All Networks news – Page 1210
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More than one
South Korea scrapped a single carrier policy which prevented its two international carriers from competing on many overseas routes. Meanwhile Korean Air has agreed to expand its codeshare agreement with Delta Air Lines into a global marketing arrangement. Source: Airline Business
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Debonair move
Low cost carrier Debonair is to launch its first London/Gatwick service in October, to Barcelona. Source: Airline Business
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The devil's in the detail
The European Commission's rulings on two transatlantic alliances will be poured over by interested parties before official comments are filed. Now that the European Commission finally has produced its conditions for approving the American Airlines/British Airways alliance, lawyers will be scrambling to examine the detail. The Commission's competition directorate, ...
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Air Afrique in crisis again
Air Afrique hopes to overcome its worst crisis yet by privatising and forming a strategic partnership, but critics say the airline's chairman has mismanaged and should resign. The heavily indebted Côte d'Ivoire-based carrier, owned by 11 African states and Air France, has defaulted on payments for four Airbus A310-300s ...
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Report weakens airport campaign
First, the good news. According to an official report, most of the runways in the US national airport system are in good to excellent condition. The bad news is that this may not be good for the airports. It will not be good news if the report, compiled by ...
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Keeping score
Airlines need an accurate means of comparing the potential benefits of their various alliance options and, once the choice is made, to assess the costs and benefits to each partner. The argument about whether alliances are effective and therefore inevitable is over; they are both. The potential benefits to ...
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Slot sale ban challenged
The UKOffice of Fair Trading (OFT) has broadly accepted the European Commission's conditions for approval of the BA-American transatlantic alliance but has criticised the ban on slot sales and the demand that the US-UK market be opened to all European Economic Area carriers. The OFT's director general, John Bridgeman, ...
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Scandinavia takes color
The launch of a low-cost no-frills start-up in Norway has forced the incumbents to cut prices, but the new entrant will be facing tough competition. Color Air began flying out of Oslo to Aaselsund on 7 August and will expand its network to Trondheim and Bergen later in August, ...
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Airline News
Transbrasil and TAP Air Portugal began codesharing on services between Lisbon and Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and Fortaleza on 30 June. TAP intends to expand in Brazil via Transbrasil's domestic network, as part of an agreement signed in 1997. Swissair was to begin codesharing with THY Turkish Airlines, ...
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Profits for better and for worse
Airline profits may be at an all-time high but can the industry keep them there? It's just déjà vu all over again. So a disillusioned sportsman is said to have remarked on seeing his team once again collapse to defeat. There may be more than a few in the airline ...
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Two set for Tokyo launch
Japan has taken several more steps towards deregulating its skies by liberalising overseas fares and licensing two new domestic airlines. The Ministry of Transport is promoting fares competition by allowing higher discounts on international tickets. From October, fares for overseas tours may be 35 per cent below International Air ...
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Startup fills Vegas niche
A planned new Las Vegas-based airline differs from previous contenders in that its backers, two of the largest casino companies in the US, have a strong vested interest in its success. National Airlines expects to begin operations in early 1999 and has already raised more than US$50 million in ...
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Aces trumps
Bogotá has convinced Washington that Aces can fly new Airbus A320s to the US even though Colombia remains in category 2. Category 2 freezes US routes and fleets for foreign airlines, but Aces' tests and pressure from Colombian officials convinced the FAA to exemptthe airline's new jets. Source: Airline ...
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PAL fights for survival
Philippine Airlines' future hangs in the balance as it prepares a plan to avoid bankruptcy. PAL's interim receivership committee is being supervised by the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission as it works towards the SEC's 21 September deadline. PAL is struggling to survive an ill-fated fleet expansion and Asia's ...
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Peru vies for US markets
Peru's airlines are scrambling to claim more than their current one-quarter share of the Peru-US market in the face of a growing invasion by US and fifth freedom airlines. Three Peruvian carriers are vying to enter the US market, which has doubled over the last eight years, sparking a ...
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Strong on caution
Qantas needs to respond quickly to market conditions yet its managing director, James Strong, refuses to be rushed into any major decisions. If he has said it once, he has said it in a dozen ways: 'There's no use charging around the place; you don't just snatch at things ...
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SIA moves to link with CAL
Singapore Airlines' latest linkup - with China Airlines - offers few clues as to whether it will join the Star Alliance. The agreement by Singapore Airlines and China Airlines to form a strategic partnership caught many by surprise because it does not follow the pattern of pacts between members ...
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A time for celebration
While 1997 certainly broke all industry records for profitability, there were already dark clouds on the horizon as the effects of the Asian currency crisis began to make themselves felt. There will be worse to come this year as economies in the region continue to slow. So while the ...
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Recipe for reform
Romania's national airline still hopes to attract a western partner, if only the economy would improve. Take one battered old airport, add a few old Russian aircraft, and then throw in years of political instability. Stir with economic collapse, simmer for nine years, and serve with a garnish of ...
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US alliances meet silence
A Wall Street analyst is predicting that none of the proposed US domestic airline alliances will be approved by the Department of Transportation because of the unfavourable environment in Washington DC and concerns about competition. Candace Browning, an analyst at Merrill Lynch in New York, points out that the ...