All news – Page 7069

  • News

    Brave faces

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The Asian slowdown is giving suppliers a chance to take stock of their many new ideas. Meanwhile, the regional jet phenomenon continues to grow. Karen Walker reports. For the commercial airliner manufacturers, observes one industry analyst, getting through the recent Asian Aerospace show was all about 'brave faces and nervous ...

  • News

    JAL heads off

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan Airlines' president, Akira Kondo, and chairman, Susumu Yamaji, both resigned on 17 March. Kondo has recommended Isao Kaneko to be his successor as president. Source: Airline Business

  • News

    North exposure

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    North Korea opened its air space in early March for the first time in 45 years. International carriers, led by Cathay Pacific, held a week of trial flights as a prelude to regular overflights starting 23 April. The new North Korea route shaves 20 to 40 minutes off flight times ...

  • News

    Is life left in Pan Am?

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    An eleventh hour bid to rescue Pan American Airways was being shaped at presstime, but the chances of success seemed remote. The airline looked set to become just another US startup destined for the history books. In a flurry of last minute activity in a Miami bankruptcy court, two ...

  • News

    Peru stalls on freedoms

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Peru's transport minister Antonio Paucar Carbajal has released some of LanChile's new fifth freedoms to the US but the key Lima-Miami route is still a hostage in the scramble for Peru-US market share. Since November, when Peru and Chile revised their bilateral to grant each other more third, fourth, ...

  • News

    UK low costs counter Go

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    While Ryanair signals it will not concede any ground to British Airways' planned low-cost operation, Go, at London/Stansted, EasyJet is firing the first shots in a legal battle to prevent BA from cross-subsidising Go. With Go yet to reveal details of its routes, in late February Ryanair announced plans ...

  • News

    Asians sell up to survive

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Malaysia Airlines and Asiana have both effectively abandoned any fleet strategy, and are putting their entire fleets up for sale in bids to overcome the Asian economic slump. Meanwhile Malaysia's regional airlines have hit severe problems while, ironically, a new Fiji-based startup still aims to brave the economic storm. ...

  • News

    What's on in telecoms

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The common standards provided by the Internet are posing considerable challenges for Sita and massive opportunities for the airlines to cut costs and boost efficiency. Jackie Gallacher talks to Sita's director general, John Watson. Just utter the words 'Internet Protocol' or IP and you have the main challenge facing Sita ...

  • News

    Second Asia tier tumbles

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Doomsday gloom as heavy as last summer's smoke hangs over southeast Asia's second tier airlines. Rising currency costs and plunging traffic are hammering carriers in Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines. 'We will not be able to make it until April,' warns Benny Rungkat, secretary general of the ...

  • News

    Southwest to rule roost

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Southwest Airlines denies that expansion plans at Baltimore-Washington are in response to US Airways' new low-cost airline. But Southwest is certainly making it difficult for a competitor to get a toe-in. Southwest currently has six gates at Baltimore airport, and Maryland authorities have granted tentative authority to lease ten ...

  • News

    Asians have private ideas

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite the tough times hitting Asia, Thai Airways and China Airlines are both talking privatisation. Recognising the attraction of currency spreads for foreign investors, Thailand and South Korea are also pondering whether to relax foreign investment limits for airlines. The pressure to privatise Thai Airways comes from the International ...

  • News

    FAA scrambles to defuse timebomb

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Tick, tick, tick. The millennium bomb is counting down, potentially to wreak havoc just as champagne corks and fireworks explode to welcome in the new century. Like most bombs, until the fuse is lit no-one is quite sure whether this will be a dud or a disaster, but there ...

  • News

    US six get big in Japan

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Six US airlines and 13 cities will receive a total of 106 new weekly flights to Japan under a tentative agreement inked by the US and Japanese governments, following the signing of the new civil aviation bilateral in February. US carriers gaining new rights are American Airlines, Continental Airlines, ...

  • News

    Venezuela starts to stir

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Venezuela's efforts to reclaim more international air traffic are not coming easily as local airlines fight over a plan to revive bankrupt Viasa. In February, Brazil's Vasp and local company Venezolana de Comercializacion unveiled a proposal to revive bankrupt flag carrier Viasa, with Vasp to hold a 49 per ...

  • News

    Masters of the cycle

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

  • News

    Turkish Eeyx

    1998-03-25T17:35:00Z

    Aerospatiale of France has signed a preliminary agreement with Turkey for co-production of Eryx anti-tank missiles. The deal, revealed by the Turkish defence ministry, is worth around Fr2.6 billion ($420 million) and the ten year production run will be carried out locally by an Aerospatiale-led consortium which includes two Turkish ...

  • News

    New TNT hub

    1998-03-25T17:03:00Z

    TNT began full scale operations from its new courier hub at Liége in Belgium on 2 March, having transferred business from Cologne, Germany, because of a night operating ban. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Freighter crash

    1998-03-25T17:02:00Z

    One of the two Boeing 707-300 freighters (registration SU-PBA) operated by Egyptian carrier Air Memphis crashed shortly after take-off at Mombasa's Moi International Airport in Kenya on 10 March, killing all six crew on board. The aircraft crashed just beyond the airport boundary and burned out. The 707 was taking ...

  • News

    FAA approves 737-800

    1998-03-25T16:51:00Z

    Europe's Joint Aviation Authorities is due to certificate Boeing's 737-800 by the end of March. This follows the award of a type certificate from the US Federal Aviation Administration on 13 March. JAA certification director Klaus van der Spek says that he does not foresee any problems, but cannot give ...

  • News

    Latin order

    1998-03-25T16:45:00Z

    Airbus is poised to finalise a deal worth an estimated $8 billion with three major Latin American airlines for almost 200 A320 family aircraft. TACA group of El Salvador, LanChile and Brazil's TAM are expected to sign a firm order for around 90 aircraft, with options on another 100 aircraft ...