All news – Page 7778

  • News

    GKN

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    David Wright has been appointed to the board of GKN, and will succeed Alan Jones as managing director for the company's Aerospace and Special Vehicles, with responsibility for the Westland Group and GKN's Special Vehicles Division. Wright has been chief executive of the Division since 1989, which he joined after ...

  • News

    FAA

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has appointed Christopher Hart to a new post of assistant administrator for system safety. Hart will have overall responsibility for the FAA's safety programmes. Hart was formerly deputy administrator at the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Preston for Continental

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Software developer The Preston Group of Australia has added Continental Airlines to the list of users for its advanced airspace simulation software, Total Airspace & Airport Modeller (TAAM). Continental will use TAAM to solve airspace and airport congestion problems and to analyse proposed schedules.   Source: Flight ...

  • News

    Solid Ramjet Test

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    A French research and industry group has succeeded in flying what it claims is the first solid-fuelled ramjet to be tested in Europe. The "Rustique" missile (so called because it promises much lower purchase cost than current liquid-fuelled ramjets) was flown at the Centre d'Essais des Landes. The programme is ...

  • News

    Programming change

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Many aviation companies, including airports and service providers as well as airlines, need to find ways of cutting costs further. Ray Eitel Porter and his colleagues at The LEK Partnership discuss effective responses. For the first time in its history, a medium-sized airline faced the threat of real competition. ...

  • News

    Northward bound

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Ansett Australia is grappling with international expansion, toughening domestic competition, questions over its ownership, and a heavy debt burden. Tom Ballantyne assesses the future of Australia's second major airline. Fledgling international carrier Ansett Australia, striving to establish a permanent presence amongst Asia-Pacific's airlines, is wondering what cards fate will deal ...

  • News

    Picking up the pieces

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The impact of a major accident on an airline's traffic and revenues is often short lived but limiting the damage to the carrier's public image is a delicate exercise. Sara Guild examines the lessons learned by a selection of carriers. There is a true tale in aviation's not so ...

  • News

    Coming clean

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    It is time the United States stopped equivocating and led the way towards multilateral liberalisation by clearly stating its international open skies policy. Jacqueline Gallacher reports. The attempt to launch a worthwhile debate on multilateralism at last November's Icao worldwide air transport conference, resulted in little more than a ...

  • News

    Financial results

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Y = Year. H = Half year. Q = Quarter. M = Months. Currencies converted into US dollars a average exchange rates during reporting period. Per cent changes in local currencies. Net profit at the UK airports operator rose 13 per cent. Passenger numbers rose 7.4 per cent ...

  • News

    The unions' man

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    United Airlines' chairman and CEO Gerald Greenwald has some novel ideas on how to make employees work together, run an airline more efficiently and establish strong ties with worker groups. Could he be the new blood airlines have needed at the top for years? Mead Jennings reports.In Gerald Greenwald's office ...

  • News

    Japan's economy set for expansion

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The initial reaction of the financial markets and analysts to major natural disasters, particularly when they occur in developed societies, is nearly always wrong. This was true of the Los Angeles earthquake in January 1994, and even more so of the recent disaster in Kobe. The immediate impact on the ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada will commence its first Middle Eastern service with a twice weekly flight from Toronto to Tel Aviv from 20 June. Northwest is to launch a Detroit-London/Gatwick service at the beginning of March. The carrier has purchased the route from Delta, in a deal awaiting US government ...

  • News

    Strong yen aids surge in JLL deals

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The Japanese leveraged lease looks certain to stabilise into a more mature product, helped by cautious equity investors. Report by Tom Ballantyne. When aircraft deliveries finally begin to pick up speed over the coming years the Japanese leveraged lease should have evolved into a stable, more mature product. ...

  • News

    Changing fortunes

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Early figures suggest that 1994 was the long-awaited turnround year for most airlines. Richard Whitaker reports. 'Mixed' seems the most appropriate word to use in describing the fortunes of the world's major airlines in 1994, to judge by the information available so far. The full-year financial results for the ...

  • News

    US launches the anti-trust debate

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    With the formal offer of open skies by the US to nine smaller European countries, the cross-border code-sharing alliance has changed from an airline marketing tool into a bilateral right that symbolises complete air service liberalisation. This is what US transportation officials have wanted. But as representatives of the ...

  • News

    Once more to the breach?

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The clearance for up to 9 million members of American Airlines' frequent flyer programme to sue the carrier over retroactive changes to its loyalty programme could open the flood gates to legal action against US carriers. At the very least, the ruling means a comparable number of United ...

  • News

    Rough and tough on top

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Two of Asia's more prominent airline chiefs have discovered just how tough it is at the top. Garuda Indonesia's president Wage Mulyono and outspoken Philippine Airlines chairman Carlos Dominguez have both been ousted in the wake of boardroom infighting, disagreement over future directions and poor financial performances by their airlines. ...

  • News

    BA: put your trust in US

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The recent decision forcing British Airways to stand trial in New York for alleged conduct in the UK has heightened uncertainties about when actions outside the US can subject a non-US company to US anti-trust claims. Indeed, one anti-trust specialist believes BA's case was weakened by the judge's ...

  • News

    North offers open airways

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    How much it has helped is questionable, but North Korea has certainly not hurt its international stature by announcing a willingness to open its airspace to foreign civil traffic. The decision, conveyed to Icao, was not sought as part of the high profile negotiations over North Korea's nuclear ...

  • News

    HK's woe of two Chinas

    1995-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The transfer of Hong Kong to Chinese control continues to overshadow the UK colony's role in regional aviation. Despite November's Sino-British accord over funding for Chek Lap Kok, talks are dragging on over the language of debt guarantee agreements, while Hong Kong's future as a Taiwan-China hub appears tenuous as ...