Gol Spreads Its Brazilian Wings Through South America

Brazilian low cost airline Gol is beginning flights to Bolivia next Monday November 7 and to Montevideo, Uruguay and Asuncion, Paraguay before the end of 2005, announced company officials in São Paulo.

Gol, which flies under the "low cost, low rates" system said the hub for the air link with Santa Cruz, Bolivia, will be Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul state, and from there to the rest of Brazil.

A spokesperson for the company also revealed that last May Gol was authorized to begin regular commercial flights to Montevideo and Asunción, the capitals of Mercosur smaller country members.

"We expect to be flying to these new international destinations before the year is over".

The Uruguay and Paraguay operations are a further step in the South American continent expansion policy of Gol airlines which already includes 41 air links between Brazil and Argentina.

Uruguay with 3.4 million population and a US$ 14 billion GDP is the third country in the region with most air traffic with Brazil totaling 252.000 passengers in 2003 equivalent to 10,6% of all passenger traffic between Brazil and the rest of South America. Paraguay with a 5.8 million population and 145.000 passengers traffic with Brazil in 2003 ranks fifth.

Gol finances are also encouraging with profits reaching US$ 62 million in the third quarter, 42,6% over the same period in 2004 and 88,3% higher than the second quarter. Net revenue in the third quarter was US$ 310 million, a 37% expansion over the third quarter of 2004.

With the incorporation of four additional Boeing 737, totaling a fleet of 39, the supply of seats increased 56,4% in the third quarter. The company has plans to acquire another three aircrafts by the end of the year.

"We’ve made flying popular, we’ve extended the "Gol effect" to Brazil and South America by expanding our business, with technological innovation, operational efficiency, quality service and a disciplined control of costs and rates", said the company’s CEO Constantino de Oliveira Junior.

This article appeared originally in Mercopress – www.mercopress.com.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Haiti’s President Elect Thanks Brazil and Plans do Visit Country

Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, called Haiti’s elected President, René Préval, this ...

Brazil: Alleged Killer of US Nun Says He Acted in Self-Defense

The man accused of killing American nun and rain forest defender Dorothy Stang told ...

Bolivia Nationalizes Gas and Gets What It Wanted from Brazil

Bolivian President Evo Morales completed his ambitious oil and gas nationalization plan early Sunday, ...

Astral Convergence

Rancharia is 1 of 49 special projects in the state of Bahia supporting 2,250 ...

100 Killed a Day: Driving in Brazil is Seven Times Deadlier that in the US

Vehicle traffic in Brazil is seven times more lethal than it is in the ...

Gol and American Airlines Expand Codeshare to More Cities in Brazil

Brazil's Gol Airlines and US's American Airlines have strengthened their alliance by finalizing a ...

Brazil’s Gun Referendum Exposes Country’s Open Wound of Violence

The legalization or ban of guns and ammunition trade is the putative matter to ...

A Judge Against The Body Shop

A Brazilian judge has sentenced The Body Shop to pay more than $100,000 in ...

Brazil’s Lula Praised in Paris for Remaining True to His Roots

At his meeting, yesterday, June 13, with the Socialist mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoe, ...

Brazil’s Marina Silva Gets an Easy Ride

When Marina Silva left the Workers Party (PT) to join the Greens many observers ...