All news – Page 6433

  • News

    Boeing selected in $1.3 billion Australian AEW&C contest

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Peter La Franchi/CANBERRAAustralia has become the launch customer for Boeing's mid-sized airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) system under a A$2 billion-plus ($1.3 billion) selection announced on 21 July.Boeing will deliver the first of seven B737-700 aircraft, carrying Northrop Grumman's Multirole Electronically Scanned Array (MESA) radar, by 2004-2005.The award is ...

  • News

    Table: Airline Safety Review

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Notes on tables Accident data comes from Flight International's own research and from Airclaims' World Airline Accident Summary (WAAS)*, a quarterly updated analytical record of accidents and incidents worldwide since 1945. The WAAS, a UK Civil Aviation Authority publication, benefits from Airclaims' exclusive information exchange with the CIS Interstate Aviation ...

  • News

    Safety surprises

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    A relatively safe first half of 1999 included some landmark events in airline flight safety David Learmount/LONDON An airline industry-feared rise in air transport accidents is not happening. A marked flight safety improvement has occurred in the first half of this year, compared with the same period last year, despite ...

  • News

    Engine rivals are urged to talk on A400M bid co-operation

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/MUNICH Airbus Military Company (AMC) has shelved the engine selection for its proposed A400M medium transport because of political pressure for the competing powerplant manufacturers to find a joint European solution. A decision between the Snecma/MTU M138 turboprop and the rival BMW Rolls-Royce BR700-TP had been set for late ...

  • News

    Civvy strip

    1999-07-21T13:35:00Z

    Ed Reavis/FRANKFURT Two German airports regain economic ground lost when the US Air Force leftWith the end of the East-West confrontation and the following military drawdown, Germany's economy suffered major after-shocks from the closure of several major US military installations. Among those given up by the US Air ...

  • News

    Manufacturers wait

    1999-07-21T13:33:00Z

    Airbus Industrie and Boeing cannot ignore the implications of doing business in euros, but both manufacturers are holding back on offering airlines wholesale opportunities to sign euro sales contracts. Sale executives at the companies confirm that airlines have approached them with requests to buy aircraft with Europe's single currency, ...

  • News

    Philippine fillip

    1999-07-21T13:28:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CLARKAFB, PHILIPPINES A former US Air Force base could be the answer to traffic saturation at Manila airport Some airlines apologise in advance to their passengers for the bumpy rollout at Manila's Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA). With insufficient space for a new runway, NAIA is ...

  • News

    American dream

    1999-07-21T13:20:00Z

    Paul Seidenman/SAN FRANCISCO The new $585 million Austin-Bergstrom International Airport opened in May after four years of construction on the site of the old Bergstrom AFB, which closed in 1993. Thirteen kilometres (8 miles) south-east of Austin, the new commercial airport for Texas' capital replaces the 68-year-old Robert ...

  • News

    Taking on the dollar

    1999-07-21T12:43:00Z

    Jack Sellsby/LONDON When the euro was introduced at the start of this year, it became a huge source of new currency financing almost overnight, although the airlines were not the quickest of the corporates to take advantage. But like any other industry on the lookout for fresh, plentiful finance ...

  • News

    Control freaks

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    It often takes a crisis to unite an industry and push participants into much-needed action. A crisis is exactly what Europe's air traffic control system is facing this summer, and Eurocontrol, Europe's air navigation organisation, freely admits it. The signs are already there. Last summer's system performance was poor, ...

  • News

    CFMI scoops second slot on A318

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/WASHINGTON DC CFM International has secured a position as the second powerplant supplier on the new Airbus A318 after Air France selected the CFM56-5A/B over the Pratt & Whitney PW6000 launch engine. The French Government is believed to have stepped in with financial assistance to ensure a ...

  • News

    777 operators object to GE as sole supplier

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    A growing number of Boeing 777 operators are signalling displeasure over the selection of General Electric as the sole source powerplant supplier for the 777X, as potential launch customers receive offers of the ultra-long-range derivative. United Airlines has made its disapproval known by unveiling an order for more Pratt ...

  • News

    US Air Force fights for F-22 funding after Congress shock

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    The US Air Force has acted to justify its need for a stealthy air superiority fighter in the light of its Kosovo experience after being surprised by a Congressional move to delay the Lockheed Martin/ Boeing F-22 Raptor. A key Congressional subcommittee proposed that funds for the first six production ...

  • News

    Eurocontrol delays steps to taking regulatory powers

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    Emma Kelly/BRUSSELS Eurocontrol's Council has delayed until October a decision on whether to approve plans to consider granting the air navigation organisation regulatory powers to force member states to make urgent air traffic management (ATM) improvements. The move comes as Europe's air traffic control (ATC) system is facing a summer ...

  • News

    A340 beats 777 at China Airlines

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    China Airlines (CAL) has selected the Airbus Industrie A340-300 over the Boeing 777-200 for its long haul requirement as part of a larger refleeting plan totalling 24 aircraft. It includes orders for additional Boeing 747-400 freighters and 737-800s. The Taiwanese flag carrier, after a prolonged evaluation, is planning to ...

  • News

    UAV designated targets

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    US Air Force sources have confirmed that the General Atomics Predator unmanned air vehicle (UAV) was used to laser designate targets for combat aircraft in the Kosovo conflict, the first time that UAVs have been confirmed as designators for laser-guided munition carrying fast jets, although it is believed the Israelis ...

  • News

    Airbus keeps up pressure on Boeing by taking bulk of orders

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON Airbus Industrie took two thirds of the 350 orders placed during the first half of 1999, providing further agony for Boeing as it works to improve its financial situation. Official figures from Airbus show that 234 firm orders were taken between January and June, against 120 ...

  • News

    LanPeru hovers as AeroPeru searches for cash

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    LanPeru seeks to expand rapidly its new domestic operation, with international services to Miami and the surrounding region on its agenda. The airline could face delay, however, as AeroPeru, the bankrupt national carrier that is LanPeru's direct competitor, is given another 60-day extension by creditors to find financial backers. ...

  • News

    Boeing and Condor claim 757-300 record

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    Boeing hopes that the successful introduction into service of the 757-300 by launch customer Condor Flugdienst will help the US manufacturer boost the slow sales pace for world's longest narrowbody twinjet. Condor is one of only three customers that have so far placed a total of 17 firm orders ...

  • News

    TAM takes first A319s

    1999-07-21T00:00:00Z

    TAM has taken delivery of its first two Airbus A319s, which have been sold to Boullioun Aviation Services and leased back for five years. The Brazilian carrier has ordered 25 122-seat A319s and 13 150-seat A320s, powered by International Aero Engines V2500s, and holds options on another 32 aircraft. The ...