Thomson launches flights with ‘world’s most-modern’ aircraft

Thomson launches flights with ‘world’s most-modern’ aircraft

By Ian Taylor

Thomson launches flights with 'world's most-modern' aircraftThomson Airways launched commercial services with the Boeing 787 on Friday, taking 290 passengers from Gatwick to Mahon, Menorca, on the Dreamliner’s maiden UK-operated flight.

Dave Burling, UK managing director of Thomson parent Tui Travel, said the 787 added a key piece to the company strategy of offering upmarket ‘differentiated’ holidays.

The aircraft will be deployed from next month on services to Cancun and Orlando and later to Thailand, Mauritius and the Pacific coast of Mexico.

Burling said: “The Dreamliner is important in differentiating our long-haul holidays. The flight is a bigger part of a long-haul holiday.”

He added: “We are very confident with the product at the other end.” Burling revealed Thomson opened 35 exclusive or differentiated properties in May.

The company describes two-thirds of its mainstream hotel product as ‘differentiated’, a proportion Burling said would increase. More than 90% of hotels in the programme are exclusive to Thomson.

The state-of-the-art Dreamliner is touted to transform long-haul flying because of its fuel efficiency and range, and the comfort it offers passengers.

Thomson Airways had planned to launch its summer 2013 long-haul programme with the 787 on May 1, but only took delivery of the first of its eight Dreamliners at the end of May.

The aircraft was grounded worldwide in January following a battery fire and only resumed flying last month.

Thomson will launch its long-haul 787 programme on July 8 with flights from Glasgow to Cancun and Manchester to Orlando. Gatwick flights will start the following day and services from East Midlands at the end of July.

The airline will add flights to Phuket in Thailand this winter – the first direct flights to the island from the UK – and to Mauritius and Puerta Vallerta in Mexico next summer.

The company has yet to announce plans for other destinations, but the 787 is capable of flying non-stop from the UK as far as Hawaii.

In the meantime, many passengers on Thomson Airways flights around the Mediterranean will get to experience the aircraft as the airline uses short-haul flights to familiarise its crew.

Those aboard on Friday and Saturday had been told in advance they would fly on the 787, but passengers on future short-haul flights will only find out at the airport.

The pilot, Captain John Murphy, told passengers: “This is a historic day for Thomson Airways. You are the first to fly on the 787 in the UK.

“We’ve been modernising our holidays and flights, and the 787 is the most modern aircraft in the world.”

Floods hurt mainland tourism in Thailand

Floods hurt mainland tourism in Thailand

By Michelle Baran
Thailand’s tourism industry is trying to get back to normal, after severe flooding in the country resulted in a slump in travelers and a U.S. State Department travel alert.

“The number of visitors to Bangkok has certainly dropped,” according to the Tourism Authority of Thailand. But the tourism authority is getting the word out that Thailand is “open for business.”

From Nov. 1 to 9, the number of arrivals at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Bangkok’s international airport, was 224,000, a decrease of 25.5% from the same period last year, according to the tourism authority.

Phuket might have been a beneficiary, as the Thai island destination welcomed 40,500 arrivals from Nov. 1-6, a 40% increase.

On Oct. 27, the State Department issued a travel alert for Thailand due to the floods. The tourism authority reported that the flooding has mainly impacted the provinces along the Chao Phraya River, including parts of Bangkok and Ayutthaya.

“Unfortunately people see images of flooding on their televisions and assume it is all throughout the destination, but that is not the case,” said Srisuda Wanapinyosak, director of the tourism authority’s New York office. “Even in Bangkok itself, visitors will find that the heart of the city, where the majority of tourists are accommodated, is dry.”

The Bangkok government is “working hard to manage the flow of water to try to prevent it from entering the central business district of inner Bangkok,” the tourism authority said.

Patrick Evans, marketing communications coordinator at STA Travel, a travel agency specializing in student travel, said that the company hasn’t had any cancellations to date related to the flooding. “All of our tour operators are operating as normal,” said Evans.

Last week, Andrea Ross of Journeys Within, a Cambodia-based tour operator that specializes in travel throughout Southeast Asia, said that the company had guests in Bangkok that were continuing to tour the city, though they were not able to take any river excursions or visit the flooded weekend market.

“We also have guests throughout the rest of the region, and they are all experiencing great November weather,” added Ross.