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The Aviation fight for Africa: Why Turkish Airlines is winning

Turkish Airlines serves 53 passenger destinations across Africa from Istanbul Airport this year, up by one over 2019. It has more destinations in Africa than in Asia (41). Cairo is the leading route, and Egypt is the top country. Narrow bodies are utterly vital to its African effort, with over two-thirds of 2,000-mile-plus destinations flown by single-aisle aircraft.

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Africa has grown strongly for Turkish Airlines, with destinations increasing from 18 in 2011 to 53 this year. It is an important region for the airline, just as it is for Qatar Airways, which now serves 26 destinations.

Turkish Airlines is better suited geographically to carry traffic to and from Europe, which was its single largest passenger source in 2019. Heathrow to Lagos was the top market over Istanbul, booking data reveals, while Germany-Egypt was number-one at country level.

One-stops are crucial

One-stops and ‘triangular’ routings are very important to Turkish Airlines’ Africa operation. This is also the case for Ethiopian Airlines, which is Africa’s leading airline and twice the size of number-two. One-stops enable smaller cities to be served while increasing frequencies, connectivity, and therefore competitiveness and dominance. Strong use of narrow bodies is key too.

Some 23 destinations outbound from Istanbul operate via somewhere this year.

Malabo is no exception. The capital of Equatorial Guinea, it is the airline’s newest destination in Africa. Added in early 2020, it routes via Port Harcourt (PHC) in Nigeria, before flying non-stop back to Istanbul.

Hugely about narrow bodies

Narrow bodies are utterly vital to Turkish’s Africa service, even for longer routings. Looking at destinations 2,000 miles away or more, single-aisle aircraft have approximately 10,671 two-way flights, or just over two-thirds of the total this year, data supplied by the carrier to OAG shows. Of these, the B737-900ER has almost four in ten, as shown below.

  1. B737-900ER: an estimated 6,147 two-way flights
  2. B737-800: 4,483
  3. A330-300: 2,863
  4. A330-200: 1,893
  5. B777-300ER: 494
  6. B737 MAX 8: 37
  7. A321: four
  8. B787-9: six

It has 15 B737-900ERs, according to ch-aviation.com, all active. They’re in a 151-seat configuration, with 16 business seats, along with 135 in economy. Its economy offering is six-abreast, with pitch between 30 and 31″.

Cairo is the top route

Cairo, some 783 miles from Istanbul, is Turkish Airlines’ number-one Africa destination by flights this year. The top few routes clearly show how important North Africa is for the airline. And, even more significantly, how important Egypt is. Turkish Airlines serves five destinations in the country; four are in the top-ten list (Luxor isn’t). This helps to account for nearly three-times more flights than to the number-two country, Algeria.

  • Cairo: 2,142 two-way flights
  • Algiers: 1,140
  • Tunis: 1,140
  • Sharm El-Sheikh: 1,036
  • Hurghada: 1,014
  • Dakar (operates triangularly with Banjul or Nouakchott, depending on the day): 744
  • Khartoum: 730
  • Alexandria: 720
  • Djibouti (continues to Mogadishu): 704 each
  • Lagos: 691

Cairo is served 21-weekly by Turkish Airlines, all by A321s. This is the same offering it had in pre-pandemic 2019. When fellow Star Alliance airline, EgyptAir, is included, there are up to 38 weekly departures.

Three destinations in Nigeria

Nigeria is Turkish Airlines’ third-largest country in Africa. It is one of only a minimal number of nations in the sub-Sahara in which it serves more than one passenger destination. While Abuja and Lagos are both currently operating once-daily, Port Harcourt resumes on a three-weekly basis from November.

Abuja and Lagos are interesting. Aircraft don’t continue elsewhere and remain on the ground all day. For example, TK625 to Lagos leaves Istanbul at 01:25, part of a huge departure bank, and arrives at 06:15. Returning, TK626 leaves at 20:45 and arrives back into Turkey at 05:25, a significant arrivals bank.

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