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North-south flight firm revealed North-south route operator named
(about 4 hours later)
The firm picked to run a proposed air link between Anglesey and Cardiff is expected to be named by Enterprise Minister Andrew Davies. A Scottish company has been confirmed as the intended operator of a new daily air link between north and south Wales.
It is hoped the service will run twice daily on weekdays, cost around £50 each way and begin in the spring. Highland Airways, based in Inverness, is to run two weekday return flights from Anglesey to Cardiff, the assembly government confirmed.
The assembly government has spent £1.5m on a terminal at RAF Valley and will subsidise the service for three years. Enterprise Minister Andrew Davies announced their intention to award the contract, subject to a statutory objection period.
The journey from north to south Wales by road takes between 4-5 hours, but by air it will be around 40 minutes. The flights will cost around £50 each way and begin in the spring.
Supporters said the flights will improve internal business and tourism links. Enterprise minister Andrew Davies said the service will offer better business links and tourism opportunities.
But critics have argued they will only cater for the wealthy, and that the A470 should be improved instead. Mr Davies said the airport was " an important step forward in the continued economic development of north west Wales".
Promoters of the idea have seen a number of attempts at linking north and south Wales by air, but none have ever lasted for a significant period of time. Subsidised service
"Air services have an important role to play in the framework of an integrated transport system, and as minister I cam keen to exploit their full potential".
The new air service - which will be subsided for three years - will offer one return flight from north to south Wales from Monday to Friday.
A maximum of 36 passengers will be accommodated in each direction and single tickets will cost up to £50, without any airport tax.
Anglesey Council has also announced its intention to offer a three year airport contract to Operon to run the airport out of the RAF Valley base where a new £1.5m terminal has been built.
There have seen a number of attempts at linking north and south Wales by air in the past, but none have ever lasted for a significant period of time.
The assembly government gave the latest scheme its backing after a 2004 consultation exercise found there was a strong need for the service.The assembly government gave the latest scheme its backing after a 2004 consultation exercise found there was a strong need for the service.
Terminal
The following year the route was recognised as a Public Service Obligation Flight (PSO) by the Department of Transport, enabling the assembly government to subsidise it.The following year the route was recognised as a Public Service Obligation Flight (PSO) by the Department of Transport, enabling the assembly government to subsidise it.
Plans for up to 10 flights a day from the new terminal at the RAF base in Valley were approved by Anglesey councillors in June 2006.Plans for up to 10 flights a day from the new terminal at the RAF base in Valley were approved by Anglesey councillors in June 2006.
The council expressed hopes the terminal would provide a daily air link to Dublin in the future. The airline operates services between the Scottish Highlands and islands
Enterprise Minister Andrew Davies will announce on Wednesday which of the 10 companies that tendered has been chosen to operate the service which will carry a maximum of 36 people on each flight. Prof Stuart Cole, director of Wales Transport Research Centre, said there were arguments both for and against the air link.
The exact amount of the assembly government's subsidy will be announced in 10 days when the contract with the operator is finalised. He said if the expected assembly government subsidy of £1.6m for the air service was spent on the railways, the improvements could be massive.
But after three years, the subsidy will have to end and the service will only continue if it is commercially viable. "There is a capital scheme to be introduced on the railway costing £120m but the trains are already running - the government is already subsiding the train."
But Russell Goodway, chief executive of the Cardiff Chamber of Commerce, said north-south air route was a "political imperative".
"The business community understands that since 1999 we've been engaged in a major project of nation building and one of the key features of that has to be to efficiently get from one end of the country to the other without having to go into another country," he said.
The exact amount of the assembly government subsidy will be announced when the contract is finalised.
But that will have to end and the service will only continue if it is commercially viable.