All Safety News – Page 1422

  • News

    Europe

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    During the past year the fortunes of Europe's flag carriers have, at best, been variable. And as 1996 gets underway there is a pervasive sense of unsettled agendas and greater events to come. The European majors have reaped the benefits of fragile economic recovery and stronger demand to ...

  • News

    Zero sum game

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    North America-Asia routes may be projected as some of the world's fastest growing, yet capacity growth is at a standstill. David Knibb examines the reasons. One would expect the skies to be full between North America and Asia, given the growth in the Asian economies and the shift in US ...

  • News

    Middle East

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Peace in the Middle East is the factor which will make or break the events of 1996. A lasting peace accord between Israel and its Arab neighbours could produce the boom the aviation players have been waiting for, but failure on the part of the politicians could put pressure on ...

  • News

    Asia-Pacific

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The Asia-Pacific region continues to maintain its flagship role at the sharp end of global air travel recovery. Double-digit growth is again forecast through 1996, bringing further financial gains for regional operators and benefits for major airlines operating into the area from elsewhere. There will, however, be dramatically ...

  • News

    Trust in us

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Harmonised competition rules would be essential to EU-US open skies and the growing link being made between US antitrust immunity for multinational alliances and the conclusion of open skies agreements with individual countries is increasing the urgency. By Ron Katz.EU transport commissioner Neil Kinnock's comment, on emerging from the December ...

  • News

    USA

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    For the US airline industry, 1996 looks set to be a year when the word 'management' is finally used without the word 'crisis' coming before it. After a full year of profits in 1995 - the first for the industry's major players since 1989 - stability seems to ...

  • News

    Sore over safety

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The FAA's controversial public ratings of foreign civil aviation authorities' safety practices is causing many to cry foul and is wreaking havoc with some non-US carriers' finances. Jane Levere reports. That the oversight of airline safety and civil aviation authorities remains paramount was never in dispute - and December's ...

  • News

    Forging ahead

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    What could possibly go wrong? Most carriers have achieved a remarkable turnaround from the depression of 1990-1. Traffic has rebounded and capacity is under control, leading to healthy load factors and yields. Unit costs have fallen as workforce cuts and productivity improvements have borne fruit, while fuel prices have remained ...

  • News

    West teeters on brink of recession

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The sustained economic recovery among the larger western economies, now entering its fifth year, could pause in 1996 after slowing abruptly in the final months of last year. A combination of factors, including the downward pressure on budget deficits in Europe being exerted by the need to meet the ...

  • News

    Beaming into new system

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Our institute has been conducting extensive research on airline revenue management for the past three years, and parts of your article 'A system approach' (Airline Business, January) seem to be based on false assumptions. Our first concern is the quoted 1 per cent increase in airline revenues. While there is ...

  • News

    China ties start to fray

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The once-strong links between Cathay Pacific and China are unravelling, fueling concerns over the unofficial flag carrier's status after the return of Hong Kong to Chinese rule next year. Cathay has withdrawn from its joint venture in southeast China to develop Xiamen airport, a project once touted as ...

  • News

    Tokyo mixes its approach

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    No one is more baffled by the Ministry of Transport's plans for a third Tokyo airport than local government and civic leaders. Not that they oppose another airport, but they are wondering whether the MOT has levelled with them, or if it is incapable of following a coherent airport strategy. ...

  • News

    On road to Roman ruin

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Alitalia's chief executive Renato Riverso may well want to think about returning to the computer industry. His promise to produce a concrete restructuring plan has failed to materialise, leading to considerable employee frustration, their refusal to guarantee a no-strike period, and a breakdown in the latest round of discussions. ...

  • News

    No state aid means yes

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    For once the European Commission is to be congratulated on its political juggling over the Spanish request to recapitalise struggling Iberia, although the carrier's continued control of two Latin American carriers has raised a few eyebrows. Avoiding the minefield of the 'one time, last time' tenet of state ...

  • News

    The day the taxes died

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    US government taxes on air tickets died - probably only temporarily - on 31 December but their demise, however short-lived, could be good news for US airlines. At presstime the 10 per cent excise tax on domestic tickets and $6 departure tax on international tickets still had not ...

  • News

    Japan boosts Asian unity

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan's Ministry of Transport has demonstrated the sway it holds in the region by bringing together Asia-Pacific's senior aviation administrators for watershed discussions aimed at forging closer cooperation on air transport policies. At presstime, officials from at least 17 nations in Asia and Oceania were preparing to meet ...

  • News

    Five crowd over Tasman

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The skies between Australia and New Zealand are becoming crowded as two new startups vie for discount traffic on secondary routes across the Tasman Sea. At the same time Ansett Australia has launched its first flights to New Zealand, joining national flags Qantas and Air New Zealand on the primary ...

  • News

    Pakistan to boost SIA?

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Singapore Airlines could boost its bottom line by an estimated US$500 million in its current financial year through a major sale of aircraft. Discussions are underway with Pakistan International Airlines over eight Boeing 747-300s, which SIA wants to retire from its fleet of 69 aircraft. It is the ...

  • News

    China double in five years

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Beijing may have put the brakes on its airline's phenomenal expansion rates over the past year but the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) is preparing to cope with another 'Great Leap Forward'. The latest Five Year Plan, covering 1996-2000, caters for an annual civil aviation industry growth ...

  • News

    Southwest sizes up east

    1996-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Southwest Airlines entered the Florida market in late January, beginning a regional operation many expect will someday rival the size and strength of its activity within California - a market Southwest continues to dominate, despite encroachment by Shuttle by United. As in other new markets, Southwest began service ...