All Safety News – Page 1451

  • News

    Canadian team develops investigation tool

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    A TEAM OF ENGINEERS at Canada's National Research Council (NRC) has developed an information-management system capable of translating data from aircraft flight recorders into computer animations. The team, based at the Flight Recorder Playback Centre, part of the NRC's Institute for Aerospace Research, developed the ADAAPS (Aircraft Data ...

  • News

    Monarch to take on Alitalia leases

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Gnter Endres/LONDON MONARCH AIRLINES is on the verge of taking over the contentious wet-leased Boeing 767-300ER operation, now provided by Ansett Worldwide Aviation Services on behalf of Alitalia. The new deal is an extension of a long-standing agreement between Monarch and Ansett, under which the UK ...

  • News

    Eurocontrol 'on target' with ATC goals

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/BRUSSELS EUROCONTROL HAS inaugurated its new ECU 117 million ($87.5 million) Brussels centre with assurances that measures to improve Europe's air-traffic-control (ATC) system are "very much on target". Located near the Brussels airport at Haren, the building brings together Eurocontrol's headquarters, the Central Flow Management ...

  • News

    Australia cuts price of Qantas

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    THE AUSTRALIAN Government has slashed the expected price of its remaining 75% stake in Qantas, in a bid to boost the privatisation, which has been flagging in the face of weak financial markets and expectations of a poorer operating performance from the airline group. Estimates for the price ...

  • News

    Managing Asia's growth

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Aeropolitics, rising costs and physical impediments to growth are the biggest challenges posed by the tidal wave of growth forecast for the Asia-Pacific region. David Knibb reports from the Airline Business/ Reed Exhibitions conference on 'Managing Airline Growth in Asia', held in Singapore.Asia's growth defies superlatives. ...

  • News

    The yen factor

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The strength of the Japanese yen is having major repercussions throughout the airline business. David Knibb looks at the impact.The Japanese even have a word for it. Endaka describes the inexorable rise in the value of the yen. It's not a new phenomenon; the yen has been appreciating for at ...

  • News

    Routing for growth

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines have added and abandoned new routes at a substantial rate in the past two years, but US carriers and those based in more liberal markets dominated the picture. Report by Reed Travel Group Market Analysis and Airline Business. Market expansion is one of the most pertinent ways to ...

  • News

    Financial results

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada cut its operating loss from C$12m to C$7m. Passengers and yields both rose 6%. There were C$40m of non-operating gains in 1994. Operating income trebled to US$162.2m, moving ANA into the black. Boosted by the Kobe earthquake and the strong yen, traffic rose 6.1%. ...

  • News

    Boom conditions shift to slowdown

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    It was only 12 short months ago that the global financial markets were gripped by fear of overheating and inflation. Robust economic growth, particularly in the United States where output soared to 4.7 per cent in 1994, sent the yields on government bonds round the world sharply higher and the ...

  • News

    SAA boosted by Lufthansa

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The cooperation agreement between South African Airways and Lufthansa is a major boost for the African carrier, while the pact nearly completes the German flag's global net of alliances. SAA has sought a European partner for more than two years and senior general manager John Hare says few ...

  • News

    Taiwan takes direct route

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Conceding the inevitable, Taiwan has taken the first fateful steps that could lead to direct air links to China within two years. But Beijing's willingness to facilitate such flights will depend on whether CAAC pragmatists prevail over policy ideologues who hope to capitalise on Taipei's recognition that direct links are ...

  • News

    Sino thaw is set to grip

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Chinese aviation appears to be experiencing a thaw as two recent events show that both outsiders and the CAAC have growing confidence in China's airlines. China's transition from bank-guaranteed to asset-based financing received a boost with the recent decision of an operating lessor to commit aircraft to a ...

  • News

    KLM cagey over Garuda

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Indonesia and the Philippines are heading in opposite directions on state ownership of flag carriers, but neither is making progress. Jakarta cannot find a buyer for Garuda Indonesia and Manila is still waiting for a ruling as to whether it can reassert control over Philippine Airlines. On-again off-again ...

  • News

    Japan urges Asian forum

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Japanese officials in Asia-Pacific have completed a diplomatic offensive to win support for a major regional aviation forum that Japan hopes will lead to tighter government cooperation on air transport policies. The initiative is emerging as the first serious attempt to bring together high level government officials capable ...

  • News

    Ghosts, phantoms and funnel flights

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Some airlines are manipulating schedules to get improved marketing visibility.When is a new route not a new route? Answer: When it's a codeshare, funnel flight, ghost flight, change of gauge, or yet another figment of a marketing executive's fertile imagination. The intention behind the survey of new route developments in ...

  • News

    Merger plan draws blank

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Yet again political expediency is muddying the debate over Air Inter's future, as its merger with Air France Europe looks set to be sidelined to minimise social unrest. Christian Blanc, who took over the chair of Air Inter when Michel Bernard unexpectedly resigned in mid-May, has proposed an ...

  • News

    US-UK slow movement

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Although the early June US-UK 'interim' agreement found favour with United Airlines and British Airways, the US Department of Transportation now faces considerable pressure from rivals American Airlines, Continental Airlines and TWA to broaden Heathrow rights in the next round of negotiations. However there has at least been ...

  • News

    TWA are set to file anew

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    A second trip into bankruptcy protection appears inevitable for Trans World Airlines. For months, carrier executives have been trying to corral creditors into supporting an ever changing plan that would see the airline enter bankruptcy with a pre-packaged debt restructuring for the second time in three years. This ...

  • News

    Euro pilots strike out

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Continuing management efforts to cut the European majors' operating costs are resulting in clashes with pilots at KLM, SAS and Alitalia. If pilots do not concede the need to reduce costs, carriers may seek alternatives. KLM is insisting on a longterm programme to cut its aircrew costs, which ...

  • News

    Africa's Alliance prepares to launch scheduled services

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON ALLIANCE, THE NEW African long-haul venture led by South African Airways (SAA), is gearing up for the launch of scheduled services in July, and says that new routes and aircraft are likely to follow. The venture has its origins in protracted talks between ...