Networks – Page 1206

  • News

    LTU drops long range services for winter season

    1998-04-15T16:14:00Z

    LTU is planning to drop some of its long range services to the USA and Asia during its next winter season because of a fall-off in loads. The German charter airline says it will stop operating to Los Angeles, Denver and Phoenix, as well as Bangkok, although this service ...

  • News

    Qantas lines up Asian 747s to counter -400IGW launch delay

    1998-04-15T16:11:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE The Qantas board is to decide shortly on a deal to purchase three surplus 747-400s from Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and Asiana, in lieu of Boeing's failure so far to give a firm commitment to launch development of an increased growth weight (IGW) version of the aircraft. ...

  • News

    Japan strike chaos

    1998-04-15T16:11:00Z

    Japanese air travel was hit last week when pilot unions at three main airlines - Japan Airlines (JAL), All Nippon Airways (ANA) and Japan Air System (JAS) - called strikes over wage negotiations. Some 50 international ANA flights were affected, while 60% of JAS domestic flights were hit. JAL managers ...

  • News

    Industry funding will pay for LAAS system

    1998-04-15T16:00:00Z

    Industry will fund development of the global positioning system (GPS) local area augmentation system (LAAS), the US Federal Aviation Administration has decided. LAAS is a ground-based system which checks and corrects GPS signals, allowing precision approach and landing. Teams certificating next-generation landing systems will get FAA help, which ...

  • News

    Air Niugini nears collapse after Qantas is ignored

    1998-04-15T15:53:00Z

    Papua New Guinea (PNG) flag carrier Air Niugini continues to edge closer to complete collapse, with the Government apparently setting aside salvage proposals put forward by Qantas. The airline was temporarily rescued from insolvency on 13 March when PNG Prime Minister Bill Skate compelled the country's main bank, PNGBC, ...

  • News

    Air New Zealand adds first 737-300

    1998-04-15T15:50:00Z

    Air New Zealand has introduced the first of three Boeing 737-300s acquired on operating lease, mainly for trans-Tasman services from Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. The first aircraft, leased from GE Capital Aviation Services, began flights at the end of March. It is painted in a "millennium" scheme, incorporating the colours ...

  • News

    SIA wants more time to study 777-200X long haul proposal

    1998-04-15T15:49:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Singapore Airlines (SIA) has again postponed a decision on purchase of a new ultra long haul aircraft. The airline wants more time to evaluate a Pratt & Whitney PW4000-powered Boeing 777-200X engine/airframe proposal. US carrier Tower Air, meanwhile, looks likely to be the next airline to ...

  • News

    Overnight parcel carriers face noisy opposition

    1998-04-15T15:48:00Z

    Herman De Wulf/Brussels Express parcel carriers, which fly the bulk of their operations at night, are facing growing opposition in Europe on environmental grounds. The latest development is the rejection by a Bavarian court of an appeal by DHL International against a ban on night operations at Nuremberg Airport, which ...

  • News

    Routes

    1998-04-15T15:46:00Z

    ++ Continental Airlines and VASP of Brazil will codeshare on flights between the USA and Brazil from mid-1998, pending Government approvals. ++ SAS Cargo is to introduce a DHL-owned McDonnell Douglas DC-8-70 freighter between New York and Gothenburg, Sweden, and will share an Antonov An-26 between Copenhagen and the ...

  • News

    JAS forecasts losses and joins fresh Japanese drive on costs

    1998-04-15T14:14:00Z

    Andrew Mollett/TOKYO Japan Air System (JAS) has added to the bad news in the Japanese airline sector, warning that it expects to post a loss for the last financial year and unveiling a renewed cost-cutting drive. JAS had forecast a profit of ´700 million ($5 million) for the ...

  • News

    Embraer heads for profits after sales soar

    1998-04-15T14:13:00Z

    Embraer has produced its promised turnaround, coming close to breakeven last year and likely to show its first profits for seven years in 1998. The overall result for 1997 showed the Brazilian manufacturer with a net loss of $13.2 million, stemming from heavy costs in the first half of the ...

  • News

    US DoT acts to protect low fare airlines

    1998-04-15T14:09:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON US low cost airlines have won their battle for rules on predatory practices by the major network carriers, with the issue of new competition guidelines from the US Department of Transportation (DoT). The new policy, unveiled for comment last week by Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater, effectively ...

  • News

    France and USA seal bilateral agreement

    1998-04-15T13:59:00Z

    Julian Moxon/paris France and the USA have finally signed a bilateral air transport accord, opening the way for codesharing alliances between French and US carriers, although it is short of the open skies agreement originally sought by the USA. The deal provides for a five year transition to ...

  • News

    US Airways talks fuel US alliance speculation

    1998-04-15T13:47:00Z

    The US airline industry may be on the verge of a new wave of consolidation through major alliances rather than mergers and acquisitions. Speculation of pending marketing alliances was fuelled by the Wall Street Journal, which reported that US Airways is again in talks with both United Airlines and ...

  • News

    Spot on satellite

    1998-04-15T00:00:00Z

    The Spot 4 launch has breathed new life into the French Earth observation satellite programme Andrzej Jeziorski/KOUROU Just another 2t of junk in a relentlessly growing orbital scrapheap, Spot 3 still zips from pole to pole, awaiting its end as a fiery skid mark across the upper atmosphere. In ...

  • News

    Manx mulls options for growth

    1998-04-15T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/Isle of Man The continued traffic growth experienced by Manx Airlines and sister company British Regional Airlines (BRAL) is forcing the two airlines to examine the acquisition of aircraft larger than the British Aerospace 146-200. The carriers operate a centrally managed fleet of some 36 aircraft with operations divided ...

  • News

    PAL probe finds faulty reverser

    1998-04-15T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Asymmetrical thrust is emerging as the most likely cause for the crash of a Philippine Air Lines' (PAL) Airbus Industrie A320 at Bacolod, after the pilot attempted to land with only one of the aircraft's two engine thrust reversers serviceable. Flight International understands from investigators in ...

  • News

    Price cutting 'harms' airline industry

    1998-04-08T17:19:00Z

    The world airline industry is continuing to underperform because of price cutting, warns Pierre Jeanniot, director general International Air Transport Association (IATA), forecasting a sharp fall in profits this year. Preliminary figures from IATA suggest that international airlines earned net profits of around $5 billion last year, despite a ...

  • News

    Air Namibia switches from four engines to twinjet

    1998-04-08T16:27:00Z

    Air Namibia has introduced a Boeing 767-300ER twinjet on its long haul services between Windhoek and London Heathrow, replacing a leased Boeing 747SP. The airline says that the move has enabled it to operate on a more cost-effective basis, and to introduce a first-class cabin for the first time. A ...

  • News

    CAL rethinks orders after crash

    1998-04-08T16:15:00Z

    Brent Hannon/TAIPEI China Airlines (CAL) is considering deferring aircraft orders because of a 10-15% drop in load factors after one of its Airbus A300s crashed at Taipei in February, killing over 200 people. CAL is considering the deferral of two Airbus A300-600Rs due for delivery this year, say ...