All Networks news – Page 1340

  • News

    Carnival will merge with Pan American

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    CARNIVAL AIRLINES has agreed to merge with start-up carrier Pan American World Airways, and to operate under the Pan Am name. While negotiations continue, Pan Am will pursue plans to gain its own operator's certificate and to launch low-fare services between Miami, New York and Los Angeles. When ...

  • News

    US/Japanese cargo row flares up again

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE THE US AND Japanese Governments are once again become embroiled in a bitter row over air-cargo rights, with the two sides threatening to impose sanctions from the end of July. The US Department of Transportation (DoT) says that it will restrict certain Japan ...

  • News

    LOT orders additional 737s

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH LOT POLISH Airlines is expanding its fleet with an order for four new Boeing 737s, including two new-generation -800s, in response to rising domestic and international traffic. The order, believed to be worth $160 million, is for two 144-seat 737-400s and two ...

  • News

    Emirates stays in the black

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    EMIRATES AIRLINES reports that it managed to keep profits relatively steady over the last financial year, although the carrier acknowledges that it has faced a "challenge" to stay in the black. The airline ended the 1995/6 financial year to March with a profit of $22 million. That is ...

  • News

    Relaunch emphasises Saudi Arabian's new commercialism

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/JEDDAH IN ITS FIRST major revamp for over two decades, Saudi Arabian Airlines has unveiled a new corporate identity and pledged a new sense of commercialism within the state-owned carrier. The revamp, which includes the dropping of the name Saudia, is described by the ...

  • News

    Deja deja vu

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    THE JAPANESE AND US Governments are once again going to the edge in the latest round of bilateral-air-service negotiations by threatening each other with sanctions and counter-sanctions. The news has been greeted by industry observers, in Tokyo and Washington, with a collective cry of "here we go again". ...

  • News

    Crash spoils TWA safety record

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    THE TWA 747-100 accident on 17 July marks the first fatal crash for the airline in a decade. The last incident occurred in April 1986, when a terrorist bomb exploded on board a Boeing 727 inbound to Athens, killing four passengers, although the aircraft landed safely. Excluding terrorist ...

  • News

    Chinese Boeing deal signals relaxation in Sino-US relations

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    IN A SIGN OF gradual thawing of relations between Washington and Beijing, Air China has ordered three Boeing 747-400s, while McDonnell Douglas (MDC) has agreed to deliver its first MD-90 TrunkLiner to China Northern. The three new Boeing 747-400s are scheduled for delivery in May and August 1997 ...

  • News

    BA tones up alliance defence

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    British Airways' proposed tie-up with American Airlines could be the most scrutinised partnership in airline history Kevin O'Toole and Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON RARELY CAN AN AIRLINE alliance have whipped up such controversy. Since it was announced, the proposed tie-up between British Airways and American Airlines has been drawing unprecedented ...

  • News

    Air Malta outlines plans for Azzura Air

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    AIR MALTA has purchased two AI(R) Avro RJ85s to start its new Italian-based venture AzzuraAir. The airline expects to add a third aircraft to the order by the end of July (Flight International, 22-28 May). Joseph Tabone, the Air Malta chairman, says that he expects to launch AzzuraAir ...

  • News

    Asian governments are offered Saeaga shareholding

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    MALAYSIAN timber tycoon Ting Pek Khiing has offered the governments of Brunei, Indonesia and Philippines each a 10% stake in his struggling start-up regional carrier Saeaga Airlines. Ting's offer follows recent talks between Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohammad and Philippine president Fidel Ramos on establishing a joint regional ...

  • News

    Trent 777 ETOPS testing resumes

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    BOEING RESUMED extended-range twin-engined operations (ETOPS) testing of the Rolls-Royce Trent 800-powered 777 on 11 July, after foreign-object damage was determined to be the cause of a surge which halted testing on 16 June (Flight International, 3-9 July). Testing for 180min ETOPS clearance is expected to be completed on schedule ...

  • News

    WestPac agrees big 328 deal

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH DORNIER LUFTFAHRT has secured the first new orders for the Dornier 328 turboprop since a majority of the company was sold to Fairchild in June. Western Pacific Airlines ("WestPac") has placed an order for up to 24 328s, which it selected over the Aero International (Regional) ...

  • News

    Test of faith

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    NO-ONE BENEFITS when accident-investigation agencies clash over the cause of an air crash. The arguments may be based on genuine grievances, but they only serve to deflect attention from the wider issues at stake. It has happened this week because the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has ...

  • News

    Hub crack is blamed for MD-88 fan failure

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    A FATIGUE crack in the fan hub is the likely cause of the uncontained failure of a Pratt & Whitney JT8D-219 powering a Delta McDonnell Douglas MD-88. Two passengers were killed and four injured when the left-engine fan disintegrated, sending debris into the cabin during the take-off run of Flight ...

  • News

    ValuJet bids to resume flying with smaller fleet

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    VALUJET AIRLINES hopes to win the US Federal Aviation Administration's approval to resume service as early as the first week of August. It has submitted a plan to the FAA's Atlanta, Georgia, regional office describing how the grounded low-fare carrier would resume flights with about 15 aircraft. More ...

  • News

    First New Zealand Airbus goes to Kiwi International

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Kiwi International Airlines has become the first New Zealand airline to operate an Airbus type, with the acquistion of an A320 on lease from Orix. It will be used for flights to Australia, serving Sydney and Brisbane, and to extend the airline's network to include Melbourne and Perth. ...

  • News

    Leading the way to extinction?

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Sir - A petulant strike by pilots of the world's most successful airline would be a double betrayal of the piloting profession. Besides bringing it into disrepute, it could contribute to its ultimate extinction with the advent of the unmanned airliner. The prestige and salaries enjoyed by British ...

  • News

    Market change

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    ARIANESPACE HAS analysed three major factors for the reduction of GEO civil-communications satellites. The globalisation (or regionalisation) of space projects has caused a significant change in the telecommunications market. National projects are tending to disappear, replaced by projects "without borders". The monopolies held by organisations such as Intelsat are at ...

  • News

    The cabin challenge

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Perceptions of new cabin dangers are emerging as old problems resurface. Paul Phelan/CAIRNS David Learmount/LONDON AIRLINE PASSENGERS ignore safety briefings because they believe that it is the cabin crew's responsibility to protect them, according to recent research. Professor Helen Muir, of Cranfield University in the UK, ...