All news – Page 6383

  • News

    UK charter airlines growing urge to merge

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Consolidation is speeding up in the UK leisure market as charter carriers Flying Colours and Caledonian Airways merge to form a vertically integrated airline, JMC Airlines. The creation of JMC Airlines follows the merger of parent companies, Thomas Cook and Carlson. Over the next five years, JMC will ...

  • News

    Iberia prepares to float

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The delayed flotation of a 54% stake in Iberia will start in the last week of November, according to the Spanish flag-carrier's chief executive, Angel Mullor. The initial public offering (IPO) should raise Ptas300 billion ($2 billion) for Iberia's parent, the state-owned holding group Sepi. The sale marks the ...

  • News

    CAL sanctions bite

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    NICK IONIDES ATI SINGAPORE Calls have been made for a shake-up in both Taiwan's aviation bureaucracy and in China Airlines' (CAL) management team following a crash in Hong Kong in August. So far, the carrier's relatively new management team, installed following an Airbus A300 crash at Taipei ...

  • News

    Vietnam in US link-up deal

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The prospect of air links between the USA and Vietnam has strengthened following successful negotiations on a codesharing deal, designed as an interim measure until a full air services agreement is reached. The memorandum was to have been signed in Hanoi early in September during a visit to ...

  • News

    Routes

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    New Zealand agreement - New Zealand and Switzerland have signed an air services agreement allowing for scheduled services between the two countries. Air New Zealand has applied to operate to Switzerland and initial services are considered likely via a route-specific codeshare agreement with Swissair. The air services agreement allows any ...

  • News

    The Airport Awards

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The aviation industry is hardly short of awards events, but the Airport Awards can perhaps claim to be different. Uniquely, these awards aim to recognise the success of airports in developing and implementing marketing strategies - not just for the benefit of passengers and profits, but in partnership with the ...

  • News

    Delta pilots talk tough

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    KAREN WALKER WASHINGTON DC Delta Air Line pilots have thrown down the gauntlet to airline management and demanded formal negotiations in one of the most important US contract negotiations of the year. But a swift response by management has already led to a tentative agreement In addition to ...

  • News

    Aloha grows beyond the Hawaiian islands

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    In the boldest move of its 53-year history, Aloha Airlines has decided to launch scheduled flights beyond the Hawaiian islands. In September, the carrier started weekly flights to the Republic of the Marshall Islands in the central Pacific, and also plans its first flights to the US mainland in February. ...

  • News

    Boeing keeps control of outsourcing

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Boeing has emerged the winner in its recent negotiations with the International Association of Machinists over the issue of outsourcing. The union had demanded that Boeing give up its right to outsource or subcontract work, a growing concern among Boeing workers worried about job security. Their ...

  • News

    Canadians spar over single airline

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE October will be a decisive month in Canada as its airline industry struggles to define its future. Only one major carrier is likely to survive, but fundamental questions must be settled before a 10 November deadline about who will own and control the airline. ...

  • News

    Sabre chief's departure fuels talk of rift with AMR

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    JANE LEVERE NEW YORK The head of Sabre, the travel distribution and information group controlled by American Airlines' parent AMR, unexpectedly left his job in early September, raising questions about the company's future. Michael Durham, Sabre's president and chief executive officer, left the company suddenly, saying in a ...

  • News

    Cintra's chief faces challenge

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Jaime Corredor Esnaola, the new head of Cintra, takes over the holding company for Aeromexico and Mexicana Airlines at a challenging time. After replacing Ernesto Martens, who retired at the end of August, one of his first moves was to announce that Mexico's federal ...

  • News

    JetBlue wins Kennedy slots in low-fares battle

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    CAROLE SHIFRIN WASHINGTON DC JetBlue Airways has cleared a major hurdle in its attempt to start new low-fare services from New York after being granted key take-off and landing rights at J F Kennedy International Airport by the US Department of Transportation. The agency gave JetBlue a total of 75 ...

  • News

    Low-costs in fierce battle at Stansted

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    LOIS JONES LONDONc Cut-throat competition between low-cost players at London Stansted airport looks set to cause casualties with the launch of KLM uk's Buzz KLMuk is to set up a low-cost fares airline next year called Buzz at Stansted to compete with Go and Ryanair. The carrier, ...

  • News

    Austrian Airlines joins Star Alliance

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    PETER BENNETT VIENNA Austrian Airlines' joint chief executives Herbert Bammer and Mario Rehulka, finally forwent a deal Air France and Delta Air Lines to join the Star Alliance. However, there is a lingering doubt whether Austrian's application to gain new anti-trust immunity with United Airlines will be approved and, ...

  • News

    SAA/Sun Air deal seems doomed to fail

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    ROGER MAKINGS JOHANNESBURG A bid by South African Airways to acquire a controlling stake in domestic rival Sun Air looks set to end in failure. The government is expected to refer the proposed deal back to the shareholders. In August, SAA announced that it had secured a ...

  • News

    New dispute looms after Sydney gets go-ahead

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE The decision on whether to build an additional Sydney airport edged another step closer early in September when Australia's environment minister gave the Badgerys Creek proposal a qualified go-ahead. A dispute is escalating, however, over how to fund the A$5 billion ($3.2 billion) project, ...

  • News

    JAS offers to trade slots for codeshares

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    As losses on its international services mount, Japan Air System (JAS) is proposing to hand some of its slots at Tokyo's Narita airport to Japan Airlines (JAL) and All Nippon Airways (ANA). In return JAS would seek codeshares on replacement flights operated by the two majors. This would be first ...

  • News

    Vanuatu faces barriers to privatisation

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The decision by Vanuatu to prepare its flag carrier for privatisation is likely to hit some of the same snags experienced elsewhere in the Pacific Islands. Vanuatu, located 2,000km east of Australia, decided to sell 49% of Air Vanuatu to an international airline, following a recommendation from New Zealand ...

  • News

    Kobe gets new airport

    1999-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Construction of a controversial airport for the Japanese city of Kobe has finally begun, nearly 30 years after it was first proposed. The airport is to be built on 270Ha (670 acres) of reclaimed land, with a single 2,500m (8,200ft)-long runway capable of handling 20,000 flight movement annually. It is ...