All Safety News – Page 1316

  • News

    Level busts in the UK bust the record books

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Level busts in the UK have reached record levels in the first few months of this year, according to a report by the UK Civil Aviation Authority safety regulation group (SRG). The study also revealed that level busts, the term for incidents where aircraft climb or descend through the ...

  • News

    EC views Malpensa transfer as anti-competitive

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission's (EC) transport directorate has ruled against Italy's plan to transfer the majority of airlines now operating at Milan Linate to the new hub at Malpensa. Transport commissioner Neil Kinnock says the Italian transport ministry decree forcing airlines with routes on which fewer than 2 million passengers ...

  • News

    SAA chief urges government protection

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Hilka Birns/CAPE TOWN South African Airways (SAA) chief executive Coleman Andrews has urged Pretoria to cut jet fuel prices and use regulatory powers to defend SAA on international routes while it reorganises its fleet and network. Andrews told a parliamentary committee that SAA could save up to R80 ...

  • News

    Asia crisis misses Lufthansa and SAirGroup

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH The Asian economic crisis has failed to dent the performance of two of Europe's flag carriers, with Germany's Lufthansa Group and Swissair owner SAir Group showing big increases in pre-tax profits for the first six months of 1998. The Lufthansa Group's pre-tax profits on ordinary activities ...

  • News

    Kitty Hawk cuts it fine in bid to acquire Southern Air Transport

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Kitty Hawk has revealed plans to purchase Southern Air Transport (SAT) after merger negotiations unexpectedly broke off between financially ailing SAT and Fine Air. Dallas, Texas-based Kitty Hawk, a charter passenger and cargo carrier which recently acquired American International Airways and other Kalitta companies, agreed ...

  • News

    Sporty Games

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    So British Airways has at last placed an order with Airbus Industrie, some 30 years after the European consortium was conceived with the primary aim of building an aircraft for BA's predecessor, British European Airways (BEA). The fiercely fought battle between Airbus and Boeing for this much prized order ...

  • News

    Back to basics

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SEOUL & SINGAPORE Asia's embattled aerospace industry will likely reflect on 1998 with utter dismay. Once-bold Asian aeronautical ambitions to be a global player have been confined to the scrapheap after a series of setbacks. The focus is now on a post mortem examination to determine if and ...

  • News

    Back from the brink

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/Seattle What went wrong, and what action is being taken to make sure it never happens again? These are the questions being asked by Boeing and the investment community as the company begins recovering from a dire production crisis that continues to wreak havoc with its financial performance. ...

  • News

    Sensing safer skies

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/SEATTLE The aviation industry's continual search for safer skies is reaching "crusade" status as the chilling implications sink in of predicted traffic growth on accident rates. The US Federal Aviation Administration, for example, expects "a serious accident" every week by 2015 unless some radical changes are made. That ...

  • News

    Jetcruzer sales accelerate as flight testing continues

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/Los Angeles Advanced Aerodynamics & Structures (AASI) has taken orders worth more than $180 million for 150 Jetcruzer 500s, as a third aircraft is prepared to join the certification programme. The Long Beach, California-based start-up manufacturer reached the new sales mark after taking a further 23 orders ...

  • News

    Meridian on course for 2000 certification

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC New Piper Aircraft flew the single-turboprop Malibu Meridian for the first time on 21 August, 10 days ahead of schedule. The Vero Beach, Florida-based manufacturer says there were "no major problems" on the maiden flight of the turboprop derivative of its Malibu Mirage high-performance piston single. ...

  • News

    Pirelli acquires controlling stake in charter company Eurofly

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Pirelli has snapped up a majority share in Italy's largest executive air charter and management company, Eurofly. The tyre and cable manufacturer has increased its share from 10% to 65%, having acquired the remaining 20% share from the Valla family and the bulk of the stake held by computer giant ...

  • News

    New software will advise flight planners on integrity of GPS

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS Eurocontrol has developed an internet tool for helping pilots assess the availability of global positioning system (GPS) satellites for European operations. The Augur system will provide all of the information needed to advise on GPS integrity, and, says Eurocontrol, will help aircraft operators to use GPS ...

  • News

    Chinese training

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    China's Civil Aviation Flying College (CAFC) has begun using Wicat Systems Wing's ab initio flight training course at Guanghan. The computer-based training course was developed by Lindon, Utah-based Wicat with Swissair and British Aerospace Flight Training. The comprehensive, self-paced, ground school curriculum is in three phases matching private pilot, commercial ...

  • News

    Have four engines, will travel far

    1998-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON When Airbus Industrie launched its four-engined fly-by-wire A340 family in June 1987, it was the first all-new long-range widebody for a generation, and seemed to catch Boeing on the hop. The McDonnell Douglas DC-10-derived MD-11 provided the only competition for the A340 for several years as Boeing ...

  • News

    China all cargo

    1998-09-01T10:03:00Z

    Beijing has decided to allow Chinese airlines to operate all-cargo flights. China Eastern Airlines quickly announced the start of China Cargo Airlines, a joint venture with China Ocean Shipping Co. Air cargo within China is growing faster than passenger traffic and is expected to accelerate. Source: Airline Business

  • News

    The devil's in the detail

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission's rulings on two transatlantic alliances will be poured over by interested parties before official comments are filed. Now that the European Commission finally has produced its conditions for approving the American Airlines/British Airways alliance, lawyers will be scrambling to examine the detail. The Commission's competition directorate, ...

  • News

    Report weakens airport campaign

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    First, the good news. According to an official report, most of the runways in the US national airport system are in good to excellent condition. The bad news is that this may not be good for the airports. It will not be good news if the report, compiled by ...

  • News

    Beware treading the bear market

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The world economy is in precarious shape.The Asian crisis is expected to cut growth by over one third in 1998. The Japanese economy will contract by at least 1 per cent, prolonging the slump throughout the East Asia region, despite the big expansion package put in place in Tokyo. The ...

  • News

    Indian policy up in the

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Even after six years of liberalisation, the Indian aviation sector is groping for direction. There is no consistent policy and the Civil Aviation Ministry has amended wet-leasing guidelines less than a month after banning the practice. The Foreign Investment Promotion Board has again deferred its decision on the Rs14 ...