„Erstaunlicher“ Rückgang der Inlandsflüge im Vereinigten Königreich seit 20 Jahren – ein weiterer Vorteil für die Transportart

    https://news.sky.com/story/staggering-20-year-fall-in-domestic-uk-flights-as-another-form-of-transport-benefits-13469808?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter

    Von StGuthlac2025

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    13 Kommentare

    1. FamousMortgage5963 on

      lol maybe people no longer have a reason to travel the country anymore.

      Cross country meetings can be remote/ video.

      Holidays are better and cheaper abroad.

    2. > So what’s driving the trend?
      >
      > A combination of better and more frequent train services, higher Air Passenger Duty tax, concern about the environmental impact of flying, and changing work patterns – especially since the pandemic – have all played a part.

      I’d suggest that “changing work patterns” has played a much more significant part in this change than the article gives credit to, and to domestic travel overall.

      Personally, I didn’t travel by domestic UK flights pre-pandemic, but on a similar level my in-person work meetings which required travel have dropped from maybe 5-10 per month on average to less than 1 per year on average.

    3. Alive_kiwi_7001 on

      The transport that benefits is rail BTW. Weird how Sky editors can’t bring themselves to put it in the headline.

    4. Organic_Armadillo_10 on

      UK domestic flights don’t make that much sense if you have a car. Even the south of England to Scotland is only 7 or 8 hours? Plus then you don’t have to rent a car.

      Although the only route I can see being useful is the south of England to Scotland though, and that’s more if you need to get there slightly faster or don’t have/need a car. Otherwise what’s the point. It’s just too short a route.

      And I get there is a big train network, but the trains are so overpriced (and crowded), and don’t run half the time. So it is actually cheaper to fly many times. I flew Manchester to London via Dublin as it was cheaper than direct trains…

    5. handyandy314 on

      How to keep bananas fresh for longer, you will cut your energy bills by this one trick, you won’t need your heating in your bedroom this winter by doing this one thing. These and other headlines

    6. I remember back in the late 80s and early 90s flying regularly between Manchester and Ipswich with Suckling Airways and Gatwick to Manchester with BA.

    7. Why would I fly to see friends in the uk when we can all fly to Spain or similar for cheaper

      Hell i could probably pay for their ticket and it would still be cheaper than trying to do London to Scotland

    8. InformationNew66 on

      Why fly when you can pay £200-300 for a family trip from Manchester to London on a train?

      Train prices are insane.

    9. The only internal flights I’ve ever taken are between England and Northern Ireland. If I can reasonably get to say the Scottish central belt by land, then I’m for sure gonna avoid all the airport bullshit and pollution. 

      The budget airlines might have a lower headline price than the train, but by the time you pay for bags, transport to the airport on each side and so on, you’re probably not saving any significant money.

    10. Wart_Time_L32 on

      Imagine if they properly subsidised rail tickets and invested properly.

    11. evolveandprosper on

      Many air journeys take just as long as their road equivalents. Air usually isn’t really worth it in the UK for anything less than 200 miles. The trip itself may take less time but you have to factor in getting to the airport, going through checks at the airport and getting from the destination airport to the destination address. Then, when you get to the destination address, you will require taxis or public transport to travel anywhere else.

    12. Spent an hour circling London waiting for a landing slot last year and as we flew over Brighton for the third time I’m thinking damn it I should have taken the train from Scotland.. meanwhile in Japan they’ve been running bullet trains since 1964… why not the U.K.?

    13. JeffSergeant on

      I prefer train over flying because to get to the airport the recommended 2 hours early, I have to leave 3 hours before the flight, if I’m driving I have to pay extortionate prices for parking, and then I have to sort transport from an airport into whatever ‚city‘ airport I’m flying to on the other side.

      With the train, I can rock up at the station knowing the train will leave on time most of the time, I’m not going to have any security queues to worry about (yet..), and can turn up in a city centre ready to go.

      Cambridge -> Edinburgh is 5 hours door-to-door by train and ,although it’s a 1-2 hour flight, the whole trip if I’m flying still takes about the same. Most of the time on the train journey is downtime to read, or work on my laptop, on the plane there’s not really time for that.

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