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Venezuela Expands Air Network To Mexico, Brazil, Portugal Amid Sanctions Pushback
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuela's state-owned Conviasa and foreign carriers are launching new international routes to Mexico, Brazil, and Portugal, marking a strategic push to revive economic ties and tourism.
The moves aim to counterbalance U.S. sanctions and reactivate underused regional airports. Conviasa will connect Maracaibo and Barquisimeto to Cancún starting July 2025 using Embraer 190 jets.
Flights depart Maracaibo every Wednesday and Sunday at 21:30, arriving in Cancún by 23:30. Return trips leave Mexico at 00:30, landing by 04:30. Barquisimeto's route launches July 3 with Thursday and Friday departures.
Both routes enable connections to Mexico City via Felipe Ángeles Airport, expanding access to Mexico 's economic hubs. Brazil's GOL Linhas Aéreas will debut direct Caracas-São Paulo flights on August 5, operating four weekly Boeing 737 services.
This route restores a vital corridor suspended since 2020, bypassing failed plans for a Bogotá stopover due to diplomatic gridlock. São Paulo's Guarulhos Airport offers links to 30 Brazilian cities and key South American markets like Buenos Aires and Montevideo.
TAP Air Portugal resumed weekly Lisbon-Funchal-Caracas flights in June 2024 using Airbus A330-900neo aircraft. The service, last operational in 2015, strengthens Venezuela's European access through Madeira.
Flights depart Lisbon at 12:30, arriving in Caracas by 16:10, with returns leaving at 18:20 for next-day arrivals. These routes signal Venezuela 's prioritization of air connectivity as an economic countermeasure.
Maracaibo's La Chinita Airport, serving Venezuela's second-largest population hub, gains its first sustained international operations in years.
Conviasa's expansion to four Mexican destinations and GOL's São Paulo link reflect targeted partnerships to bypass regional diplomatic friction. Challenges persist, including operational sustainability amid fluctuating demand and geopolitical pressures.
The moves aim to counterbalance U.S. sanctions and reactivate underused regional airports. Conviasa will connect Maracaibo and Barquisimeto to Cancún starting July 2025 using Embraer 190 jets.
Flights depart Maracaibo every Wednesday and Sunday at 21:30, arriving in Cancún by 23:30. Return trips leave Mexico at 00:30, landing by 04:30. Barquisimeto's route launches July 3 with Thursday and Friday departures.
Both routes enable connections to Mexico City via Felipe Ángeles Airport, expanding access to Mexico 's economic hubs. Brazil's GOL Linhas Aéreas will debut direct Caracas-São Paulo flights on August 5, operating four weekly Boeing 737 services.
This route restores a vital corridor suspended since 2020, bypassing failed plans for a Bogotá stopover due to diplomatic gridlock. São Paulo's Guarulhos Airport offers links to 30 Brazilian cities and key South American markets like Buenos Aires and Montevideo.
TAP Air Portugal resumed weekly Lisbon-Funchal-Caracas flights in June 2024 using Airbus A330-900neo aircraft. The service, last operational in 2015, strengthens Venezuela's European access through Madeira.
Flights depart Lisbon at 12:30, arriving in Caracas by 16:10, with returns leaving at 18:20 for next-day arrivals. These routes signal Venezuela 's prioritization of air connectivity as an economic countermeasure.
Maracaibo's La Chinita Airport, serving Venezuela's second-largest population hub, gains its first sustained international operations in years.
Conviasa's expansion to four Mexican destinations and GOL's São Paulo link reflect targeted partnerships to bypass regional diplomatic friction. Challenges persist, including operational sustainability amid fluctuating demand and geopolitical pressures.
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