Networks – Page 1375
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India's giant
NEPC Airlines has bought rival Damania Airways to become the largest privately owned carrier in India. Damania operates mainly in western India, using four Boeing 737-200s. NEPC operates five Fokker F27s on feeder routes in southern India. Source: Airline Business
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Canadian spread
Air Canada and United Airlines have tightened their marketing alliance, and now plan codesharing to six US and four Canadian destinations. Air Canada also has been granted route rights to Belgium, the Czech Republic, Greece, Haiti, Israel, Russia, Singapore and Spain. Flights to Israel start end of June. ...
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New entry to Oz
Cathay Pacific has filed with the Australian Federal Court asking for the Australian government's ban on flights from 30 June to be quashed. Talks on the Australia-Hong Kong bilateral have broken down and Cathay's licence to operate to Australia finishes at the end of June. The HK carrier says the ...
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Managing Asia's growth
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. ...
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The yen factor
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 ...
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Clearing the cost block
Continental Airlines' president, Gordon Bethune, says the airline must focus on revenue gains rather than cost cuts, and must improve its poor reputation. Mark Odell reports from Houston.Gordon Bethune, the president and chief executive of Continental Airlines, doesn't mince his words. His energetic and hands-on management style has ripped ...
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Routing for growth
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 ...
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Pyramids in the sky
Egyptair has seen off domestic competition and traffic is returning after a couple of years of decline. Chairman Mohammed Rayan talks to Sara Guild about his lofty plans for the carrier's future. There appears to be a discrepancy between the plans and ideas of Egyptair's chief executive and those of ...
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Airline news
All Nippon Airways will begin routes from Osaka/Kansai to Shanghai, Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur in mid-July. The routes are subject to approval by Japan's Ministry of Transport. Philippine Airlines has begun a three time a week service from Manila to San Francisco using B747-400s. SilkAir and ...
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Financial results
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%. ...
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Crisis looms in Thailand
Thailand faces the renewed prospect of its airline industry falling prey to political vested interests in the wake of the dissolution of the Thai government on 19 May and the elections set for 2 July. The dissolution has meant the departure of both the transport and finance ministers, ...
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SAA boosted by Lufthansa
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 ...
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Taiwan takes direct route
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 ...
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Sino thaw is set to grip
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 ...
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Japan urges Asian forum
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 ...
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Phone-in plan riles agents
Japan's travel agents are up in arms over a new ticketing drive by the country's major airlines which allows domestic travellers to bypass agents by ordering airline tickets directly over the telephone and paying by credit card. Initiated by the country's biggest carrier All Nippon Airways in April, ...
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Qantas all set to float
With its long awaited A$2 billion (US$1.4 billion) public flotation now in sight, Qantas has taken steps to reassure prospective local investors that privatisation is not a step on the way to integration with 25 per cent stockholder British Airways, and that the company remains committed to European markets. ...
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Ansett carry on regardless
Ignoring recent losses and the imminent purchase of 50 per cent of its stock by Air New Zealand, Ansett Australia has decided to push ahead with plans to expand its embryonic international operations in Asia. Managing director Graeme McMahon says a third Boeing 747-300 will be leased for ...
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Capital plans out of Africa
Two African airlines are moving closer to privatisation, as Kenya Airways seeks an airline investor and Air Tanzania awaits the government's plan for its intended sell-off. International Finance Corporation, the World Bank body advising the Kenyan government, has written to all Iata members requesting expressions of interest in ...
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Latin sales close to end
The opening of the bidding for Bolivia's LAB and what remains of Ecuatoriana should bring to a close the troubled airline privatisation process in Latin America. Consolidation could be the emerging trend, as evidenced by events in Chile and Peru. Advisers for both LAB and Ecuatoriana are placing ...