News from FlightGlobal – Page 2485

  • News

    Slots scramble at Haneda highlights Japan's problems

    1997-02-05T00:00:00Z

    A recent airline scramble for a limited number of new slots at Tokyo's Haneda Airport has served to underline Japan's growing problem of trying to liberalise its air-transport industry in the face on an already over- extended infrastructure. The proliferation in new start-up and subsidiary carriers follows moves ...

  • News

    Masters of aviation

    1997-02-05T00:00:00Z

    Pilots' careers finish relatively early, leaving them with no credit for accumulated knowledge and experience beyond that learned during the period of their licences. A postgraduate level of education in the aviation industry would be attractive to some motivated licence-holders who want future employment, early positions as management pilots, or ...

  • News

    Airbus and Boeing wait for British Midland decision

    1997-02-05T00:00:00Z

    British Midland (BM) is close to placing a substantial order for aircraft in the 180-seat class, which will be phased in over the next five years to replace part of its Boeing 737 fleet. The expanding UK airline has hinted for some time that it was considering larger ...

  • News

    Rising power

    1997-02-05T00:00:00Z

    Hydrogen was first used as a means of "powering" flight with the manned flight of a hydrogen balloon only ten days after the Montgolfiers' first manned hot-air balloon flight in 1782. Despite achieving an excellent safety record - 50,000 passengers carried without a fatality - the use of ...

  • News

    Flexible flying

    1997-02-05T00:00:00Z

    For aspiring pilots who mortgage their careers until middle-age to earn a full airline pilot's licence, airline sponsorship is the ultimate dream. Yet, would-be pilots know that such offers are few, and the schemes, reacting to market behaviour, have been sporadic. When sponsors do announce a course, many are called, ...

  • News

    Appointments

    1997-02-01T10:16:00Z

    Mike Street, British Airways' director of operations, has assumed the responsibilities of chief operating officer Alistair Cumming, who retires in June. Charles Gurassa, current director of passenger business, becomes director of passenger and cargo business. Colin Matthews has been appointed managing director of British Airways Engineering. Henry Fan, ...

  • News

    Taiwan's trade

    1997-02-01T10:11:00Z

    Taiwan hopes to trade its agreement to a new trans-shipment centre for FedEx in Taipei for additional access to the US market for Eva Air and China Airlines. The latter wants to add Chicago, Miami and Houston while Eva has applied for Washington DC. FedEx plans to open the centre ...

  • News

    Strait ahead

    1997-02-01T10:02:00Z

    Ansett Australia and Air New Zealand are cementing their alliance with the former adding 66 weekly trans-Tasman flights to link their networks. The move still requires regulatory approval but includes launching services to Auckland from both Sydney and Brisbane.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    Ryanair shares

    1997-02-01T10:02:00Z

    Low-cost Irish independent Ryanair is considering a share offering which would value the company at up to US$170 million. The carrier has purchased six former Lufthansa Boeing 737-300s and is preparing to expand its operations with flights to continental European destinations from London/Stansted.     Source: ...

  • News

    City rescue

    1997-02-01T10:01:00Z

    Malmo Aviation will take a 43 per cent stake in CityJet if the courts approve the Irish regional's US$6.6 million rescue plan. Malmo has also begun codesharing with Air UK. CityJet, which flies five BAe 146s, has withdrawn from the Dublin-Brussels route, but plans to increase Dublin-London City frequencies to ...

  • News

    Lufthansa sale

    1997-02-01T09:50:00Z

    The German government has approved a bill for Lufthansa's full privatisation ahead of the flotation of the state's remaining 35.68 per cent stake later this year. Foreign ownership will be capped at 50 per cent. Three-fifths of Lufthansa's employees have acquired the equivalent of 0.5 per cent of its capital ...

  • News

    Geneva launch

    1997-02-01T09:49:00Z

    Swiss World Airlines plans to launch long-haul services from Geneva with three Boeing 767s in mid-1998. The carrier is searching for investors, and cannot fly until Swissair's monopoly is revoked by parliament.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    The sales of the century?

    1997-02-01T09:49:00Z

    The sales of the century? NetsAAvers, CyberSavers, E-Savers or On-Line Travel Specials - under various names, four of the largest US carriers, plus a handful of others, are experimenting with using the Internet to promote special fare deals. They are selling what is essentially 'distressed' inventory - seats on weekend ...

  • News

    Credits roll on the Douglas era

    1997-02-01T08:55:00Z

    One of the most pressing concerns for airlines should the merger between Boeing and McDonnell Douglas go ahead centres on whether the current Douglas product lines will remain intact and, by implication, what will happen to the residual values of Douglas aircraft they own. No-one knows for sure ...

  • News

    BA-AA: a hell of a furore

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission's latest drive to secure external competence in aviation matters is little short of a public relations disaster. But then the way most parties have acted during the response period to the UK's Office of Fair Trading report on the proposed British Airways-American Airlines alliance reeks of bad ...

  • News

    BA tightens Euro screws

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    British Airways will intensify its efforts to turn around its unprofitable operations in France and Germany after the acquisition of Air Liberté and the relaunch of Deutsche BA. Air Liberté's fate rests in BA's hands after the commercial tribunal in Creteil finally approved BA's recovery plan, filed in ...

  • News

    Garuda link

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Garuda and Northwest Airlines have signed an MoU to pursue a broad marketing and operating alliance. The deal envisages codesharing, schedule coordination, a CRS linkup and joint marketing. On the operational side, Northwest plans to extend its three weekly Seattle-Osaka flights to Jakarta.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    1997: very best of the decade?

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    There is an extraordinary degree of optimism about world economic prospects in the year ahead. Equity markets, the global barometer of business health, stand at or close to record levels on both sides of the Atlantic and have been climbing in the Pacific; oil prices have begun to flatten after ...

  • News

    Papering over the cracks?

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    With close to 500 typewritten pages and 61 boxes of supporting documents, the application by American Airlines and British Airways for antitrust immunity for their alliance, announced early in January, appears to be an attempt to either bowl over or bore US regulators into approving it. US Department of Transportation ...

  • News

    Delta dumps Frankfurt hub

    1997-02-01T00:00:00Z

    By insisting his airline will remain the number one transatlantic carrier and the leading US carrier in Germany, Delta Air Lines' chairman Ron Allen is trying to put a positive spin on the winding down of the Frankfurt hub. The decision, which is expected to boost operating profits ...