PIK

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Clive
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Re: PIK

Post by Clive »

hads wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 11:28 am Almost nothing to do with Edinburgh. But an awful lot to do with the Glasgow conurbation.
Thats 38 weekly flights Glasgow isnt handling and at the current level of output, God knows, they could be doing with them.
Virtually every single person I know in the west of Scotland use PIK.
Yes indeed. Sooner someone buys it and closes the terminal the better.

Wish I knew why GLA doesn’t do literally whatever it takes to snatch that Ryanair contract.
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viscount
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Re: PIK

Post by viscount »

Glad you said the terminal and not the airport.

I don’t know if the terminal could be turn into something like a world class aviation museum and hotel.
Clive
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Re: PIK

Post by Clive »

viscount wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 2:57 pm Glad you said the terminal and not the airport.
I’ve been saying that for years. For all of its other aviation functions PIK is unique and invaluable to Scotland. No one would want us to lose that to England or Ireland or wherever as long as the terminal ops were gone.

It’s going to be even more strategically important to Scotland in the future, as our air freight hub and as one of our military facilities, I’d wager.
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GeorgeNTravels
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Re: PIK

Post by GeorgeNTravels »

Clive wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 2:44 pm
hads wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 11:28 am Almost nothing to do with Edinburgh. But an awful lot to do with the Glasgow conurbation.
Thats 38 weekly flights Glasgow isnt handling and at the current level of output, God knows, they could be doing with them.
Virtually every single person I know in the west of Scotland use PIK.
Yes indeed. Sooner someone buys it and closes the terminal the better.

Wish I knew why GLA doesn’t do literally whatever it takes to snatch that Ryanair contract.
My only theory is maybe the Government is offering some discount simply to keep them there while they own the airport, imagine the headlines if the Scottish Govt was owning the airport with no commercial flights.
GeorgeNTravels
Posts: 604
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Re: PIK

Post by GeorgeNTravels »

GeorgeNTravels wrote: Wed Dec 01, 2021 10:26 pm Ryanair planning 38 weekly flights from PIK to 9 destinations next summer those being:

Alicante - 6 weekly
Barcelona - 3 weekly
Faro - 5 weekly
Gran Canaria - 2 weekly
Lanzarote - 2 weekly
Malaga - 5 weekly
Murcia International - 2 weekly
Palma de Mallorca - 7 weekly
Tenerife - 6 weekly

2 based aircraft and the rest operated by visiting aircraft.
Also worth highlighting that Ibiza has been floating on and off schedules over the last 18 months, looking at the spreadsheet I have with flights on it, this would be operated by a visiting aircraft unless Pisa was added back to the schedule as well.
atuk
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Re: PIK

Post by atuk »

Clive wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 3:57 pm [quote=viscount post_id=5223 time=<a href="tel:1638457061">1638457061</a> user_id=395]
Glad you said the terminal and not the airport.
I’ve been saying that for years. For all of its other aviation functions PIK is unique and invaluable to Scotland. No one would want us to lose that to England or Ireland or wherever as long as the terminal ops were gone.

It’s going to be even more strategically important to Scotland in the future, as our air freight hub and as one of our military facilities, I’d wager.
[/quote]


:lol: :evil: :evil: :lol: unique, certainly. A massive tax loss definitely. Invaluable? Where is the paint shop...let me see.....Dublin and Shannon. :o Where is the likes of Lufthansa Teknik? Dublin! :o
Ireland leaves Scotland in the starting blocks where MRO is concerned. For all your comments about the loss to the Scottish economy it simply doesn’t add up. Or does the possible loss of Cambo compensate?
Clive
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Re: PIK

Post by Clive »

atuk wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 5:47 pm
Clive wrote: Thu Dec 02, 2021 3:57 pm [quote=viscount post_id=5223 time=<a href="tel:1638457061">1638457061</a> user_id=395]
Glad you said the terminal and not the airport.
I’ve been saying that for years. For all of its other aviation functions PIK is unique and invaluable to Scotland. No one would want us to lose that to England or Ireland or wherever as long as the terminal ops were gone.

It’s going to be even more strategically important to Scotland in the future, as our air freight hub and as one of our military facilities, I’d wager.

:lol: :evil: :evil: :lol: unique, certainly. A massive tax loss definitely. Invaluable? Where is the paint shop...let me see.....Dublin and Shannon. :o Where is the likes of Lufthansa Teknik? Dublin! :o
Ireland leaves Scotland in the starting blocks where MRO is concerned. For all your comments about the loss to the Scottish economy it simply doesn’t add up. Or does the possible loss of Cambo compensate?
[/quote]

Tax loss? The economic balance sheet has two sides. Back to school.

Unique to Scotland. Yes it is. We want to deliberately lose that? No we don’t.

The loss of Cambo would compensate? We are at a loss as to what you mean.
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atuk
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Re: PIK

Post by atuk »

Okay, here we go.

A state owned, loss making, white elephant. Despite the years of BAA (also state owned at the time) and the millions of pounds poured into it over decades PIK has never cracked it.

Scottish Aviation then BAE then closure. Narrow body long haul flights, many of them charters replaced by wide bodied aircraft at low frequency... Pan Am, Air Canada, British Caledonian, Laker Airways, Northwest, Highland Express all have long departed the scene. Volta Dixon, Thomson, Thomas Cook, Club Travel 2000 and lastly Seguro Holidays all operated charter flights to Mediterranean destinations, mainly Spain, and all have withdrawn or collapsed. Nobody was able to make a lasting profit.

Fast forward to privatisation and change of ownership to Stagecoach who pulled out despite trying to link bus services to attract better connectivity, then Infratil who sold out after racking up heavy losses.

What does that tell you?

Despite trying to sell this cash devouring millstone there were no takers from the private sector - not even rapacious private equity companies who perfect and delight in the asset stripping pile on the debt business model of short term gain for long term pain.

So we have what we have. A state owned asset which can even make the dark days of British Leyland Motor Company look good. And we all know what happened to them.

Ryanair the sole operator of passenger services with two based aircraft serving destinations catering for outbound tourism which are easily covered by EZY, LS, TOM from other private sector airports. If PIK was so attractive don’t you think they would already be flying there?
So an Irish Airline, which contributes zero tax to the UK economy, operates from a state subsidised airport at minimal operating costs. These aircraft and staff could easily be redployed elsewhere in the Central Belt.

As for cargo - low frequency, no Scottish hub; surely it could be accommodated elsewhere with better connectivity?

Aviation companies are off site - like RR at Inchinnan - they don’t require a runway.

This leaves military. Perhaps it really is time to remove the rose tinted spectacles, wake up to harsh reality, apply the economic slide rule and close this anachronism for good.
Clive
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Re: PIK

Post by Clive »

atuk wrote: Fri Dec 03, 2021 7:29 am Okay, here we go.

A state owned, loss making, white elephant. Despite the years of BAA (also state owned at the time) and the millions of pounds poured into it over decades PIK has never cracked it.

Scottish Aviation then BAE then closure. Narrow body long haul flights, many of them charters replaced by wide bodied aircraft at low frequency... Pan Am, Air Canada, British Caledonian, Laker Airways, Northwest, Highland Express all have long departed the scene. Volta Dixon, Thomson, Thomas Cook, Club Travel 2000 and lastly Seguro Holidays all operated charter flights to Mediterranean destinations, mainly Spain, and all have withdrawn or collapsed. Nobody was able to make a lasting profit.

Fast forward to privatisation and change of ownership to Stagecoach who pulled out despite trying to link bus services to attract better connectivity, then Infratil who sold out after racking up heavy losses.

What does that tell you?

Despite trying to sell this cash devouring millstone there were no takers from the private sector - not even rapacious private equity companies who perfect and delight in the asset stripping pile on the debt business model of short term gain for long term pain.

So we have what we have. A state owned asset which can even make the dark days of British Leyland Motor Company look good. And we all know what happened to them.

Ryanair the sole operator of passenger services with two based aircraft serving destinations catering for outbound tourism which are easily covered by EZY, LS, TOM from other private sector airports. If PIK was so attractive don’t you think they would already be flying there?
So an Irish Airline, which contributes zero tax to the UK economy, operates from a state subsidised airport at minimal operating costs. These aircraft and staff could easily be redployed elsewhere in The a Central Belt.

As for cargo - low frequency, no Scottish hub; surely it could be accommodated elsewhere with better connectivity?

Aviation companies are off site - like RR at Inchinnan - they don’t require a runway.

This leaves military. Perhaps it really is time to remove the rose tinted spectacles, wake up to harsh reality, apply the economic slide rule and close this anachronism for good.
We agree about Ryanair and closing the perma-loss-making pax ops.

Thatcherite’s would but no quality government would throw the high quality, high tech jobs of that localised aerospace cluster on the scrap heap nor the thousands involved in the supply chain and the aviation services.

That’s why a buyer with a development plan is being sought.

As I said before, the contribution in productivity, earnings and tax take of the airport and attached campus far outweighs whatever costs you think the public purse is incurring. Clue - a sum between zero and any loan capital write off after the sale price. So between zero and very little is the cost of preserving this strategic asset and its continued productivity to the Scottish purse.
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atuk
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Re: PIK

Post by atuk »

Clive, explain to me exactly which companies are thriving, what their ultimate ownership is and how much they directly pay in UK tax? Furthermore exactly how much has been given out in Scottish Enterprise grants, local council inducements and stripping these out of the final totals what would the ultimate profit / loss be.

Exactly where do these highly skilled jobs lie, how many are there and could that finance have been ploughed into continuing aviation businesses (Rolls Royce being one example) instead?

It’s all very well shouting out about the “benefits” but what it actually boils down to is state subsidy. Something that PIK and its tenants are well used to and remain hooked on.
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