Corporate travel was another impetus, with the carrier’s slot holding at airports like Amsterdam’s Schiphol being a draw for business travellers. “No airline in the world holds more slots at airports like these than us,” Lundgren added.
This may also have swayed his decision to choose Birmingham, with the airport claiming to have the second-highest proportion of business traffic after Heathrow. Lundgren said business travel demand was returning quicker than leisure. He predicted: “We will go back to the level of business travel we had [pre-Covid] because we are over-represented in SMEs and those that need to actually go somewhere, like engineers.”
There are plenty of engineers at Birmingham airport itself, where ongoing investment – Barton said – would reach “£1 million a week for the next three years”. From 1 June, new security scanners will permit liquids in hand luggage, with trials already under way. The airport is spending £55 million on revamping security channels and £10 million on a solar farm that will provide a third of its electricity.
Untapped potential
Barton has longer-term plans for Birmingham, which he said has “a catchment 20% bigger than the population of Canada”. Birmingham’s issue is that some of these potential passengers must choose Manchester, Bristol or even Luton because of gaps in its schedule. Barton aims to fill these, and top of his wish list is to restore a US connection – almost certainly New York, where he was lobbying before Christmas.
“We have every reason to believe the US and Canada will feature in our network planning in two to three years,” he said. “We have 500 people a day from our catchment travelling to the US via another airport.”
He cites aircraft availability, in particular the narrow-body Airbus A321LR, as a barrier, but is nevertheless confident. He adds there is also “some case” for a Hong Kong connection.
Further ahead, Barton is excited by the opportunities the HS2 high speed rail link brings. He claims BHX will be a 36-minute journey from London’s Bond Street – via Old Oak Common on the outskirts of the capital – and says HS2 “will move the dial” and make Birmingham part of a network of UK airports.
Meanwhile, for Lundgren and Barton, there is the small matter of the summer to be getting on with. In its last trading statement, easyJet said demand was strong.
“We continue to confirm that is the case,” said Lundgren, who brushed off suggestions airlines were price gouging due to restrained capacity, adding half of all easyJet fares were “still under £50”.
“Leisure is picking up strongly, easyJet this year will be back to 2019 levels,” he predicted, and he was unapologetic too about easyJet’s perhaps long-overdue arrival at the UK’s second city.
“What will competitors say? I don’t care – the people that will take advantage will be consumers.”
The agent outlook
TTG approached three Midlands agents for their take on easyJet’s decision to open a base at Birmingham, and find out what opportunities it opens up for them.