newstodate.aero
FEB 28, 2005 (newstodate): SAS will maintain its one-hub strategy at Copenhagen Airport but aims at increasing Asian traffic from other Scandinavian capitals as well.
-Copenhagen is our main hub for long-distance flights, and it is our strategy to cover all of our intercontinental operations exclusively from Copenhagen until we reach the point of having at least six weekly departures on each route, said Axel Blom, SAS General Manager in Thailand, Indochina, Taiwan and the Philippines at a recent press conference in Bangkok before a meeting with the Scandinavian Chambers of Commerce.
-Stockholm will only be considered as an additional point of departure for direct flights to Asia if the need for more frequencies to a certain destination continues to increase in addition to the six or seven weekly departures from Copenhagen.
-Right now we still have to focus on having just one hub, namely Copenhagen, since Scandinavia is too small for several hubs, said Axel Blom.
-Copenhagen is our main hub for long-distance flights, and it is our strategy to cover all of our intercontinental operations exclusively from Copenhagen until we reach the point of having at least six weekly departures on each route, said Axel Blom, SAS General Manager in Thailand, Indochina, Taiwan and the Philippines at a recent press conference in Bangkok before a meeting with the Scandinavian Chambers of Commerce.
-Stockholm will only be considered as an additional point of departure for direct flights to Asia if the need for more frequencies to a certain destination continues to increase in addition to the six or seven weekly departures from Copenhagen.
-Right now we still have to focus on having just one hub, namely Copenhagen, since Scandinavia is too small for several hubs, said Axel Blom.