Take Off, Light Up On Smokers' Airline
"We would like to
remind passengers that smoking is permitted on this
flight."
It has been a long
time since most European air travellers heard anything
like this, but a German entrepreneur has set up an
airline that will give its customers the freedom to
chain-smoke from take-off to landing.
Alexander Schoppmann,
the 55-year-old founder of Smoker's International
Airways -- Smintair -- said he got the idea for a
smokers' haven in the heavens after he'd had enough of
expensive non-smoking long-haul flights with poor
service.
"I got so annoyed that
ticket prices were rising while service was getting
worse," said Schoppmann, who is a 20-a-day cigarette
smoker.
Once Smintair flights
begin in October 2007, smoking will be allowed in all
138 seats aboard a spacious Smintair Boeing 747.
Normal airlines fit up to 559 passengers in a
747.
"The crew can smoke as
well," the former stockbroker said.
Schoppmann came up
with the idea as Germany considers toughening its
smoking regulations, among the most lenient in Europe.
Germans have been loath to ban smoking because of
memories of Adolf Hitler, who forbade it in public
places.
The center-left Social
Democrats, who are part of the grand coalition, have
drafted a proposal to ban smoking in many public
places.
Berlin, the city-state
that is Germany's capital, may go even further. It is
considering a ban in all public places.
Nicotine-friendly
Smintair is already popular, even though tickets are
not on sale yet.
"Demand is strong,"
Schoppmann said. "We get people who say they want to
fly with us, even though they have no business in
Tokyo or Shanghai," he said.
On daily flights from
Duesseldorf to Tokyo and Shanghai, Smintair will offer
Cuban cigars, caviar served by flight attendants in
designer uniforms, a deluxe on-board entertainment
system and large ashtrays at every seat.
There will be a lounge
with a duty-free shop.
The extravagance will
not cost any more than a flight to Japan with any
other airline, Schoppmann said.
A first-class round
trip ticket -- Smintair offers only business and
first-class tickets -- from Duesseldorf to Tokyo will
cost EUR10,000 euros (USD$12,750), while a
business-class seat will go for EUR6,500 (USD$8,300)
on the same route, he says.
Schoppmann expects to
make profit within the first 12 months. He forecasts a
rise in annual sales to EUR500 million (USD$638
million) and a pre-tax profit of EUR120 million
(USD$153 million) by October 2008.
Airline industry
experts are sceptical.
"I don't think an
all-business class smoking flight can be run
economically from Duesseldorf," said Andreas
Kretzschmar, chairman of the Board of Airline
Representatives in Germany.
Ernst-Guenther Krause,
vice-president of the Non-Smoker Initiative Germany,
said Schoppmann's idea would never fly because people
were increasingly aware of the risks of
smoking.
"Most people have
realised by now that tobacco is not good for them," he
said.
Nearly one in three
German adults smokes regularly and about 140,000
Germans die every year from tobacco-related
illnesses.
Schoppmann, who
dismisses the effects of second-hand smoking as
"nonsense", is not worried about a future smoking
ban.
"Quite the opposite.
We'll benefit from it," he said.
Smintair does not have
an airline licence yet, since it still lacks one
crucial piece of equipment -- planes.
Schoppmann said he was
taking over three used Boeing 747s from airlines that
hoped to replace them with the new Airbus A380 super
jumbo, whose delivery is delayed.
Once his airline takes
off, the chain-smoking Smintair founder hopes to open
a chain of hotels, restaurants, pubs and
resorts.
He may also expand the
airline's route to the southern hemisphere.
Johannesburg and Sao Paulo are on his
radar.
Nov 8