Networks – Page 1383

  • News

    Competition conference

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    Europe is less than two years away from completing the single European air market, yet bitter disputes continue to rage over issues ranging from airport access and slot allocation, through to state aid and US open-skies deals. To help address these crucial issues, Flight International has been invited ...

  • News

    TNT considers Subic Bay tie-up with FedEx

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    TNT Worldwide Express is looking to relocate its Philippine-based Asian freight hub from Manila to Subic Bay International Airport (SBIA) and is negotiating a line-haul co-operation agreement with FedEx as part of the move. The company's joint venture Pacific East Asia Cargo (PEAC) carrier is constrained by a ...

  • News

    Indian Airlines plans to wet-lease regionals

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    INDIAN AIRLINES' board of directors has approved a proposal to acquire six 56-seater aircraft on wet lease. The aircraft will be flown on short-haul routes, mainly in India's northeastern sector. The board has also approved a scheme, to form a joint venture with either an international or Indian ...

  • News

    Indian cargo step Up

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    Elbee Airlines is to become India's first all-cargo airline. The new carrier is scheduled to become operational in June, having acquired an air-taxi-operator's certificate from the country's Directorate General of Civil Aviation to operate four Fokker 50s on domestic routes. There are no dedicated cargo airlines in India's domestic sector, ...

  • News

    Lockheed Martin ready to consolidate by June

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    Lockheed Martin chairman Dan Tellep has underlined the newly merged group's commitment to announce decisions on consolidating the businesses "no later than" the end of June. Presenting the group's first-quarter results, the first since the merger was formalised, Tellep calls for "reduction of excess capacity and aggressive elimination ...

  • News

    Lufthansa considers A320s for S America

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    LUFTHANSA IS considering using the Airbus cross-crew qualification (CCQ) concept to allow it to base A320s in Latin America to operate onward routes from its long-haul services. The airline will begin using Airbus A340s to Caracas, Venezuela, during the next winter timetable, but expects very low load-factors on ...

  • News

    Cargo boosts long-haul economics

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    TWO OF AIRBUS Industrie's long-haul customers are using their aircraft to fly pure-freight services. Cathay Pacific has found the A330 and A340 sufficiently efficient to operate as lower-deck-only freighters once their day-time passenger duties are completed, and Aer Lingus says that it converts one of its three A330-300s ...

  • News

    Top executives struggle for power at Kiwi

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    KIWI INTERNATIONAL Airlines has gone through its second management shake-up of the year, with Byron Hogue resigning as chief executive. Kiwi president Danny Wright assumes Hogue's post. The troubled carrier has offered no explanation for the move, but there are reports of a power struggle between Wright and ...

  • News

    Arrow strikes deal with FAA

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    ARROW AIR EXPECTS to resume cargo operations by the end of this month following a deal made with the US Federal Aviation Administration. The two sides agreed that Arrow Air would retain its operating certificate if it paid the aviation agency $1.5 million to defray the cost of ...

  • News

    UK gives option to cut take-off separation

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    SOME AIRCRAFT departing from London Heathrow Airport will be operated at half the present take-off separation minima during a UK Civil Aviation Authority-sanctioned trial scheduled to start in June. The current separation for a narrow-body following a wide-body is 2min, and the proposal would reduce this to 60s. ...

  • News

    Damascus connection revived with UK

    1995-05-10T00:00:00Z

    After a gap of 12 years, two UK scheduled airlines have started services to the Syrian capital, Damascus. British Mediterranean Airways and British Airways have started services almost simultaneously. Each flies twice weekly out of London Heathrow, BA using Boeing 767s, via Amman, Jordan, and British Mediterranean Airbus A320s, via ...

  • News

    Boeing places drawings on-line

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    AIRLINE ENGINEERING departments are to gain, for the first time, direct on-line access to a Boeing technical-drawings database covering all its aircraft from the 707 onward. Called REDARS (reference engineering-data automated-retrieval system), the subscription-based system gives maintenance engineers on-line access to "...the technical drawings and parts-lists needed for ...

  • News

    Ansett NZ is crucial to Tasman future

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    The future of loss-making New Zealand domestic carrier Ansett New Zealand may be one of the last issues for resolution as Air New Zealand positions itself to take up News Corporation's 50% stake in Ansett Australia for an estimated A$50 million ($36 million). Air New Zealand has reportedly ...

  • News

    FAA changes pilot pairing regulations...

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration has tightened its rules on air-transport pilot pairing to prevent low-time pilots being rostered together. The rule changes, which take effect in four months for major airlines and at the end of the year for regional carriers, result from several accident investigations in ...

  • News

    Manufacturers vie for SAA order

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    HIGH-RANKING executives from Airbus, Boeing and McDonnell Douglas are due in Johannesburg, South Africa, on 5 May to brief board members of South African Airways (SAA), and its parent company Transnet, on their proposals to fulfil a planned R4 billion ($1 billion fleet requirement. The meeting is the ...

  • News

    CNAC challenges Cathay at Hong Kong

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    China National Aviation (CNAC) has applied to the Hong Kong Government for an air operators' certificate (AOC), threatening Cathay Pacific Airway's virtual monopoly and undermining confidence in its post-1997 position. Hong Kong's Civil Aviation Department (CAD) has confirmed that CNAC, a subsidiary of the Civil Aviation Authority of ...

  • News

    Thailand approves second flag carrier

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    THAILAND'S CIVIL Aviation Committee has approved the setting up of a second national carrier, as part of a plan to liberalise the country's air-transport industry. The proposal, which still needs to be endorsed by the cabinet, requires the new airline to have a registered capital of 2.5 billion ...

  • News

    CIS engine head defends PS-90A

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    THE HEAD OF THE CIS aero-engine manufacturers' association (ASSAD) has hit out at Western and Russian firms which, he claims, are plotting against the Aviadvigatel/Perm Motors PS-90A turbofan. Victor Chuiko, president of ASSAD, failed to show up at the conference for unspecified reasons, but his presentation was included ...

  • News

    Alitalia selects Fokker 70

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    ALITALIA HAS selected the Fokker 70 to boost its presence on regional and feeder routes. The Italian carrier has agreed to lease 15 of the aircraft from the Dutch manufacturer. The aircraft will be operated by Avianova, a Rome based regional carrier in which, Alitalia has a ...

  • News

    Canadian opens Russian route

    1995-05-03T00:00:00Z

    CANADIAN AIRLINES International has become the first carrier to use a newly agreed cross over point between Russian and Chinese airspace, which will cut 2-3h off the flight-time between Vancouver and Beijing. Designated ARGUK, the crossing, lies between Khabarovsk in Russia and Haiqing in China. Previously, flights had ...