All Systems & Interiors news – Page 887

  • News

    AEA slams European ATC performance

    1996-06-05T00:00:00Z

    Herman de Wulf/BRUSSELS KARL-HEINZ Neumeister, secretary-general of the Association of European Airlines (AEA) has led an attack on Europe's "increasing" flight delays, "lousy" air-traffic control (ATC) and "scandalous" route charges. He complains that European airlines are being saddled with unnecessary costs, putting them at a disadvantage ...

  • News

    Japan's carriers make gains

    1996-06-05T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Kevin O'Toole/LONDON GROWING international traffic has helped Japan Airlines (JAL) return to profitability for the first time in five years and has further strengthened the recovery at All Nippon Airways (ANA) JAL bounced back into the black for the first time since 1990, with ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1996-06-01T10:51:00Z

    Air Canada is reducing its shareholding in Continental Airlines to 10 per cent, while retaining 4 per cent voting power, and plans to sell its remaining holding by early 1997. Continental will start a weekly New York/Newark-Dusseldorf flight in July. United Airlines will launch nonstop Chicago-Hong Kong services ...

  • News

    JAL's internet

    1996-06-01T10:05:00Z

    Japan Airlines will introduce ticketless travel in the domestic market this month, including sales through travel agents. From July, JAL will become the first Asian carrier to offer domestic bookings via the Internet.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    BA savours American pie

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The impending alliance between American Airlines and British Airways confirms that US international aviation policy over the last two years has had a dramatic impact on the global airline industry. BA and American officials were preparing the accord at presstime. Sources say that a two-year discussion finally yielded ...

  • News

    Marketing a package

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Abu Dhabi, host city for Routes '97, has its own unique approach to airport marketing. Mark Blacklock reportsShortly before landing at Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, Britannia Airways screens a video about the city, its airport and the duty free shopping complex. Provided free of charge by ...

  • News

    Immune deficiency syndromes

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    US transportation officials have long been quietly offering antitrust immunity as a gift for opening up international markets to their airlines. Now immunity is being sought on a grand scale, but the Department of Justice is wary. Mead Jennings reports.The question won't be asked officially for another year, but Elliott ...

  • News

    Mirror images

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan's two largest carriers are eyeing each other's traditional markets as they struggle to rectify the advantages enjoyed by their US rivals and the disadvantages of Japanese airport congestion. Successful cost-cutting remains the key. Mark Odell reports on their progress from Tokyo and then scrutinises domestic deregulation Japanese-style. Put the ...

  • News

    A clearer direction?

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    A spring-clean of the alliance movement has taken place over the past year, with many of the majors dusting off and discarding some of their older, redundant agreements and focusing instead on developing newer ones. Meanwhile the number of alliances continues to grow as more pertinent agreements are added by ...

  • News

    UPS closes on Taipei hub

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The decisions by United Parcel Service and DHL to launch Asian hubs commit all four of the big express cargo carriers to the Orient. The question now is which of the differing strategies will work and whether they will avoid the bloody shakedown that followed a similar scramble four years ...

  • News

    Euro majors sweat it out

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    A block on state aid, job cuts and cash shortages. Just three big headaches that should ensure the managements of the struggling European majors endure a long, hot summer. Olympic Airways has become the first carrier to suffer the ignominy of having a tranche of its state aid ...

  • News

    Lax tax rules hit at costs

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    As US carriers report record earnings during the first quarter, some analysts are cautioning that the windfalls, in good measure due to the lapse of the 10 per cent ticket tax at the start of this year, are disguising a rise in unit costs. On one of the ...

  • News

    Trust US for new allies?

    1996-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Washington's aviation scene is bubbling with potential alliance building and demolition, after the US Department of Transportation tentatively approved the application for antitrust immunity between United Airlines and Lufthansa. 'There is no question that all kinds of conversations are going nonstop and the immunity applications are the big ...

  • News

    ValuJet halves its network as NTSB probe centres on cargo-fire issue

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    THE THEORY that the ValuJet McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 accident on 11 May was linked to the unauthorised freighting of oxygen-generator units has been reinforced by the investigator's discovery of pieces of the canisters embedded in a tyre from the forward cargo hold. At the time of going to ...

  • News

    RAA wants icing AD extended to cover more than turboprops

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    SENIOR US OFFICIALS from the Regional Airline Association (RAA) are pressing the US Federal Aviation Administration to extend a new airworthiness directive (AD) on severe icing to all commercial aircraft, rather than singling out turboprops. The RAA feels that the AD, which requires guidance for pilots on how ...

  • News

    RAA launches plan to counter poor public image of regionals

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    AN IMAGE-enhancement campaign has been adopted by the Regional Airline Association (RAA) in an effort to counter public uncertainties about the safety of commuter airlines. Called Plane Sense, the programme focuses on three main groups - passengers, travel agents and professionals, and the employees of regional airlines. Packages ...

  • News

    AI(R) aims for launch of regional-jet in 1997

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    AERO INTERNATIONAL (Regional) (AI(R)) says that development of a 58- to 85-seat regional-jet family is its "main goal", with a market study already under way and a launch pencilled in for the Paris air show in June 1997. The plan is to work towards an in-service entry ...

  • News

    Market for 30-seat regional jet studied

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    ALLIEDSIGNAL ENGINES believes that a 30-seat regional jet may be economically feasible and has embarked on a study to examine the market for regional jets with fewer than 50 seats. General Electric, meanwhile, says that it is in the "exploratory phase" of studying the market for 35- to 45-seat regional ...

  • News

    Small, but is it beautiful?

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    ALL OF A SUDDEN, the discussion is about small jets. Not just the 100-seater which China and Korea, or China and Singapore, want to build with European help. Not just the rival 100-seater, for which Boeing and Bombardier may link up with Japan. Not just the 100-seater which IPTN wants ...

  • News

    IPTN aims N270 stretch at US buyers

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    IPTN IS OFFERING a further stretch of the N250 regional turboprop, aimed at the US market. The 70-seat N270 is being marketed by American Regional Aircraft Industry (AMRAI), 40% owned by the Indonesian manufacturer, with a launch planned for the third quarter of 1996, leading to first delivery in the ...