Clark's roar
TIGERAIR
PHILIPPINES starts today, Dec. 17, its thrice weekly Clark-Davao flights.
Reopening
the route AirAsia Phil accessed on March 29, 2012, only to abandon in October
this year.
This
coming and going was foremost in the collective media mindset at Friday’s
launch of this newest ticket at the Clark International Airport. Having been
there in all the maiden flights of AirAsia Phil to both domestic and regional
destinations, hearing – and feeling – its advocacy for the CIA as “most ideal”
gateway.
“Clark
International Airport is a vital location for our operations, especially in our
flights in the Asia-Pacific region, and we intend to expand our presence in the
area,” Tigerair Phil President Olive Ramos declared.
Qualified
the lady boss: “Tigerair will maximize its presence in Clark and as a hub for
its flights because of its ideal location. Unlike the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport in Metro Manila, it is not as busy and congested.”
And
then some more: “Operating in Clark
offers many incentives, such like the fuel is tax free, and fuel is 60 percent
to 70 percent of the cost of operating carriers, That’s why it is cheaper to
fly out of Clark.”
Capped
with the come-on: “With these flight, travellers from the Northern and Central
Luzon no longer need to drive all the way to Metro Manila to take their flights
to these destinations.”
Haven’t
we heard all these before?
Actually
a recurring refrain in all of AirAsia Phil’s maiden flights – Hong Kong, Macau,
and Taiwan, Davao, Puerto Princesa and Kalibo too – alas, all gone.
Virtually
verbatim at the Emirates’ daily Dubai-Clark-Dubai launch last October 1. Which
moved Business Mirror’s Joey Pavia to
ask, rather pointedly, Mohammed Mattar, Emirates divisional senior vice president:
“How deep is your pocket? Will you not pull out (of Clark) once your planes fly
way below their passenger capacities?”
Rather
than a straight answer, we heard Mr. Mattar tell the story of Emirates’ maiden
flight to Mumbai with only five passengers and the low, low pax volume in the
succeeding flights, only to culminate to the now fully booked,
five-times-daily Dubai-Mumbai flights.
"We are sure that we will do good in Clark after many studies
in the market. We are not worried and we will do good here in Clark just like
in Manila." So was Mr, Mattar quoted in news reports then.
While,
far from fully-packed, the Clark-Dubai flight has markedly risen in capacity,
and is expected to increase some more, with the holiday seasons.
Why,
our family has been rather busy lately with arriving relatives from Saudi
Arabia at Clark via Dubai.
Faced
with the same Pavia poser, Tigerair’s Madame Olive did a Mattar: “We are here
to stay. Focused as we are on what the people of Central and Northern Luzon need
and want. ”
Not
only to stay – if we may give our one-way ticket’s worth – but to grow. As
indeed Tigerair has – the Singapore-flagged parent company opening at Clark with daily flight to the “fine” city-state,
then veritably absorbing Seair, evolving into its present corporate body with
expanded reach to Hong Kong, Bangkok,
Kalibo, and now Davao, seeking to reach further in 2014 to Incheon and
Tokyo.
What
mighty roar there. So that when Clark International Airport Corp. President-CEO
Victor Jose Luciano was asked how viable has Clark remained in the wake of
AirAsia Phil’s pull-out, his snap-of-the-finger answer: “Take a look at
Tigerair.”
Yeah,
right there is the new poster boy for the Clark airport.
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