All news – Page 7125
-
News
Air Malta aims to finalise fleet revamp in 1998
Air Malta hopes to move forward with its aircraft re-equipment plans by the end of 1998, as it ponders a switch to a one-manufacturer fleet. The airline operates a mixed fleet of seven aircraft, including two Boeing 737-200s, three 737-300s and two Airbus A320s. Four Aero International (Regional) RJ70s acquired ...
-
News
British Airways and LOT Polish plan a strategic alliance
British Airways and LOT Polish Airlines have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to begin negotiating a strategic alliance. BA's prime aim is to develop its Central European network, but LOT says that there is the option of extending the deal in future to include other alliance partners. BA's prospective ...
-
News
BMW Rolls-Royce renegotiates BR715 deal on Boeing regional
Andrzej Jeziorski/DAHLEWITZ BMW Rolls-Royce (BMW R-R) has switched from being a risk-sharing partner in the Boeing 717-200 programme by renegotiating the contract it had originally agreed with McDonnell Douglas (MDC)on the former MD-95. The engine manufacturer is no longer a risk-sharing partner, says BMW R-R managing director Klaus Nittinger, having ...
-
News
Hong Kong faces Chek Lap Kok money troubles
The Hong Kong Airport Authority (HKAA) is having to address a projected two-month shortfall in operating revenue, following the Government's decision to delay until 6 July the opening of the territory's new international airport at Chek Lap Kok. Hong Kong International Airport will actually be ready at the end ...
-
News
EasyJet targets Air Holland as a way in to mainland Europe
EasyJet is seeking to establish a hub in mainland Europe by acquiring the Schiphol, Amsterdam-based charter airline Air Holland. EasyJet has been looking to establish a Dutch hub and already serves Amsterdam from its Luton base and its secondary hub in Liverpool. The airline also operates a weekend service ...
-
News
FedEx accepts TCAS 2 and awaits ADS solution
Federal Express has accepted the need to equip its fleet of jet-powered freighters with the traffic-alert and collision-avoidance system (TCAS 2) to meet pending international regulations, but is still backing the US Cargo Airlines Association (CAA) effort to develop an automatic dependent surveillance - broadcast (ADS-B)-based system. The airline, ...
-
News
Mesa ceases United's west coast feed
Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC US regional Mesa Air Group is to sell or close down its Fresno, California-based WestAir Commuter division, which operates as United Express, after it failed to reach agreement with United Airlines to renew the codesharing agreement. The Westair agreement expires on 31 May and United ...
-
News
Marketplace
++ Singapore Aircraft Leasing Enterprise (SALE) has received the first of up to 24 Airbus A320 family aircraft, with the delivery of an International Aero Engines V2500-powered A320, which is being leased to Ireland's TransAer. SALE has a further 13 firm orders - 12 A320s and one A321 - scheduled ...
-
News
Small accidents
A number of accidents occurred in early January. The two crew of an Aeroservice International Polish Airlines Let 410 on a 13 January ferry flight were killed when the aircraft crashed on its approach in fog to Brno Airport, Czech Republic. On 11 January, a THY Turkish Airlines Aero International ...
-
News
Airbus Trent 500 nacelle decision 'was political'
US nacelles specialist Rohr, recently acquired by BFGoodrich, has accused Airbus Industrie of abandoning the tender process to supply the nacelles and thrust reversers for the Rolls-Royce Trent 500 on the new Airbus A340-500/600 and selecting a French-led consortium. After contract negotiations in 1997 with teams including Rohr (now ...
-
News
Routes
++ Polar Air has won US Department of Transportation approval to operate cargo flights between the USA and South Africa via Egypt, Kenya, the Netherlands and Zimbabwe, using Boeing 747 freighters. Flights will begin in April 1998. ++ American Airlines is to launch daily transatlantic flights from Boston to London ...
-
News
Taiwanese carriers look towards Malaysian services
Taiwan's second-tier airlines have set their sights on Malaysian destinations in the wake of the open-skies accord signed in October 1997 between the two countries. The airlines face saturated domestic markets, steady increases in capacity and a slight decline in overseas travel. UNI Air hopes to fly from Kaohsiung ...
-
News
Tata looks to start Indian carrier again
Following the collapse of plans to form an Indian private airline with Singapore Airlines (SIA), the Tata Group is again seeking to set up a carrier in the country. The original project was blocked by a change in Government policy, which decided that foreign airlines could not invest in ...
-
News
African carriers gear up for next round of privatisations
Kevin O'Toole/ZIMBABWEAfrican airlines have begun the new year with preparations for a renewed round of privatisations. The main event is the planned sale of South Africa Airways (SAA), but there is a growing impetus throughout the region taking in Air Zimbabwe, Air Madagascar and Air Uganda. South Africa made ...
-
News
Garuda rushes out encouraging figures
State-owned Garuda Indonesia has rushed out encouraging year-end profits figures in an apparent attempt to re-assure markets in the middle of the Indonesian economic crisis, but financial analysts remain sceptical of the claims. The airline is claiming to have boosted its net profit to Rp191.5 billion ($22 million) against ...
-
News
Indonesia agrees to put clamps on state hand-outs for IPTN
Indonesian aircraft manufacturer IPTN will no longer receive state hand-outs, under sweeping economic reforms announced by the Jakarta Government under heavy pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). A halt to Government funding for the state-run aerospace company was one of the pre-conditions demanded of Jakarta in return ...
-
News
UK's Lucas reveals ambitious plans following R-R deal
Lucas Aerospace, fresh from its Rolls-Royce engines-control deal, has put down its marker as a potential leader in the expected consolidation of the industry. "We have very ambitious plans for Lucas Aerospace," says Victor Rice, chairman of Lucas Varity, the parent company formed by the Anglo-US link-up of the ...
-
News
AAR completes AVSCO
AAR has completed its acquisition of the Aviation Service Company (AVSCO), a major distributor of aerospace products. The terms of the sale were not disclosed. AVSCO was a unit of Barfield, which is in turn a subsidiary of France's Sogerma. Source: Flight International
-
News
Northwest talks with Continental approved
Leaders of the Northwest Airlines chapter of the US Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) have endorsed the carrier's proposed partnership with Continental Airlines, which includes the option of a 14% shareholding. After stalling on the initial proposals, which were first mooted in early December, ALPA has given its blessing ...
-
News
Russia presses on with integration
Russia is pressing ahead with plans to consolidate and integrate its state-owned aerospace industry with moves to sell off shares in two Sukhoi military-aircraft plants and put the remainder in the hands of the AVPK Sukhoi holding group. The Komsomolsk-on-Amur and Novosibirsk plants, which respectively manufacture the Sukhoi Su-27 ...



















