US carriers pile into Cancun despite violence in Mexico

epa04582232 (FILE) A file photograph showing a Southwest Airlines jet taxiing past Delta Air Lines planes at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, 12 February 2012. Reports from US officials on 24 January 2015 state that police are searching two airliners at Atlanta's airport after informtaion that their was 'credible' bomb threats. Atlanta airport spokesman Reese McCranie said the threats were received against Delta and Southwest flights coming from Portland and Milwaukee respectively.  EPA/ERIK S. LESSER

Bloomberg

US airlines are wagering that American tourists will keep flocking to Cancun despite rising violence in Mexico and a warning from the State Department.
Southwest Airlines Co., Spirit Airlines Inc. and Delta Air Lines Inc. are adding flights to the resort. United Continental Holdings Inc. is using one of its biggest jets once a week to ply the Chicago-Cancun route. The extra flights suggest stable growth in US tourism even after the State Department said turf wars between crime gangs were fueling a surge in violence in two Mexican states, including the one where Cancun is located.
Mexico’s top beach destination potentially could also pick up visitors from other Caribbean destinations that suffered severe hurricane damage.
“It’s quickly become our largest international market,” Steven Swan, Southwest’s director of international planning, said of
Cancun. It’s common for traffic to rebound after briefly dipping on travel warnings, he said. “People tend to have a relatively short-term memory.”
From the airlines’ perspective, Cancun flights are good business because of their lower costs, high passenger counts, said Mark Drusch, a consultant and former airline executive. American Airlines Group Inc. has more flights into Cancun than any other international destination, American spokeswoman Kristen Foster said.

Traffic Rising
International passenger traffic to Mexico’s largest resort has climbed since the US State Department’s travel warning last year. It rose 6.3 percent in November from a year earlier and has increased more than 8 percent in 2017, according to the regional airport’s operator.
Without a doubt, some of the news coming out of Mexican beach towns has been grim. Innocent bystanders in Quintana Roo, where Cancun is located, and some other Mexican destinations have been caught up in shooting battles between criminal gangs, the US advisory noted. But such warnings are “not top of mind” for people looking to relax, Drusch said. Quintana Roo receives 10 million tourists a year and accounts for a third of Mexico’s international visitors.
With all the news about mass shootings in the US in 2017, Mexico’s neighbour to the north seems just as dangerous, said Vancouver resident Clark MacPherson.
Carriers expanding flights to the region in recent months include Southwest, which announced two new seasonal routes to the Mexican resort town from Pittsburgh and Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, and deep discounter Spirit, which is adding year-round service from Baltimore/Washington and Chicago. Delta added a third daily flight from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport to Cancun, and added another flight from Boston.

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