All air transport news – Page 2570

  • News

    Dutch loss

    1995-08-01T16:14:00Z

    Fokker has warned shareholders that equity will fall to below half the issued share capital, as the net loss in the first half of 1995 was expected to be greater than the DFl449 million ($288 million) loss for all of 1994.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    Superjumbo or white elephant?

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Mrs Akido is flying from Sapporo to Fukuoka to visit her mother. While the aircraft is taxiing to the runway, she goes through the safety procedure on her virtual reality screen. In the noise-proofed cabin she cannot hear the roar of the engines, nestling under the 80 metre wingspan, as ...

  • News

    Don't just talk

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Leading airlines have long talked about spinning off or even selling their non-core operations but there are finally signs that they are putting their words into action. T Wakelee Smith of SH&E assesses what progress has been made.For several years now, airline experts and management gurus have expounded on the ...

  • News

    Staying in business

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Iata's director general Pierre Jeanniot is preaching the benefits of market economics and privatisation to member airlines while carrying out the association's own extensive internal review and restructuring. Interview by Jacqueline Gallacher. Pierre Jeanniot is no stranger to government bureaucracy, nor to market restrictions. As president and chief executive of ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    South African Airways has begun a weekly service between Cape Town and Frankfurt, as well as between Johannesburg and Dar es Salaam. The service will use Alliance's B747SP. Emirates has launched twice weekly services from Abu Dhabi to Beirut originating from its base in Dubai. Transaero ...

  • News

    A new breed?

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    The US airline industry has produced several waves of startup carriers at various points in its history. The latest such surge, centred on low-cost entrants, started in 1992 with the recession in full swing and is now slowing in the swell of an economic upturn. Mead Jennings examines the new ...

  • News

    Air France sale to bail out Chirac?

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    There is a paradox at the heart of the economic strategy being pursued by the new Chirac administration in France. The highest priority of President Jacques Chirac's government is the reduction of unemployment. This was the centrepiece of his campaign for the presidency, his main preoccupation at the G7 ...

  • News

    Doubts fail to rip Oz

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite two outstanding strategic issues clouding the long awaited privatisation of Qantas, initial investor interest appears solid. But a reduced issue price is threatening to cut dramatically the value of British Airways' 25 per cent investment and shrink the expected returns for the federal coffers. As applications for ...

  • News

    The digital age: A virtual reality?

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Second-guessing future developments will help airlines in key areas like distribution.Good morning. It's 0800 local time on 1 August 2005. This synthesised, virtual reality, digital Airline Business newscast is brought to you, wherever you are, by satellite from London. The top stories this morning: * United Lufthansa buys final tranche ...

  • News

    Indian feed for starters

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    A third tier of Indian feeder carriers is emerging as more turboprop operators, backed by state governments and investment from home and abroad, start up in a potentially lucrative market. The smaller carriers will fill the gap below the country's jet operators, which, with profitability still eluding them, ...

  • News

    Swedes root for Carlzon

    1995-08-01T00:00:00Z

    A long-awaited shakeup in the ownership of Swedish independent Transwede will see a shift towards charter operations and a retreat back into scheduled domestic services. The change also sees the return of ex-SAS chief Jan Carlzon to the industry as president of new holding company Transpool and chairman ...

  • News

    Nagoya A300 families to sue CAL and Airbus

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    RELATIVES OF VICTIMS killed in the 1994 China Airlines (CAL) Airbus Industrie A300-600R crash, in Nagoya, Japan, have decided to sue the aircraft manufacturer and Taiwanese carrier, for substantial damages. Families of 124 of the crash victims are jointly seeking around '100 million ($1.16 million) each in compensation ...

  • News

    TransBrazil ditches 777

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    TRANSBRASIL HAS cancelled its order for three Boeing 777s. The Brazilian carrier informed Boeing of its decision just days before the Paris air show, held during June, but the US manufacturer has yet to announce the move officially. Transbrasil ordered the aircraft in 1993, originally for delivery starting ...

  • News

    Russian regrets?

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    The initial enthusiasm for East-West joint projects appears to be waning. Alexander Velovich/MOSCOW AT THE END OF THE 1980s, political and economical changes in the Soviet Union opened the way for a series of co-operative agreements between Western and Soviet aerospace companies. Now, five years ...

  • News

    High-speed trains pose no threat to aircraft services

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Sir - A recent report to the International Civil Aviation Organisation-CAEP, High-speed trains - competition and competitive power, written by Jan Veldhuis (Netherlands Civil Aviation Authority), Alf Schmitt (Germany) and myself, provides minimal support for the apprehensions put forward by "name withheld" and Haluk Taysi of Airbus (Flight International, Letters, ...

  • News

    P&W begins testing PW4090 turbofan

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    PRATT & WHITNEY IS testing its PW4090 turbofan, the latest high-thrust version of the PW4000 which, rated at 400kN (90,000lb) take-off thrust, is destined to power Boeing's high- gross-weight 777-200 wide-body twinjet. The East Hartford, Connecticut-based company hopes to obtain US Federal Aviation Administration certification for the engine ...

  • News

    A320 Overhaul

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa Technik (LTAG) began overhauling Airbus A320 landing gears at its Hamburg, Germany site in July. Meanwhile, LTAG has acquired a complete Boeing 747-200 landing gear, in addition to the 747-400 gear already held in the company's inventory of rotable spares. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Pemco pushes heavier 727-200

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    PEMCO WORLD AIR Services Group has received US Federal Aviation Administration supplemental type certification (STC) for weight increases for the Boeing 727-200. The STC raises the maximum zero fuel weight to almost 70,370kg from 63,320kg, and maximum landing weight is increased to almost 74,500kg from 72,575. The first ...

  • News

    Agusta Power will 'double A.109 production' rate

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    AGUSTA HOPES ALMOST to double production of its A.109 twin-turbine helicopter when deliveries of the new A.109 Power begin in mid-1996. The present A.109C and "hot-and-high" K2 will remain in production alongside the Power, and the Italian manufacturer hopes to increase production from the recent level of 20-25 annually to ...

  • News

    FAA calls for check on THY JT8Ds overhauls

    1995-07-26T00:00:00Z

    THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration will issue an airworthiness directive (AD) calling for detailed inspection of Pratt & Whitney JT8D turbofan engines overhauled by Turk Hava Yollari (THY), an FAA-certificated aircraft and engine-maintenance shop in Turkey. The AD results from an investigation of the 8 June uncontained failure ...