All Safety News – Page 1301

  • News

    Cost cutting pays off as Gulf Air climbs back into profit

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Gulf Air edged back into profit during 1997 after a cost-cutting campaign overcame two years of financial crisis. The carrier's troubles began to unfold in 1995, when it recorded operating losses of $135 million, running up another deficit of $58 million in 1996. Ahmed Bin Saif Al Nehyan, ...

  • News

    Ayres picks Alabama site for assembly of the Loadmaster

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Ayres is to assemble its LM200 Loadmaster cargo aircraft in Dothan, Alabama. The aircraft manufacturer, which is based in Albany, Georgia, selected Dothan over another Georgian town, Americus, as the site for fuselage manufacture and final assembly of the aircraft. The decision was influenced by a combination of $4 ...

  • News

    Stampede to market

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    As more airports move into the private sector, airlines are hoping for better service and investment yet worrying about higher prices. Tom Gill reports. Airport privatisation is gathering pace, and although private investment and the introduction of commercial airport expertise appears to be good news for airlines, it is ...

  • News

    Asia's fireless dragons

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Traditionally cosy and secure, nestling in the world's highest growth region, can Asian airlines find the panic button now that the bad times are here? For some the bottle is always half empty, to others it's half full. But to proclaim the virtues of a bottle with just the ...

  • News

    Focus on Phoenix

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    America West's ups and downs have made Wall Street nervous, but new revenue management skills, a concentration on Phoenix, and codeshares with Continental and Northwest should allow its healthier performance to continue. Karen Walker reports from Phoenix You can only envy the residents of Phoenix, Arizona. Not only do they ...

  • News

    Virgin flirts with US rules

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Richard Branson, chairman of Virgin Atlantic, is calling for the US to open itself up to cabotage, saying he would open an airline there 'tomorrow.' Branson has briefed US congressmen on his wish to see the rules changed so foreign carriers can operate domestic services in the US. 'We ...

  • News

    First EMU wave gains momentum

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The march towards European Monetary Union now looks unstoppable. By early May the eleven countries which will join the first wave of monetary union on 1 January 1999 will have locked exchange rates and most of Europe will effectively be part of what will become a Deutsche mark bloc. ...

  • News

    Debonair in row over aid

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Debonair may sue the southern Italian regional government of Calabria for damages following delays in a contract to operate services from Reggio Calabria and Lamezia to Rome, Turin, Florence and Bologna. 'We still believe the authorities will be true to their commitments but we'll be firm to make sure ...

  • News

    Air France to open up

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The French government and Air France may be ready for the flag carrier's partial privatisation, but its employees certainly are not, and some are gearing up for strike action. The French government has announced that up to 20 per cent of Air France is to be floated on the ...

  • News

    Iberia pilots in civil war

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Iberia pilots are up in arms over plans to wetlease aircraft and hire pilots from domestic rival Air Europa and intend to carry out eleven hour strikes every Monday and Friday between 27 March and 31 July. The pilots are protesting at plans for a one year contract to wetlease ...

  • News

    UK low costs counter Go

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    While Ryanair signals it will not concede any ground to British Airways' planned low-cost operation, Go, at London/Stansted, EasyJet is firing the first shots in a legal battle to prevent BA from cross-subsidising Go. With Go yet to reveal details of its routes, in late February Ryanair announced plans ...

  • News

    Second Asia tier tumbles

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Doomsday gloom as heavy as last summer's smoke hangs over southeast Asia's second tier airlines. Rising currency costs and plunging traffic are hammering carriers in Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines. 'We will not be able to make it until April,' warns Benny Rungkat, secretary general of the ...

  • News

    FAA scrambles to defuse timebomb

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Tick, tick, tick. The millennium bomb is counting down, potentially to wreak havoc just as champagne corks and fireworks explode to welcome in the new century. Like most bombs, until the fuse is lit no-one is quite sure whether this will be a dud or a disaster, but there ...

  • News

    US six get big in Japan

    1998-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Six US airlines and 13 cities will receive a total of 106 new weekly flights to Japan under a tentative agreement inked by the US and Japanese governments, following the signing of the new civil aviation bilateral in February. US carriers gaining new rights are American Airlines, Continental Airlines, ...

  • News

    High altitude blade cracking may delay 717

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES BMW Rolls-Royce has been forced to redesign high pressure compressor (HPC) blades in the BR715 turbofan for the Boeing 717-200 after cracks developed in the 717's tests. The problem could delay the first flight. The problems, uncovered during high altitude tests in the UK, affect the third ...

  • News

    Atlantic plays the name game again and Atlantic Airlines is born

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    Atlantic Airlines is the new operating name for a Coventry, UK, based company which has previously operated under a variety of titles. "Some people call us Air Atlantique, others Atlantic Cargo, Atlantic Airways, Air Corbiere or Atlantic Air Transport," says chairman Mike Collett. Atlantic Airlines, which operates a fleet that ...

  • News

    GE widens 'boltless turbine' work

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    General Electric is studying the application of its recently developed "boltless turbine" to the entire range of CF6-80C2 and -80E1 turbofans as it perfects the technology for the newest -B7F1 and -B8F versions. The boltless turbine improves performance, reduces parts count, weight and cost, and is being introduced for ...

  • News

    New European safety authority gathers support from industry

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    Alan George/BRUSSELS Strong support for the establishment of the proposed European Aviation Safety Authority (EASA) has been expressed by European aviation industry organisations participating in a consultation process organised by the European Commission (EC). The process also revealed a wide measure of agreement on the form and mission ...

  • News

    Marketplace

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    -British Airways subsidiary Brymon Airways is to aquire eight more de Havilland Dash 8-300s on lease from Bombardier Aerospace. The new Dash 8Q models will replace some of the airline's existing Dash 8s, and serve new routes. Deliveries will begin in April and continue through to early 1999. -Lufthansa CityLine ...

  • News

    Definitely maybe

    1998-03-25T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/SINGAPORE Airbus Industrie may have just allowed its A3XX high capacity airliner programme to slip by almost a year, but it remains committed to the initiative to provide a European alternative to Boeing's long term monopoly of the market. There are hurdles to cross during 1998, however, before Airbus ...