All Safety News – Page 1306

  • News

    Sun Air seeks a listing

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    A second South African carrier, Sun Air, is planning to seek a listing on the Johannesburg stock exchange. Comair, which operates under a franchise agreement with British Airways, listed in July and Sun Air now plans to follow suit in around 2000. Managing director Johan Borstlap says that he ...

  • News

    Taiwan and China edge closer

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The prospect of direct flights between Taiwan and China suddenly looks brighter. Prior predictions have all proven wrong, but now there are signs that such flights could follow a warming in relations. First, there have been recent breakthroughs in shipping. Taipei has previously said that shipping could be a ...

  • News

    World economic outlook is bleak

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    There was no disguising the universal gloom as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) issued its latest World Economic Outlook report - regarded by economists around the world as the most authoritative of international economic projections. Even the USA, which has enjoyed seven years of unprecedented growth, now looks close ...

  • News

    Current outlook

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    There are still some glimmers despite the gloom, it seems. Although there is little doubt that the world is poised for downturn, the latest projections coming out for the airline industry, if not exactly buoyant, are at least cautiously optimistic. The new passenger forecasts from the International Air Transport ...

  • News

    Balkan and Malev face sale

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The Bulgarian Government is on the verge of selling a controlling stake in its national carrier, Balkan Bulgarian. The buyer is a locally based consortium, calling itself Balkan Air, made up of management, local financiers and a US institutional investor. The original offer is understood to be a straight ...

  • News

    FLEETS

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    More MD-11Fs The Boeing MD-11 has won a stay of execution with a follow-up order for six freighters from Lufthansa Cargo for delivery starting in 2000. The German airline has also firmed up options for six additional Airbus A321s. Iberia boosts Airbus Spanish flag carrier ...

  • News

    Much noise but little progress

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The endless debate on how best to square air traffic growth at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport with concerns over the ensuing noise pollution goes on. The incoming government promptly tightened the screw after its election victory in March, reducing the allowable noise footprint from that agreed previously. Yet the issue ...

  • News

    Fresh start for Virgin Express

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The move by Virgin Express to establish a new Irish subsidiary in Shannon will, alongside its fledgling French operation, give the carrier the resources and cost structure it needs to pursue growth. Gus Carbonell, director of marketing and planning at the Brussels-based carrier, says the heavy social charges attached ...

  • News

    OUTLOOK a dose of Asian Flu

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Eventually the crisis in Asia had to catch up with the air cargo market. And so it has. Growth finally came to a shuddering halt earlier this year and, with Asian carriers scrabbling to fill capacity, the rest of the world has felt the fallout. Although passenger traffic was ...

  • News

    CARGO chasing the value chain

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The cargo business may once have languished as the Cinderella of the airline industry, perpetually under the shadow of its more glittering cousins in the passenger business. But those days have long since passed. Not only is air cargo now recognised as a lucrative market in its own right, ...

  • News

    Yields making cargo pay

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Few airlines still need to be convinced about the worth of yield management systems in the passenger business. Now some of the major combination carriers are beginning to turn their attention to the aircraft belly, asking whether revenue management techniques cannot now be applied to raise freight yields. The ...

  • News

    POLAR steering a new course

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Good navigators, whether in cockpits or corner offices, sense when it is time to change course. The navigators for Long Beach-based Polar Air Cargo think that the time is now. But knowing when to change is only part of their challenge; they also must know what to change and what ...

  • News

    Stormy weather?

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    This year's hurricane season has been unkind to the Caribbean, with Georges cutting a particularly devastating swathe through many of the region's islands. But for the local airlines, hurricanes are the least of their worries. Just ask Conrad Aleong, who stepped in this year to take the helm of ...

  • News

    Routes 98

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Not so long ago, the idea of airport marketing may well have sounded like a contradiction in terms to the jaded airline route planner. Airport operators looked more like immovable institutions, to be worked around rather than with. But if airports were late to the art of marketing, then ...

  • News

    Gaining an edge

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Managers may dream of introducing the ground-breaking innovation that reshapes the industry. Or of the revolution that launches their airline to new heights of sustained performance. But in today's real world of increasingly competitive marketplace, victories tend to be smaller, more fleeting and harder to win. Welcome to the age ...

  • News

    Virgin stirs US cabotage debate

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic Airways chairman Richard Branson has touched a nerve in the USA by calling for seventh freedom rights so that he can start a low-fares, low-cost, airline. His calls for cabotage came in the same month that a senior US Department of Transportation (DoT) official questioned whether current aviation ...

  • News

    A Renaissance hub

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    With the opening of the new Malpensa airport, northern Italy may at last achieve its ambition of challenging northern Europe's major hubs. On the face of it, the transfer of international flights to Milan's shiny new airport at Malpensa should hardly have caused much of a fuss. Yet fuss ...

  • News

    Airports

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    -Vienna International Airport has recorded an 8.4% rise in passenger traffic in the first six months to June 1998. Passenger numbers for the period totalled 4.9 million. Cargo saw an 8.8% increase to 73,688t. -BAA is seeking approval for a £200 million ($120 million) two-phase expansion of London Stansted Airport ...

  • News

    African safety improves in 1998, despite growth

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones/DAKAR Air accidents in Africa are reducing, says ASECNA, the air navigation agency for Francophone Africa. The number of reported accidents stand at 14 in 1998, compared with last year's tally of 30. Reported near misses stand at 17 this year, compared to 26 in 1997, says ...

  • News

    Big Sky moves in on Aspen Mountain Air routes from Dallas

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    US regional Big Sky Airlines is to take over bankrupt Aspen Mountain Air's (AMA) Essential Air Service (EAS) routes from Dallas/Fort Worth, beginning in the middle of November. In an emergency action, the US Department of Transportation selected the Billings, Montana-based regional in preference to three other applicants. The ...