All Safety News – Page 1266

  • News

    Tax break recommended for UK training

    1999-08-04T00:00:00Z

    Training for pilots and maintenance engineers in the UK should be made more accessible to potential students by removing the 17.5% value added tax (VAT) from the price of training courses, the UK parliamentary transport committee has recommended in a recent report. The recommendation has been welcomed by the ...

  • News

    Poor performance

    1999-08-04T00:00:00Z

    As Europe tackles another summer of air traffic delays, an independent report of last year's performance points to future relief Emma Kelly/BRUSSELS With air traffic and flight delays in Europe this summer topping those of the crisis proportions reached last year, 1999 looks set to break more records. ...

  • News

    Giving over control

    1999-08-04T00:00:00Z

    It may be time for governments to shed the burden of air traffic control Emma Kelly/LONDON David Learmount/LONDON Private provision of air traffic services (ATS) may prove to be the way of the future. Canada's ATS is already privatised - but as a trust. The UK has just launched ...

  • News

    Boeing's spares

    1999-08-04T00:00:00Z

    Boeing's new Rapid Response Center began operations last month, providing product support to airline customers outside normal business hours with an expanded team of technical experts and using upgraded databases. The centre, in Seattle, is primarily intended to deal with aircraft-on-ground (AOG) situations. "This is one of the steps ...

  • News

    No rush

    1999-08-04T00:00:00Z

    The head of the US Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, says the crash of John F Kennedy Jr's Piper Saratoga II, which remains under investigation, should not prompt changes to the rules under which private pilots without instrument ratings may fly. Phil Boyer told a US Government Congressional panel that ...

  • News

    Gearing up for the millennium

    1999-08-01T08:36:00Z

    At the eye of the hurricane it is very calm - at the edges there is a lot of wind. So says KLM, predicting that New Year's day 2000 is likely to be calmer than the frenetic build-up may suggest. There is optimism elsewhere that aviation will indeed be ready ...

  • News

    Delaying the inevitable

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Europe's latest crisis in air traffic control looks unlikely to be its last unless the region faces up to the need for long-term solutions. Air traffic control (ATC) authorities have been forced to resort to crisis management. At the route of the problem is the patchwork nature of the ...

  • News

    Cintra plan for public float draws fire

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE Mexico's Cintra group, which owns both Aeromexico and Mexicana, has caused a furore by announcing plans for an initial public offering (IPO) this autumn. Pilots claim that the government-linked holding company is using its ownership of both carriers to favour Aeromexico. Meanwhile, the Mexican federal competition ...

  • News

    Airlines check out from Galileo ties

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Jane Levere NEW YORK Ties between Galileo and its major airline owners have unravelled further, as four carriers have reduced or entirely eliminated their ownership in the global distribution system (GDS). United Airlines, its largest shareholder, began a search for a new vendor to act as its host and potentially ...

  • News

    Agency incentives fines may go further than BA

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Alan George BRUSSELS Lois Jones LONDON British Airways may not be the only European carrier to be punished over travel agent incentives by the outgoing European Commission (EC). EC competition authorities have begun an investigation into commission payments to travel agents by eight European flag carriers - Air France, ...

  • News

    Sydney's second airport moves closer

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb BRISBANE A decision could come as early as August on whether to build Sydney's second airport after the project was cleared by an environmental report. The Badgery's Creek project, which has been stalled for years by long debates, made a breakthrough in July when a second audit of ...

  • News

    Australian ownership rules criticised

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Australia's new limits on airline foreign ownership have come under fire due to the special treatment of Qantas. British Airways chairman Lord Marshall claims the new limits discriminate against the foreign owners of Qantas, particularly BA. In June, Australia's government announced, as part of a package of ...

  • News

    The ATC obstacle course

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Currently available statistics only reflect the amount of delays and the average time of delay. Few detail why an aircraft is late. European airspace is divided into 240 sectors, each controlled by an ATC centre on the ground. An air traffic controller in each of the 39 ATC centres ...

  • News

    Virgin truce puts Irish operation on hold

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Simon Montlake ATI LONDON Virgin boss Richard Branson has brokered a truce between disgruntled pilots and managers at Virgin Express, the Brussels-based low-cost carrier. But the agreement, signed by Branson and staff representatives, has only put off the day of reckoning for Virgin Express Ireland, the new subsidiary at ...

  • News

    Indian fare war erupts

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    India's airlines have slashed their fares by 20-25%, taking them to their lowest level in four years and setting the scene for a long and bitter war. Besides discounts, a wide range of gifts are on offer, from free holidays to complimentary stays in hotels and free travel for spouses. ...

  • News

    IT Trends Survey

    1999-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole GENEVA Joint industry research conducted by Airline Business and SITA attempts to establish how far the airline industry is keeping pace with the new wave of information technology and the dawn of the Internet age. Is the airline industry keeping step with information technology? Less than a decade ...

  • News

    50 years ago...

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    As Airbus fine tunes its A3XX design, the world celebrates a half century of jet travel On Wednesday 27 July, 1949, the world's first jet airliner, the de Havilland (DH) 106 Comet, made its first flight from Hatfield airfield, just north of London. That historic half an hour trip marked ...

  • News

    South Africa to levy 'safety' fee

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Doug Birch/LONDON Foreign airlines flying to South Africa will have to pay fees totalling almost $3 million over the next 18 months as a contribution to an "aviation safety charge", according to the South African Civil Aviation Authority. The fees replace a fuel levy implemented in January by ...

  • News

    Eurocontrol settles on remedies to increase capacity

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Eurocontrol's Council has approved measures to increase air traffic capacity in Europe this summer and cope with potential capacity shortfalls between 2002 and 2005. At its 16 July meeting, the council approved the process for enhancing co-operation between area control centres (ACCs) to improve traffic flow. Eurocontrol has already ...

  • News

    MD-10 speeds up as passenger version is studied

    1999-07-28T00:00:00Z

    Boeing is talking to potential customers about developing a passenger version of the MD-10, as it considers accelerating the cargo-led programme by up to three months. US express carrier FedEx is so far the only customer for the MD-10 conversion of the DC-10, with orders and options for 120. ...