All Networks articles – Page 1309

  • News

    Wide smiles at Sabena

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    It's happy families in Brussels, on the surface at least. Sabena's management appears to have won the support of the unions for the airline's 'Horizon '98' restructuring plan, which will lead to lower labour costs and to more flexible working hours. All four Sabena unions have signed a ...

  • News

    SAA trips on triple threat

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    South African Airways is having a hard time of it. In mid-October, the carrier was embroiled in a bitter battle with its technical staff and faced a threat of court action from its pilots. Its domestic rivals are turning up the heat through alliances with British Airways and Virgin Atlantic. ...

  • News

    Rocky road

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Will Canadian Airlines International survive until the weight of its financial liabilities start to lift two years from now? David Knibb weighs up the Calgary-based carrier's chances. Canadian Airlines International is in a race against time. Two years from now its loan and lease obligations will ease, finally giving the ...

  • News

    Slots wrong for regionals

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Not surprisingly Europe's regional carriers are up in arms over the European Commission's revision of its slot regulation, which is likely to come down in favour of slot trading. And alternative proposals circulating in Germany have heightened the dismay. The board of airline representatives in Germany (Barig) appears ...

  • News

    Ramping up the price

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Europe's airlines are fighting to cut costs but the second Cranfield University study of user charges at the region's airports suggests carriers can expect little help from their infrastructure and ground handling providers. By Ian Stockman. Since the last assessment of aircraft turnround fees at European airports by Cranfield ...

  • News

    US startups lose value

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Two low-cost US airlines launched service within a week of each other in late September, including a reborn ValuJet. But the experience of long-ailing Kiwi, which filed for Chapter 11 in early October, seems the more likely barometer for this sector. Some three months after ValuJet was shut ...

  • News

    Who's taking a liberty?

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The lure of valuable slots at Paris/Orly has attracted four potential suitors for troubled Air Liberté after the carrier entered receivership on 26 September. AOM, Air France Europe, TAT and Virgin Express have all expressed interest and reopened the debate about the French government's competition policy. Saddled with ...

  • News

    SIA hopes lift in India

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The proposed Singapore Airlines Indian joint venture with the Tata Group is back under government scrutiny. And while the civil aviation ministry insists it will ban all foreign participation in Indian carriers, the weak state of some private Indian carriers suggest the sector may benefit from foreign investment and management ...

  • News

    Tan on hiding to nothing?

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The boardroom battle for control of Philippine Airlines is finally over but the carrier's ambitious expansion plans now face the threat of intensified competition as the country's independent carriers seek to expand their international presence. PAL chairman Lucio Tan cleared the final hurdles in his three-and-a-half year campaign ...

  • News

    Sunshine Express

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Delta has finally launched its low-cost carrier. But has management learned from the mistakes made by other US majors in setting up such low-fare units? Jane Levere first looks at the arguments for and against the Florida-based Express operation and then turns to California to review the performance of Shuttle ...

  • News

    SAS Express is so simple

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    SAS has responded to the threat of competition on its profitable Nordic services by piloting a new simplified product, SAS Express. SAS Express is being used to brand 14 daily Stockholm-Oslo services for a three-month trial period from 22 October but could be extended throughout its Nordic and domestic network. ...

  • News

    Eagle lands in MAS' lair

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The Malaysian government has finally acceded to pressure to authorise a second international carrier but will initially protect flag carrier Malaysia Airlines from direct competition. The AirAsia consortium has battled for two years to secure a licence in the face of opposition from MAS and has finally secured ...

  • News

    Dragon fired

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Dragonair's owners have shelved the planned initial public offering until at least the end of 1997. Citic Pacific, one of the carrier's main shareholders, cited the impact of new route development which would not be fully reflected in the 1996 profits. Source: Airline Business

  • News

    Ghana clears FAA hurdle

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Ghana has joined South Africa as only the second sub-Saharan African country to secure category one status from the US Federal Aviation Administration. The rapid process of the country's application could help diffuse criticism over the FAA's tough safety oversight policy, particularly towards South America. The approval paved ...

  • News

    China offers no guarantee

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The Civil Aviation Administration of China has signalled an expansion of operating leasing in China by ordering airlines to cease providing lessors with a Bank of China guarantee. However, future growth may be limited to lessors willing to accept unguaranteed deals and carriers which can prove their own financial health. ...

  • News

    High risk business

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The risks associated with flying are obvious, but airline managers face hefty business risks, too. Colin Smith says risk management should be a board responsibility and asks whether airline directors can afford the risks they are running. Risk in the aviation industry is most commonly associated with threat to ...

  • News

    Back to your routes

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    How does an airline perform better than its rivals when all carriers do basically the same thing? The key to success - resource-based management - can be found at home base, argues Paul Couvret. Every airline strategist will say they have the answers to market success, but are they ...

  • News

    Unions balk at BA plans

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    British Airways is facing a serious confrontation with its two main unions in the wake of plans to slash US$1.5 billion from its cost base in three years. The UK carrier has also come under fire from employees and the financial community over the apparently unfocused nature of its proposals, ...

  • News

    Asia's cargo crunch

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines bidding to capitalise on the projected rich pickings from the Asia-Pacific cargo boom are pouring capacity into the region. But nobody is benefiting as rates, yields and profits slump, says Tom Ballantyne. When United Airlines said earlier this year that it planned to enter the full-freighter air cargo market ...

  • News

    US is set to open up Asia

    1996-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The US has floated a joint approach to open skies talks with the Asia-Pacific region for the first time. While cynics view the move as an attempt to kick-start stalled talks with Japan and deflect attention from the European focus of recent policy, some officials argue it is a genuine ...