All air transport news – Page 2677

  • News

    Continental and Air Canada agree to extend code-share deal

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    CONTINENTAL AIRLINES and shareholder Air Canada have announced new code-share services, beginning on 8 July. Rival Canadian Airlines International and American Airlines launched their code-sharing agreement on 1 June. The US-Canada "open-skies" aviation pact, signed in February, allows unlimited code-sharing between the countries' airlines, with temporary limits on ...

  • News

    Collins and Dassault team up on GCAS

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    ROCKWELL-COLLINS has linked with Dassault Electronique of France to develop a ground-collision avoidance system (GCAS). Airbus Industrie will flight-test a "red-label" prototype of the Dassault unit in late 1995, in an A319, and the system is to enter service with Air Inter in early 1997. Rockwell's Collins Commercial ...

  • News

    Aircraft news

    1995-07-01T09:17:00Z

    Continental Express has ordered 25 Beech 1900Ds. The contract is worth $105 million with deliveries due to start in July and continue through to mid-1996. Qantas has ordered three B737-400s and two 767-300ERs, worth $325 million. Maersk Air has ordered six Boeing 737-500s with options on ...

  • News

    Appointments

    1995-07-01T09:17:00Z

    Graham Atkinson has been named vice president Atlantic division for United Airlines. This gives him responsibility for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The Board of Airline Representatives in the UK has appointed Peter North as its first chief executive. Ed Bavaria has been named deputy ...

  • News

    B777 gets ETOPs

    1995-07-01T08:49:00Z

    Boeing's Pratt & Whitney powered 777 received Etops approval from the US Federal Aviation Administration prior to its maiden revenue flight with United Airlines on 7 June.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    The yen factor

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The strength of the Japanese yen is having major repercussions throughout the airline business. David Knibb looks at the impact.The Japanese even have a word for it. Endaka describes the inexorable rise in the value of the yen. It's not a new phenomenon; the yen has been appreciating for at ...

  • News

    Clearing the cost block

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Continental Airlines' president, Gordon Bethune, says the airline must focus on revenue gains rather than cost cuts, and must improve its poor reputation. Mark Odell reports from Houston.Gordon Bethune, the president and chief executive of Continental Airlines, doesn't mince his words. His energetic and hands-on management style has ripped ...

  • News

    Routing for growth

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines have added and abandoned new routes at a substantial rate in the past two years, but US carriers and those based in more liberal markets dominated the picture. Report by Reed Travel Group Market Analysis and Airline Business. Market expansion is one of the most pertinent ways to ...

  • News

    Boom conditions shift to slowdown

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    It was only 12 short months ago that the global financial markets were gripped by fear of overheating and inflation. Robust economic growth, particularly in the United States where output soared to 4.7 per cent in 1994, sent the yields on government bonds round the world sharply higher and the ...

  • News

    Sino thaw is set to grip

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Chinese aviation appears to be experiencing a thaw as two recent events show that both outsiders and the CAAC have growing confidence in China's airlines. China's transition from bank-guaranteed to asset-based financing received a boost with the recent decision of an operating lessor to commit aircraft to a ...

  • News

    Major job cuts

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Boeing, Fokker and Embraer have been trimming staff in a bid to cut costs back and stay competitive. Boeing announced 5,000 more employees will go in addition to the 7,000 job losses already announced. Fokker is to cut staff by 945, of which 490 will be forced lay-offs, by year ...

  • News

    Ansett carry on regardless

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Ignoring recent losses and the imminent purchase of 50 per cent of its stock by Air New Zealand, Ansett Australia has decided to push ahead with plans to expand its embryonic international operations in Asia. Managing director Graeme McMahon says a third Boeing 747-300 will be leased for ...

  • News

    New wave hits Mexico

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The reversal in Mexican economic fortunes, dragged down by the slump of the peso, is at least restoring some equilibrium in the airline industry. But the economic crisis could yet precipitate a reversal in policy, with the government pushing to re-regulate pricing and infusing both Aeromexico and Mexicana with new ...

  • News

    Euro pilots strike out

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Continuing management efforts to cut the European majors' operating costs are resulting in clashes with pilots at KLM, SAS and Alitalia. If pilots do not concede the need to reduce costs, carriers may seek alternatives. KLM is insisting on a longterm programme to cut its aircrew costs, which ...

  • News

    Africa's Alliance prepares to launch scheduled services

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON ALLIANCE, THE NEW African long-haul venture led by South African Airways (SAA), is gearing up for the launch of scheduled services in July, and says that new routes and aircraft are likely to follow. The venture has its origins in protracted talks between ...

  • News

    Impact of high-speed competition: the real threat

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Sir - Andrew Chuter is right to warn the airlines of the impact of high-speed rail services (Flight International, 7-13 June, P94). The real danger threatening domestic and short-haul European services, does not come from the TGV high speed train, however, but from the willingness of governments to sink ...

  • News

    Merger mania

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Europe still has a long way to go to match the strategic power of big US alliances. Julian Moxon/PARIS Only an optimistic visionary would have come out of the Paris air show maintaining that the European aerospace industry had begun seriously to re-organise itself. After all, ...

  • News

    Back to break-even

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    The world airline industry ended 1994 close to break-even, but cost of reduction is still top of the agenda. Kevin O'Toole/LONDON At times, it seemed that it would never happen, but the world airline industry at last appears to have ended its record run of ...

  • News

    Finnair leases DC-10s to Air Liberte

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    FINNAIR IS TO LEASE its entire McDonnell Douglas DC-10 fleet to French airline Air Liberte. The agreement covers four aircraft on a five-year lease. The deal will net Finnair revenues of around FM140 million ($32 million) a year. Air Liberte has been leasing one of the four DC-10s ...

  • News

    Atlas to deal second ACE after crash

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    ATLAS AVIATION is to build an improved ACE turboprop trainer following the crash of the prototype in February. The new ACE II, is scheduled to be flown, in the second half of 1996. The aircraft will differ from the original principally in its use of the more powerful ...