News from FlightGlobal – Page 2628
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Strikingly Cheap
Air Inter has kicked off an aggressive fare-cutting campaign in an attempt to win back some of the 397,000 passengers lost - around 8% of annual volume - during a series of strikes between February and May. Passengers will be offered a Fr100 ($20) fare on any route within France ...
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Franco/Japanese Link
Air France has reinforced its long-standing alliance with Japan Airlines with a new accord aimed at improving co-operation on the airlines' frequent-flier programmes. The two will also introduce code sharing, which already exists between Paris and Osaka, on the Paris-Tokyo route. Further moves to harmonise their tariff structures are also ...
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Kenya Aerotech
Nairobi, Kenya-based ground-handling company Kenya Aerotech has appointed Simon Watts general manager for field services. He was formerly a consultant with Kuwait Airways and has also served with British Airways. Source: Flight International
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Southern Air
Stephen Van Gordon has been appointed senior vice-president of technical services for US carrier Southern Air Transport, of Miami, Florida. He was formerly general manager for airframe maintenance at United Airlines. Michael Vogt has been named director of sales for the Pacific Rim. He was most recently regional manager for ...
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Financial results
An exceptional charge of £139.2m ($226.8m) for restructuring contributed to the loss. Team Aer Lingus, the maintenance unit, lost £27.9m. Air France expects losses of FFr3.5b ($713m) for its 15 month 'year'. Debt fell from FFr33.6b to FFr27b due to the state capital injection. Lower ticket prices and ...
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Fly America in the ointment
The failure of US and UK aeropolitical negotiators to reach agreement on a proposed 'mini deal' in mid-April was just another chapter in years of fractious negotiations between the two countries. But the tripping point was so small that even veteran negotiators turned away in disgust at their inability to ...
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Suppliers
Amadeus has signed new partners, the Colombian flag carrier Avianca, and ANATO, the country's travel agency association, to operate the CRS in Colombia. GE Aircraft Engines has signed an MoU with IHI for the Japanese company to develop and manufacture 25 to 30 per cent of the CF34-8C ...
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Airports
The privatisation of the UK Civil Aviation Authority's National Air Traffic Services has been postponed indefinitely. Lockheed Air Terminal is currently completing a feasibility study for the conversion of Zolotaya Dolina Air Base to a commercial passenger and cargo airport. The former air base is in Nakhodka on ...
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Orders
Aero Lloyd has ordered four A321s and two A320s direct from Airbus Industrie, worth $306 million. In addition the German charter will lease four A320s and six A321s from Los Angeles-based lessor ILFC. Delivery of the V2500 powered aircraft will begin in early 1996. United Airlines has ordered ...
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Appointments
Capt ST Deo, Capt JRD Rao and PJ Crasta have been appointed deputy managing directors at Indian Airlines. NC Ghosh has replaced RN Saxena as director of finance. Bob Taylor has been named managing director European services for American Airlines. John Garel has been appointed senior ...
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JAL's new head
Japan Airlines has appointed Akira Kondo as its next president and Akio Kohno as executive vice president. Kondo is presently the senior managing director, corporate planning and will succeed Matsuo Toshimitsu, who will remain on the board. Source: Airline Business
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Name change
PWA Corporation, parent company of Canadian Airlines International, has changed its name to Canadian Airlines Corporation. Meanwhile, American Airlines is to phase in codesharing on all transborder routes with Canadian from mid-June, with full implementation by the end of the year. Source: Airline Business
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Even bidding
Nine consortia including Air France, Continental, Vasp, Taca, Aces, and Carnival Airlines are bidding for a 50.1 per cent stake in Ecuatoriana. Business plans plus a minimum working capital sum of $10 million must be submitted by mid-June. Source: Airline Business
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US antipathy gives focus
Nations in Asia-Pacific ponder the benefits of a single market. Aeropolitics in the Asia-Pacific region are at something of a crossroads. The US has always been a single market, and the European Union created a single market in 1993. But the Pacific Rim nations remain aeropolitically fragmented, and this could ...
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A mighty match
Can the Boeing 747-400 freighter be more profitable than an older conversion? Mark W Lyon reports.A new freighter aircraft can be a financial conundrum. How can one be confident of financing a $150 million investment over 20 years when cargo yields fluctuate wildly and show a disturbing long-term decline? Between ...
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Pushing the limits
Failure to agree a new international system quickly could mean that all airlines will face unlimited financial liability for the injury or death of their passengers. David Knibb reports.It may already be too late, but even those who still champion the Montreal Protocols now acknowledge that time is running out ...
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Suppliers in demand
What enlarged role could suppliers and manufacturers play as airlines look to outsourcing as a cost control mechanism? Kevin P Michaels and William D Angeloni of the Canaan Group explore the possibilities.Airline suppliers have already endured a tumultuous decade - order boom followed by order bust, complicated by the constant ...
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A question of give and take
Many airlines have become more demanding of marketing alliances and are now prepared to abandon bad agreements or switch partners to get the right benefits.To the untrained eye the level of alliance activity over the past year could seem rather subdued compared to the frenetic activity of previous years. Some ...
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Not so easy
Where are the Southwests of Europe? As 1997 fast approaches, Sara Guild talks to the sole example, Ryanair, and looks at the difficulties of establishing the profitable low cost, low fare European airline. Tentative inquiries from the US are reaching the ears of would-be European airline companies. Two years away ...
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Making it work
Though airline alliances will come and go in the years to come, this survey demonstrates that they will almost certainly remain a strong feature of the industry. Despite some significant deletions since last year, particularly in the realm of route specific cooperation, each time an agreement has died another partnership ...