The
largest U.S. airline will also boost its international flights
schedule next month, flying nearly 20% of its July 2019
schedule.
By comparison, American flew just 20% of its domestic schedule
in May and is flying 25% in June, said Vasu Raja, American
Airlines' senior vice president of network strategy.
"As an airline, we've consciously bet on demand coming back. We
have bet the economy," Raja said, noting American has been
operating a larger schedule than U.S. rivals.
Raja told Reuters that the airline would fly just over 4,000
flights on peak days in July compared with nearly 2,000 on peak
days in May. That is still down from the peak 6,800 daily
flights before the crisis.
Airlines are adding new cleaning procedures and requiring masks
on board to reassure customers it is safe to travel
In total, American plans to fly 40% of July 2019 capacity.
The airline is boosting flights from New York City airports, Los
Angeles and Washington and adding flights from its Dallas Fort
Worth and Charlotte hubs. It is also boosting flights to major
cities in Florida, Gulf Coast cities and mountain destinations
as national parks and outdoor recreational spaces reopen.
In late May, the airline carried a daily average of about
110,000 customers – an increase of 71% over the 32,000 daily
average the airline served in April, but still far below last
year. Load factors rose to 55% by late May.
American plans to resume service to additional European and
Latin American destinations in August. It will resume service to
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from Miami on July 7.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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