Eight Asian budget carriers form alliance

Eight Asian budget carriers form alliance

Nok Air aircraft park at Don Mueang airprot. (Photo by Krit Promsaka na Sakolnakorn)
Nok Air aircraft park at Don Mueang airprot. (Photo by Krit Promsaka na Sakolnakorn)

SINGAPORE -- Eight Asian low-cost carriers including Nok Air and NokScoot have formed an alliance that will open their networks to their respective passengers.

The Value Alliance in a statement on Monday said passengers will be able to book over 160 destinations via the websites of ANA's Vanilla Air, SIA's Scoot and Tiger Airways, Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd's Tiger Airways Australia, carriers Nok Airlines Plc and NokScoot, Cebu Air Inc's Cebu Pacific, and South Korea's Jeju Air Co Ltd.

Asian budget carriers are looking to take advantage of a air travel boom in the region, placing orders for several hundred aircraft from Airbus Group SE and Boeing Co.

Boeing's 2015 global market outlook showed Asian low-cost carriers generated average annual growth of 24.5% over the previous decade. By comparison, European peers grew 13.4%.

The US planemaker also forecast 100 million new passengers entering the Asian market annually for the foreseeable future, creating demand in the next 20 years for 10,370 single-aisle planes such as Boeing's 737 and Airbus' A320.

The new alliance is not as extensive as full-service carrier partnerships such as Star Alliance, Oneworld and SkyTeam. Those alliances feature extensive codesharing agreements, access to a network of waiting lounges, and the ability to redeem points on partner flights.

Value Alliance also does not include Asia's biggest budget carriers such as Malaysia's AirAsia Bhd and AirAsia X Bhd, and affiliates including Indonesia's Lion Air, India's IndiGo, and Jetstar and Jetstar-branded units from Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd.

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