All news – Page 6661
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Canadians spar over single airline
DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE October will be a decisive month in Canada as its airline industry struggles to define its future. Only one major carrier is likely to survive, but fundamental questions must be settled before a 10 November deadline about who will own and control the airline. ...
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Sabre chief's departure fuels talk of rift with AMR
JANE LEVERE NEW YORK The head of Sabre, the travel distribution and information group controlled by American Airlines' parent AMR, unexpectedly left his job in early September, raising questions about the company's future. Michael Durham, Sabre's president and chief executive officer, left the company suddenly, saying in a ...
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Cintra's chief faces challenge
DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Jaime Corredor Esnaola, the new head of Cintra, takes over the holding company for Aeromexico and Mexicana Airlines at a challenging time. After replacing Ernesto Martens, who retired at the end of August, one of his first moves was to announce that Mexico's federal ...
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JetBlue wins Kennedy slots in low-fares battle
CAROLE SHIFRIN WASHINGTON DC JetBlue Airways has cleared a major hurdle in its attempt to start new low-fare services from New York after being granted key take-off and landing rights at J F Kennedy International Airport by the US Department of Transportation. The agency gave JetBlue a total of 75 ...
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Low-costs in fierce battle at Stansted
LOIS JONES LONDONc Cut-throat competition between low-cost players at London Stansted airport looks set to cause casualties with the launch of KLM uk's Buzz KLMuk is to set up a low-cost fares airline next year called Buzz at Stansted to compete with Go and Ryanair. The carrier, ...
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Austrian Airlines joins Star Alliance
PETER BENNETT VIENNA Austrian Airlines' joint chief executives Herbert Bammer and Mario Rehulka, finally forwent a deal Air France and Delta Air Lines to join the Star Alliance. However, there is a lingering doubt whether Austrian's application to gain new anti-trust immunity with United Airlines will be approved and, ...
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SAA/Sun Air deal seems doomed to fail
ROGER MAKINGS JOHANNESBURG A bid by South African Airways to acquire a controlling stake in domestic rival Sun Air looks set to end in failure. The government is expected to refer the proposed deal back to the shareholders. In August, SAA announced that it had secured a ...
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New dispute looms after Sydney gets go-ahead
DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE The decision on whether to build an additional Sydney airport edged another step closer early in September when Australia's environment minister gave the Badgerys Creek proposal a qualified go-ahead. A dispute is escalating, however, over how to fund the A$5 billion ($3.2 billion) project, ...
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JAS offers to trade slots for codeshares
As losses on its international services mount, Japan Air System (JAS) is proposing to hand some of its slots at Tokyo's Narita airport to Japan Airlines (JAL) and All Nippon Airways (ANA). In return JAS would seek codeshares on replacement flights operated by the two majors. This would be first ...
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Vanuatu faces barriers to privatisation
The decision by Vanuatu to prepare its flag carrier for privatisation is likely to hit some of the same snags experienced elsewhere in the Pacific Islands. Vanuatu, located 2,000km east of Australia, decided to sell 49% of Air Vanuatu to an international airline, following a recommendation from New Zealand ...
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Kobe gets new airport
Construction of a controversial airport for the Japanese city of Kobe has finally begun, nearly 30 years after it was first proposed. The airport is to be built on 270Ha (670 acres) of reclaimed land, with a single 2,500m (8,200ft)-long runway capable of handling 20,000 flight movement annually. It is ...
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Recovery route
NICHOLAS IONIDES MELBOURNE Ansett's chief executive has made a running start at turning the airline's finances around and inserting it into a global alliance. But there is still plenty of work to do. "When I arrived at Ansett we had what I have described as a Noah's ...
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A question of scale
KEVIN O'TOOLE Conventional wisdom has held back outsourcing of heavy maintenance, but as it starts to be challenged, only as few as a dozen airlines may emerge able to justify keeping work captive, argues IPG Consulting. On paper the equation looks perfect. On one side, airline boardrooms are keen ...
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Probing the costs
JACK SELLSBY LONDON IATA's upgraded maintenance accounting system offers cost transparency and gives participating airlines the best chance yet to benchmark globally Establishing the true cost of maintenance has never been a straightforward affair, even within the most sophisticated of airlines. Attempts to make meaningful comparisons between different ...
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Uneasy alliances
The global alliances have often looked more like mutually-beneficial truces between competitors than genuine joint . The Austrian Airlines move to Star seems to confirm that partners still value their independence. News that Austrian Airlines had chosen to forego its long-term partners for the bright lights of Star has ...
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Is Asia close to a turning point?
Asia's economic woes authored much of the over-capacity appearing on the North Atlantic. Chris Tarry of Commerzbank looks for sings of recovery Over the last few months much attention has been focussed on the current blood bath taking place on the North Atlantic. The conclusion very early on from ...
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EC shifts competition scrutiny to European alliances
ALAN GEORGE BRUSSELS After a lengthy period spent focusing on European-US aviation alliances, the European Commission's competition authorities plan to devote more effort to intra-European alliances. The intra-EU focus follows the EC's setting of conditions on the recent Alitalia/KLM alliance. The Commission ruled that the airlines should reduce frequencies ...
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UK cargo carriers pin hopes on Europe
PETER CONWAY LONDON UK cargo airlines angry at a controversial government decision that grants new rights to US operators, hope to generate the consensus needed by the European Commission to negotiate broader cargo rights with the USA. In August, the UK Government granted fifth freedom rights out of ...
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Singapore Airlines joins call for US-UK open skies
LOIS JONES LONDON UK-USopen skies talks remain in gridlock, with no sign of progress this side of the Millennium. But more players are joining the queue to offer transatlantic services and increase pressure for an open skies agreement. Singapore Airlines is the latest airline to apply pressure on the ...
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Privatisation the second time around?
PETER BENNETT VIENNA After decades in state ownership, privatisation could finally be on the cards for eastern Europe's airlines. Eastern European airlines, dogged by government procrastination, bureaucracy and stalled privatisation plans, may be about to see a change in their fortunes. Privatising the region's carriers has been ...



















