All Safety News – Page 1470

  • News

    Canadian airlines fill capacity

    1995-11-08T00:00:00Z

    CANADIAN AIRLINES' pilots have ratified a new three-year labour agreement which will save the carrier around C$41 million ($30 million) a year. Under the deal, the carrier's 1,200 pilots have accepted a 5% cut in pay in exchange for shares in the airline. The deal was ...

  • News

    Appointments

    1995-11-01T11:52:00Z

    Mauricio Botelho has been appointed president and chief executive officer of Embraer. At KLM Cargo, Jan Meurer has been appointed vice president, operations, Enno Osinga is named vice president customer service, and Michael Kimman becomes business systems manager. Sjaak Hofstra becomes operations and marketing director, cargo service centre ...

  • News

    Agent blues

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The traditional role of the travel agent in distributing airline products is being challenged by CRS pricing polices, ticketless travel, the Internet and commission capping by airlines. Does this mean the end of the travel agent as we know it? Chris Lyle discusses the implications.In theory, travel agents should be ...

  • News

    EVA enjoys the fruits of youth

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    If spectacular improvements in efficiency and productivity are a measure of success, then on the surface at least Taiwan's international newcomer EVA Airways appears to be setting new standards. Productivity, measured in terms of revenue per employee, soared 62 per cent last year. Unit costs plunged 21 per cent and ...

  • News

    Profit share: a stroke of genius

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Singapore Airlines' chairman J Y Pillay has absolutely no doubt that in an unforgiving airline industry, survival rests on the continuing struggle to improve productivity and keep ahead of costs. And there can be little doubt that Pillay's message is getting through at an airline which consistently turns in some ...

  • News

    Getting IT right

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    What does a business do when none of its computer systems support its core business processes? Simple. It realigns its information technology with those processes, then develops a plan to put the systems in place. UK-based Britannia Airways has done just that, showing how IT can add significant extra ...

  • News

    Growth spurs on drive for cuts

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada, in the midst of a significant growth phase, is attempting to counteract the costs of expansion with employee productivity gains and new technology. Air Canada expects to double its transborder service to the US within the next three years and in recent months has added new flights ...

  • News

    Get smart inside the system!

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    For Northwest Airlines, record profits this year have been less a result of recent, company-wide efficiency programmes than of a series of initiatives - including route restructuring, employee concessions and alliance-building - stretching back several years. Nonetheless, 'smarter' flying and pricing have produced lower costs and higher yields for the ...

  • News

    China cuts its numbers

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Beijing has formally declared its intent to consolidate China's airlines after two years moving in that direction. The number is set to shrink by 40 per cent, but more carriers are likely to receive international designation as well. Li Zhao, deputy director of the Civil Aviation Administrat- ion ...

  • News

    More than a fleeting gain?

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    At Malev Hungarian Airlines, a major improvement in efficiency is one of the main outcomes of a modernisation programme that started back in 1991 but only really started to take root last year. Indeed, commercial director Ferenc Turi says the restructuring has really only just begun in earnest. 'We are ...

  • News

    Moving targets

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Singapore Airlines' chairman J Y Pillay calls it 'The genius of the organisation at work.' Productivity has become a mantra in an airline industry which is desperate to find ways of improving its long term financial performance. All airline managers are putting in a great deal of effort to improve ...

  • News

    US boost as Ozberg nears

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Cathay Pacific has launched an immediate review of its North American expansion strategy after the signing of a landmark air service agreement with the US. The breakthrough comes as welcome relief to Hong Kong negotiators embroiled in a bitter bilateral dispute with Australia. The US deal was forged ...

  • News

    Asiana close to the grade

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Asiana Airlines has moved a step closer to parity with its bigger rival, Korean Airlines, after receiving its first routes to Europe and Australia, two key parts of the globe that were previously off limits to South Korea's second carrier. Asiana plans to launch service to Brussels via ...

  • News

    PAL struggle: end in sight?

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The seven-month standoff over control of Philippine Airlines between chairman Lucio Tan and the government is still delicately poised, but a compromise may yet settle the dispute. The future of the struggling Philippine flag carrier has been in limbo since March, when the government shareholders invoked a 1992 ...

  • News

    The CAA is targeting New Zealand's poor general-aviation safety record

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Aviation morale in New Zealand is sky high, with Air New Zealand among the beneficiaries of economic reform Paul Phelan/Auckland To the casual observer, New Zealand may appear to be the poor relation of its neighbour, Australia. Nothing could be further from the truth, particularly in ...

  • News

    European rules must be tighter

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Sir - In your editorial "Associate membership" (Flight International, 20-26 September), "bizarre anomalies just around the corner" is a good description of what is being allowed to happen to civil aviation within the European Union. This particular club (non-affiliated) must be the only such to charge high subscription ...

  • News

    School uses GPS to check proficiency

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    EMBRY-RIDDLE Aeronautical University is experimenting with the global-positioning system (GPS) as a means of evaluating students and instructors in its flight-training programme. GPS position data is being recorded in flight then replayed on the ground, to evaluate pilot proficiency objectively. Embry-Riddle's campus in Prescott, Arizona has developed an ...

  • News

    Safety spotlight shifts on to loss of control

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    IN-FLIGHT LOSS of control is now the biggest single killer of airline passengers, replacing controlled flight into terrain (CFIT), according to a recent Boeing analysis of the subject. Boeing's chief engineer for aeroplane safety engineering Paul Russell says that from 1990 to 1994, 1,056 people died in loss-of-control ...

  • News

    Safer seats 'too costly' for use

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON SEAT-DESIGN CHANGES, which could improve passenger safety, are unlikely to be adopted because of their extra weight, according to a Japanese research agency. The Japanese Civil Aviation Bureau (JCAB) confirms that the changes are effective, but concludes that manufacturers and carriers will ignore them because ...

  • News

    Strong results encourage SIA

    1995-11-01T00:00:00Z

    SINGAPORE AIRLINES (SIA) turned in another strong profits rise over the first half of its financial year and is "cautiously optimistic" that the improvement will continue, helped by signs of an upturn in passenger traffic. Group net profits for the six months to the end of September were ...