CEO of the Ottawa International Airport Authority, agreed.

Expanded facilities​

“There is only going to be one airline that is going to be hubbing through Ottawa, and it’s going to be Porter for the next decade,” he said.

“The more support they see in the community, they are going to offer more destinations, more direct flights. Ottawa is a small market for the airline industry, and we need connecting traffic to fill the aircraft so (airlines) can make a return on (their investment) on new routes.”
Porter – which has been on an expansion tear since the airline industry began emerging from the pandemic – has made no secret of its desire to become the leading carrier in the National Capital Region.
The company is investing $65 million in two new aircraft hangars at Ottawa Airport that will serve as the primary maintenance base for its growing fleet of Embraer E195-E2 aircraft, as well as a maintenance hub for its De Havilland Dash 8-400 aircraft. The first phase of the project opened late last year, with the second phase slated for completion next month.
Meanwhile, the airline announced earlier this year it plans to establish a new crew base at YOW this summer for pilots and flight attendants who staff its Embraer E2 fleet.
In all, Porter expects to nearly double its number of Ottawa-based employees to 450 from the current total of 250 by the end of 2024.
Calling YOW his second-favourite air terminal after Porter’s original launching point at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport, Deluce said it is a “very easy connecting point” for passengers from both the east and west coasts.

“We are going to continue (adding routes) as long as the community is using the service,” he said. “There is tremendous opportunity for Ottawa.”
 
Paywalled, but good news keeps coming for YOW. London would be an excellent addition.



https://obj.ca/ottawa-airport-working-to-get-more-routes-to-europe-london-high-on-list-ceo/

Ottawa Airport ‘working to get’ more routes to Europe, London high on list: CEO​



David Sali
David Sali


  • April 11, 2024
  • 3:42 PM
  • ET




Air France Airbus A350



The Ottawa Airport continues to pursue direct flights to other European destinations after seeing steady growth in traffic between Ottawa and Paris since that route was introduced last year.
 

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