Samoa Air to Charge Passengers by Weight

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Chris

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Airline to charge overweight passengers more

Samoa Air has become the world's first airline to implement "pay as you weigh" flights, meaning overweight passengers pay more for their seats.

"This is the fairest way of travelling," chief executive of Samoa Air, Chris Langton, told ABC Radio. "There are no extra fees in terms of excess baggage or anything – it is just a kilo is a kilo is a kilo."

Like many Pacific island nations, Samoa has a serious obesity problem and is often included in the top 10 countries for obesity levels. As such, Mr Langton believes his airline's new payment policy will also help promote health and obesity awareness.

"When you get into the Pacific, standard weight is substantially higher [than south-east Asia]," he said. "That's a health issue in some areas. [This payment system] has raised the awareness of weight."

Under the new system, Samoa Air passengers must type in their weight and the weight of their baggage into the online booking section of the airline's website. The rates vary depending on the distance flown: from $1 per kilogram on the airline's shortest domestic route to about $4.16 per kilogram for travel between Samoa and American Samoa. Passengers are then weighed again on scales at the airport, to check that they weren't fibbing online.

Samoa Air operates BN2A Islander and Cessna 172 aircraft.

Mr Langton said he believed it to be a system of the future, and added that "the standard width and pitch of seats are changing as people are getting a bit bigger, wider and taller than they were 40 to 50 years ago".

He also pointed out that families travelling with small children could end up paying far less with the pay-by-weight scheme.

"A family of maybe two adults and a couple of mid-sized kids ... can travel at considerably less than what they were being charged before," he said.

Public relations and marketing representative for Samoa Tourism, Peter Sereno, said he believed that the policy would also help with safety standards.

"When you're only fitting eight to 12 people in these aircraft and you've got some bigger Samoans getting on, you do need to weigh them and distribute that weight evenly throughout the aircraft, to make sure everyone's safe," he said. "At the end of the day, I don't care who they're weighing or how they're weighing them as long as it's safe."

Norwegian economist Bharat P. Bhatta proposed in a recent journal article that by implementing pay-per-kilo policies, carriers could also recoup the cost of the extra fuel required to carry larger people.

Some airlines in the United States already force obese passengers who cannot fit in a single seat to pay for two seats, but this is the first time a per-kilo rate has been used by an airline.

What do you guys think of this? Do you believe it to be fair?
 

ThatGuyFromNukemHigh

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Sounds like what my local public transit company is trying to implement for bus fares.

I do not find this fair, as it is discrimination towards the overweight. Think of having scales that every passenger has to be weighed on, and it being displayed in one way or another that other passengers can see this, not only do the overweight passengers have to endure this, but also the people who try and pride themselves on their appearance whose house scales may not agree with these ones, thus bringing out their insecurities.
 

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I seriously doubt this will raise any "weight awareness" or whatever silly thing they want to call it, it'll just piss off a lot of fat people.

The only thing that kinda annoys me about this is that they're saying that they're doing it for a noble reason when really they're only doing it because someone thought it would be a good idea to profit off how fat the people of that country are. They know damn well that no Samoan is going to eat less fish just because some airline is making them pay a little extra to fly. That's completely absurd that they think people will actually believe that.
 

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These planes are meant to be able to handle a giant load to one place to the next so I don't think this helps anything except making fat people stay in the same place. Isn't it enough that they already have to buy more than one seat? If you are that fat that you have to buy two seats that is your fault anyways but this is going a little overboard.
 

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I have no issue with airlines that operate small planes like this to weigh passengers to distribute the weight evenly on the aircraft and to ensure there is enough fuel etc. Charging customers for it is a bit rich. I don't mind if fat people are made to pay for two seats if they overhang one seat because it isn't fair on other customers if this person takes up two seats. Not a fan of charging per kilo because it discriminates against tall people who are naturally heavier than short people.