All Networks articles – Page 1109

  • News

    Virgin deal raises doubts over SIA's role within Star

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Sir Richard Branson, newly knighted in the UK's millennial honours list, calls the deal between his Virgin Atlantic group and Singapore Airlines (SIA) a "marriage made in heaven", but Star alliance members in Australasia are having heartburn over its implications. The codeshare access that SIA gains ...

  • News

    Finding a new deal

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Airline Business looks at the state of finance markets as carriers continue to find innovative ways to keep aircraft liabilities off the balance sheet. A new survey also covers the world's major operating lease companies, including a ranking of the Top 40 groups by fleet value. JACK SELLSBY ...

  • News

    Crystal joins list of US hopefuls

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    KAREN WALKER WASHINGTON DC Following a dearth of activity in the late 1990s, the US start-up scene is off to a flying start in the new millennium. The latest entrant is Tampa, Florida-based Crystal Airways, which intends to launch a low-fare, all-business-class service in the first quarter of this ...

  • News

    Italy's Gandalf emerges as contender

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Gandalf Airlines made Italian aviation history on 23 December when it become only the second carrier in the country, after Alitalia, to undertake a successful initial public offering. The company, which was established by a group of venture capitalists in April 1998, started operations in April 1999. Despite the ...

  • News

    Italy clamps down on small regionals

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Italy's civil aviation authority, Enac, has clamped down on several of the country's small regional airlines in its first moves to tighten regulatory inspections following its reorganisation in 1997. Air Sicilia is back in operation following the grounding of the chief pilot for failing to comply with numerous procedural ...

  • News

    Taiwan and China edge closer

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Direct Taiwan-China flights, operated by pseudo-third country airlines, could start this year. The first hint of a thaw came after remarks by Shen Yuankang, Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) deputy director, at a Shanghai aviation seminar. Shen suggested that direct flights could start with Air ...

  • News

    Slow change

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    NICHOLAS IONIDES TOKYO The final changes in Japan's painstakingly slow aviation deregulation, from April, will at last pave the way for more new start-ups For a country that so often leads the world in technological innovation, it is ironic that change in other areas can be painfully slow in ...

  • News

    US-UK mini deal threatens to sideline cargo

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    PETER CONWAY LONDON The latest in the seemingly unending round of open skies talks between the USA and UK in Washington on 4-5 January failed to produce the widely predicted "mini deal" over access to London Heathrow. But most observers still expect some kind of interim compromise to emerge when ...

  • News

    Cargo on-line

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    PETER CONWAY LONDON A new system aims to bring air cargo into the Internet age. But is the model right for the market? For the past year, former McKinsey consultant Todd Morgan, together with his colleague Doug Ash, ex-managing director of global freight forwarder MSAS, have been touring airline and ...

  • News

    Canadian hopefuls flex their muscles

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE Two start-ups and two incumbents are moving to fill the vacuum expected to result from Air Canada's takeover and makeover of Canadian Airlines. While none aspire to become a new Air Canada or Canadian, they foresee profitable low-cost, low-fares niches. Regional Airlines Holdings, led by ...

  • News

    CAA's hands are tied on foreign operators' safety standards

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Peter Gray expressed the view that the UK Civil Aviation Authority should have a role in excluding airlines with a dubious safety history from operating in the UK (Letters, Flight International, 18-24 January). The CAA Safety Regulation Group [SRG] supports the contention that a strong safety culture is an essential ...

  • News

    Government cash lets Domodedovo buy fuel

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Domodedovo Airlines plans to resume scheduled flights in early February after being promised cash owed by the Russian Government. Domodedovo, based at the Moscow airport of the same name, had its accounts frozen and had to cease flights last month after it defaulted on debts and could no longer ...

  • News

    British Midland Commuter starts CityLine services

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/COLOGNE British Midland Commuter was due to start flying services for Lufthansa CityLine on 1 February as part of a deal that will see the UK carrier take over the bulk of the routes from Munich operated by bankrupt Debonair. The wet-lease deal, which was close to ...

  • News

    In Brief - Europe

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Aer Lingus to be floated The Irish Government has opted to go ahead with an initial public offering for Aer Lingus, rather than offer the oneworld partners a strategic stake in the airline. The flotation is expected late this year or early 2001. The carrier says the exact timing, ...

  • News

    Peru claims bigger piece of Miami pie

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    DAVID KNIBB SEATTLE AND DENNIS BLANK ORLANDO United Airlines is the first casualty of a push by Peruvian airlines to claim more traffic between Peru and the USA. For years the trend throughout Latin America has been towards more US dominance of north-south routes. But LanPeru and AeroContinente ...

  • News

    Legend battles for February launch

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Embattled Legend Airlines plans to initiate services from Dallas Love Field, Texas, late this month if it overcomes legal challenges from American Airlines, the city of Fort Worth and Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Legend, which planned to begin interstate business-class operations last September, using six 56-seat McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s, ...

  • News

    TWA banks on Middle East and Caribbean for recovery

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/NEW YORK After a decade of losses, two trips to the bankruptcy court and the crash of Flight 800, Trans World Airlines is counting on the Middle East, the Caribbean and regional jets to help it pursue its recovery plan. TWA, the USA's eighth-largest airline, in early ...

  • News

    TES programme resumes but BA says more work is needed

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Emma Kelly/LONDON British Airways is resuming installations of Rockwell Collins Passenger Systems' Total Entertainment System (TES) on its widebody fleet after a temporary halt in the programme following initially disappointing seat availability figures. The airline claims improved performance of the TES, which is installed on 24 Boeing 747s and 777s, ...

  • News

    BA stake gains seats on Comair's board

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    British Airways has taken a minority stake in South African regional carrier Comair in a move that cements the latter's status as a franchisee of the UK flag carrier, which will get two seats on its board. The 18.3% holding cost BA R168 million ($28 million) and was bought from ...

  • News

    In Brief - Asia-Pacific

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Cathay orders Cathay Pacific Airways has ordered three more Airbus A330-300s to help cope with current and forecast rates of passenger traffic growth. The Rolls-Royce Trent 700-powered aircraft are to be delivered early next year. JAL sells DHL stake Japan Airlines (JAL) has sold most of its ...