Networks – Page 1183

  • News

    Scandinavia takes color

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The launch of a low-cost no-frills start-up in Norway has forced the incumbents to cut prices, but the new entrant will be facing tough competition. Color Air began flying out of Oslo to Aaselsund on 7 August and will expand its network to Trondheim and Bergen later in August, ...

  • News

    Airline News

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Transbrasil and TAP Air Portugal began codesharing on services between Lisbon and Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and Fortaleza on 30 June. TAP intends to expand in Brazil via Transbrasil's domestic network, as part of an agreement signed in 1997. Swissair was to begin codesharing with THY Turkish Airlines, ...

  • News

    Profits for better and for worse

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Airline profits may be at an all-time high but can the industry keep them there? It's just déjà vu all over again. So a disillusioned sportsman is said to have remarked on seeing his team once again collapse to defeat. There may be more than a few in the airline ...

  • News

    Two set for Tokyo launch

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan has taken several more steps towards deregulating its skies by liberalising overseas fares and licensing two new domestic airlines. The Ministry of Transport is promoting fares competition by allowing higher discounts on international tickets. From October, fares for overseas tours may be 35 per cent below International Air ...

  • News

    Startup fills Vegas niche

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    A planned new Las Vegas-based airline differs from previous contenders in that its backers, two of the largest casino companies in the US, have a strong vested interest in its success. National Airlines expects to begin operations in early 1999 and has already raised more than US$50 million in ...

  • News

    Aces trumps

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Bogotá has convinced Washington that Aces can fly new Airbus A320s to the US even though Colombia remains in category 2. Category 2 freezes US routes and fleets for foreign airlines, but Aces' tests and pressure from Colombian officials convinced the FAA to exemptthe airline's new jets. Source: Airline ...

  • News

    PAL fights for survival

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Philippine Airlines' future hangs in the balance as it prepares a plan to avoid bankruptcy. PAL's interim receivership committee is being supervised by the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission as it works towards the SEC's 21 September deadline. PAL is struggling to survive an ill-fated fleet expansion and Asia's ...

  • News

    Peru vies for US markets

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Peru's airlines are scrambling to claim more than their current one-quarter share of the Peru-US market in the face of a growing invasion by US and fifth freedom airlines. Three Peruvian carriers are vying to enter the US market, which has doubled over the last eight years, sparking a ...

  • News

    Strong on caution

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Qantas needs to respond quickly to market conditions yet its managing director, James Strong, refuses to be rushed into any major decisions. If he has said it once, he has said it in a dozen ways: 'There's no use charging around the place; you don't just snatch at things ...

  • News

    SIA moves to link with CAL

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Singapore Airlines' latest linkup - with China Airlines - offers few clues as to whether it will join the Star Alliance. The agreement by Singapore Airlines and China Airlines to form a strategic partnership caught many by surprise because it does not follow the pattern of pacts between members ...

  • News

    A time for celebration

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    While 1997 certainly broke all industry records for profitability, there were already dark clouds on the horizon as the effects of the Asian currency crisis began to make themselves felt. There will be worse to come this year as economies in the region continue to slow. So while the ...

  • News

    Recipe for reform

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Romania's national airline still hopes to attract a western partner, if only the economy would improve. Take one battered old airport, add a few old Russian aircraft, and then throw in years of political instability. Stir with economic collapse, simmer for nine years, and serve with a garnish of ...

  • News

    US alliances meet silence

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    A Wall Street analyst is predicting that none of the proposed US domestic airline alliances will be approved by the Department of Transportation because of the unfavourable environment in Washington DC and concerns about competition. Candace Browning, an analyst at Merrill Lynch in New York, points out that the ...

  • News

    Winds rise in the east

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Following the entry of MetroJet, US Airways' long awaited low cost spinoff, the rapidly growing US east coast market is becoming crowded with competitors. From Florida to Maine the story is the same - the US east coast is booming. Airports are growing capacity; airlines are adding frequencies; new ...

  • News

    Deregulation dogfight

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The US majors are responding to the Department of Transportation's proposed policy against predatory behaviour by arguing that it will deter them from offering cheaper fares. The irony is obvious. This year is the 20th anniversary of deregulation in the US and the industry should be celebrating two decades ...

  • News

    North America: communication lines are open

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    If the millennium bug decides to take a bite out of the US airline industry, it will not be through lack of dialogue on the subject. Perhaps characteristically, Americans see communication as the primary frontline weapon in the war against potential computer chaos at the birth of the new century. ...

  • News

    Europe: few direct answers

    1998-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Will Europe's aviation industry be ready for the year 2000? The honest answer is that nobody yet knows. To date, companies have largely been preoccupied with their own internal compliance issues, but the wider debate over how the issue will affect the industry as a whole has only just begun. ...

  • News

    Air Jamaica plan for all-Airbus fleet hit by shortage of aircraft

    1998-08-26T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/Washington DC Air Jamaica wants to move to an all-Airbus fleet "as soon as possible", to cut costs, but is being stymied by a lack of available aircraft. The Jamaican flag carrier is looking for at least four A320s and one A340, says chief executive Christopher Zacca. ...

  • News

    Skymark Airlines takes first aircraft and prepares to launch

    1998-08-26T00:00:00Z

    Japanese start-up Skymark Airlines has taken delivery of its first aircraft, a Boeing 767-300ER, one of two examples being leased from International Lease Finance. Skymark will launch operations with the 309-seater on 19 September, operating three daily round-trip flights between Tokyo and Fukuoka. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Delta speeds up 727 retirement

    1998-08-26T00:00:00Z

    Delta Air Lines is accelerating the retirement of its Boeing 727-200s. The last of the tri-jets are set to leave the fleet in 2005, some three years earlier than previously planned, . The 117 727-200Advs in the mainline fleet and the 14 similar aircraft allocated to Delta Shuttle operations ...