All Safety News – Page 1301

  • News

    Alitalia and KLM sign unity

    1998-12-02T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/AMSTERDAM KLM and Alitalia signed a far reaching "master cooperation agreement" on 27 November, which, although it stops short of equity exchange, commits the two airlines to "uniting as deeply as possible". Alitalia managing director Domenico Cempella warns, however, that the airline, which is still majority government-owned ...

  • News

    PAL/Northwest talks cast doubt on Cathay bail-out

    1998-12-02T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MANILA Philippine Airlines (PAL) has thrown into question Cathay Pacific's attempts to acquire a controlling stake in the debt-ridden carrier, by restarting talks with Northwest Airlines. Northwest has previously shown interest in PAL, as has Singapore Airlines, but talks with all other interested parties had been suspended ...

  • News

    Boeing succeeds with fourth Delta

    1998-12-02T00:00:00Z

    It was fourth time lucky for Boeing's Delta II on 22 November when the booster lifted off from Cape Canaveral carrying Russia's Hughes-built Bonum 1 communications satellite. The launch had been ditched three times on successive days, starting on 19 November, by an engine gimballing problem, a communications glitch and ...

  • News

    A300B2/B4 retrofit provides global positioning capability

    1998-12-02T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON An electronic retrofit developed by Airbus Industrie for the A300B2/B4 twinjet, which provides increased efficiency and meets new navigation requirements, has been certificated. The B2/B4 variants - the first examples of the A300 to be produced - are equipped with analogue, electromechanical-instrument cockpits and, with a few ...

  • News

    Airports Gearing up to grow

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    An unprecedented enthusiasm for commercialisation is sweeping the world's airports. Old public service concepts are out. The new creed is cost containment, private finance, aggressive marketing and even acquisition strategies. But before the airline customers start to celebrate, there are potential penalties as well as gains from this latest trend. ...

  • News

    Star attracts a galaxy

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    The Star Alliance will expand to nine full members before the end of 1999, following All Nippon Airlines' (ANA) decision to join. ANA president, Kichisaburo Nomura, says his company will take up full membership at the start of October 1999, following the example of Ansett and Air New Zealand, ...

  • News

    Newsline Asia

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Mandarin merger - China Airlines has set a June 1999 target date for the merger of its subsidiaries Mandarin Airlines and Formosa Airlines. The merged carrier will retain the Mandarin name, but will focus entirely on domestic services. Garuda shake-up - Debt-ridden Indonesian airline Garuda has appointed a new ...

  • News

    Russian rates hit North Korea income

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    "Open your skies and they will come." That was the message North Korea heard when it agreed with the International Civil Aviation Organisation to allow commercial flights through its heavily guarded airspace. Yet, since that agreement took effect in April, use of North Korean airspace has been below projections. ...

  • News

    Taiwan eases another notch

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    In the wake of Koo Chen-fu's trip to China, the highest-ranking Taiwanese visit to China in 50 years, Taipei has eased direct flight restrictions another notch. The first of many Air Macau charters from Ningbo, a Chinese port, flew to Taiwan via Macau under one flight number and without ...

  • News

    Preparing for downturn

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Any analysts keen to spot signs of an end to the boom, will have found much to whet the appetite as the major US airlines posted their third quarter financials. Even before the results were fully out, nervous equity markets had begun to downgrade earnings estimates for next year. It ...

  • News

    Airports can be low cost too

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Spurred on by the low-cost carriers, Europe's local airports have begun to reinvent themselves as low-cost alternatives to the major hubs. Much attention has been lavished on the rise of Europe's low-cost airlines. But it is not only the carriers which are cutting costs. Following fast on their heels ...

  • News

    French flotation delayed

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    The privatisation of Air France may now be delayed until late 1999 as a result of weak market conditions, political opposition and investor fears of further labour troubles. Originally scheduled for summer 1998, the sale of a 20% stake in the company on the Paris bourse has been delayed ...

  • News

    Cretans welcome Dutch move

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Dutch scheduled and charter airline Transavia has become the first non-Greek airline to operate a domestic schedule in Greece, following a change in the rules by the Greek aviation authorities in line with European Union (EU) rules. Transavia, which has built up a strong following in Greece over many ...

  • News

    BA and American agree 10% Iberia stake

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    While the alliance across the Atlantic appears to have been scaled back, British Airways and American Airlines are moving ahead with their European and Latin American links. BA and American are taking a 10% stake in Iberia, according to Spanish state industrial holding company SEPI, with BA taking at ...

  • News

    Balkan sale mysteriously delayed

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Officials in the Bulgarian Ministry of Transport have postponed the sale of flag carrier Balkan Bulgarian, despite a "perfectly legitimate" bid from Balkan Air. The carrier was due to be sold by the end of the year to a consortium led by Balkan Air, which included a management team and ...

  • News

    Moscow tussle continues

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic and British Midland are still fighting it out over Moscow route rights. The two rivals are taking their cases for a new London Heathrow to Moscow route back to the UK's Civil Aviation Authority after John Prescott, the UK Secretary of State for Transport, ruled that it had ...

  • News

    FAA team builder

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    The sceptics were out when Jane Garvey became the FAA's first female, non-pilot Administrator. But her management technique is beginning to change minds. Only 18 months after taking the helm at the Federal Aviation Administration, Jane Garvey has already served as long as the entire terms of some of ...

  • News

    Gleaming Gardermoen

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Can Norway's attractive new hub at Gardermoen carve out an international role in the Scandinavian market? Oslo's futuristic new airport at Gardermoen can probably lay claim to being Europe's last major new opening this side of the millennium. It is undoubtedly a gleaming example of Norwegian architecture, coming complete with ...

  • News

    private investigations

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    A new European directive on data protection is threatening to change the rules for airline alliance partners seeking to share customer details. Imagine the global alliance makers as players on a Monopoly board, all lined up at the start and keen to roll the dice. The world's major airlines ...

  • News

    Reining back on growth

    1998-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Not so long ago, the issue exercising minds in much of Asia Pacific was whether airport capacity would be able to keep pace with the region's roaring traffic growth. Since last year's economic turmoil took hold, the concerns have changed. After decades of topping the growth tables, the region ...