All Networks news – Page 1146

  • News

    Routes

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic has received US approval to allow it to begin services between London Heathrow and Chicago O'Hare from November. Midway Airlines will begin a new service between Louisville, Kentucky, and its hub at Raleigh-Durham from 15 October. The airline plans to offer three daily non-stop flights each way using ...

  • News

    Hapag-Lloyd pushes reluctant Airbus on A310 replacement

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/MUNICH German charter carrier Hapag-Lloyd's effort to replace its Airbus A310s is being frustrated by the reluctance of Airbus and Boeing to commit to developing new short/medium-range widebody types. The airline is one of a growing band of operators, including Lufthansa and Singapore Airlines, that seek A310 ...

  • News

    Air Afrique expands with A330-200 lease

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Afrique has concluded a deal with International Lease Finance for the lease of two Airbus A330-200s, to enable it to upgrade its long-haul operations. Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire-based Air Afrique will take the two Pratt & Whitney PW6168-powered aircraft late next year on seven-year leases to operate services from ...

  • News

    PAL enters cargo venture talks with Lufthansa

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/SINGAPORE Struggling Philippine Airlines (PAL) is talking to Lufthansa about a joint cargo service between Manila and Frankfurt, which could mark PAL's return to Europe after a year away. According to PAL, the proposed block space agreement will come into effect on 1 November, with PAL buying ...

  • News

    Airports

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Brussels Zaventem Airport is planning to spend BFr1 billion ($26 million) to build a new air traffic control tower. This has become necessary because the view of one of the runways from the existing tower will be obstructed when terminal construction work is completed. The new 75m (246ft)-high tower will ...

  • News

    AAIC calls police in SilkAir 'suicide' crash

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/SINGAPORE Indonesian accident investigators say they have contacted police after formally confirming that a SilkAir Boeing 737-300 may have been deliberately crashed by one of the crew in December 1997, near Palembang, Sumatra. All 104 passengers and crew on board the 737, which was operating flight MI185 ...

  • News

    Orlando courts Europeans

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic Airways has signed a long-term agreement for a $58 million international 12-gate terminal to be built at Orlando airport, Florida. The recent approval of the lease, which runs until 2008 for one gate, is described by Greater Orlando Aviation Authority (GOAA) officials as "unique" for a foreign ...

  • News

    China's fortunes improve

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Nicholas Ionides SINGAPORE The Chinese Government is claiming success in its struggle to turn the country's unprofitable airlines around, but has warned that the industry is not out of the woods yet. The state-run China Daily newspaper says total losses by the country's 30-plus airlines in the first half of ...

  • News

    US carriers gripe over China routes

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE All three US carriers that have been tentatively awarded new rights to China have asked the US Department of Transportation (DoT) for more flights than they have received. Of the 17 new weekly flights allowed under the China-US bilateral between now and next April, the DoT ...

  • News

    AB Airlines becomes a low-fares casualty

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Industry analysts have been keenly awaiting a first casualty among the new generation of low-cost airlines. The waiting was finally over last month as London-based AB Airlines went into administration. AB has been around since late 1993, but came to the fore a year ago as it made a ...

  • News

    KLM, Alitalia produce the goods with cargo deal

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Peter Conway LONDON Airline alliances tend to generate much rhetoric about cargo partnerships, but little action. However, the tie-up between KLM and Alitalia, announced in July, looks set to be different. Cargo departments within the two carriers have already gone further in their planning than KLM's long-running tie-up with Northwest. ...

  • News

    KLM uk eyes low-cost route

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones LONDON Fierce competition from low-cost carriers at its London Stansted base is forcing KLM uk to rethink its market position and restructure. Launching its own no-frills service is one possibility. The KLM regional subsidiary is to axe six unprofitable routes from 12 September and streamline its fleet. The ...

  • News

    Routes

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Tunisian tie-up - Air France and Tunisair are to extend their codeshare agreement, under way in Tunis, Lyon and Marseilles, to cover all flights between Tunisia and France by next year. Copenhagen meets Cracow - SAS introduced a daily service between Copenhagen in Denmark and Cracow in Poland on ...

  • News

    Majors eye Kennedy terminals

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Delta Air Lines and United Airlines are weighing up major investments in new terminal facilities at New York's Kennedy Airport, already in the middle of a massive $9 billion redevelopment programme for new terminals and infrastructure. Delta and United operate from outdated and overcrowded facilities while many of ...

  • News

    Routes

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    SriLankan/MAS codeshare - SriLankan Airlines, formerly Air Lanka, has agreed to share codes with Malaysia Airlines on flights between Colombo and Kuala Lumpur. Under the agreement, MAS is adding its code to thrice-weekly services being operated by the Colombo-based carrier. JAS and Northwest in Japan - Japan Air System ...

  • News

    Profits on a plateau

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole In the final analysis, the airline industry's financial results for 1998 were once again a mix of the encouraging and the depressingly familiar. Overall profitability came out at almost identical levels to the year before. The industry should perhaps take heart from that fact, given the dire ...

  • News

    Stormy weather

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Carole Shifrin WASHINGTON DC Air traffic delays are not unique to Europe. The USA is also being forced to look hard at upgrading services After some fierce attacks by several top airline officials on the Federal Aviation Administration's running of the US air traffic control system, airline and FAA ...

  • News

    Controlling the future

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Peter Bennett VIENNA Commercialisation, privatisation and the empowerment of Eurocontrol are possible solutions to Europe's growing delays. The solution for Europe's air traffic delays is simple. First, look at the causes - a fragmented air system controlled by a patchwork of control centres that leads to the inefficient management ...

  • News

    Raising the internet stakes

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Dennis Blank ORLANDO The explosion of online travel booking in the USA - stimulated by offerings of bargain basement ticket fares - is attracting the wrath of travel agents. But US major carriers cannot ignore this rapidly growing marketplace. This year, the customary late summer round of airfare bargains across ...

  • News

    BA reins in again

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones LONDON British Airways may have stayed profitable through the last recession but it is now fighting to stay out of the red For over a decade British Airways has been the shining example of how a profitable airline should look. But it could be about to fall from ...