UAE’s Emirates airline said it is spending
$20 million a year as its rolls out wi-fi services across its fleet and will
move to one day make the service available to passengers for free.
Tim Clark, president of Emirates airline
said “Ultimately, we believe that on-board wi-fi will become a free service and
a standard that customers will expect on a full-service airline”.
The Middle East’s largest passenger
airline currently offers wi-fi on its 53 Airbus A380s and on 28 Boeing 777s.
In October, the airline recorded a 200
per cent surge in wi-fi usage compared to the same month a year earlier.
Through October the daily average was 3,500 passengers using on-board wi-fi
services at an average of 28 megabytes (MB) per user, the airline said.
Emirates said that on most of its
flights equipped with wi-fi, the first 10MB is offered to passengers free of
charge. A $1 charge is levied for the next 600MB.
Emirates did not state when the wi-fi
fleet rollout would be complete or when it plans to offer the service free of
charge. However, the airline did say that it subsidises some of the costs and
has an “aggressive retrofit programme” to make the service available.
A roll-out of wi-fi services across the airline’s fleet can also improve the carrier’s operations alongside its appeal among travellers.
However, the use of on-board wi-fi is currently subject to the countries the airline flies over. According to the airline’s website, its wi-fi services “may not be available over a number of countries including China, India and the US.”
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