News from FlightGlobal – Page 2209

  • News

    Three's a crowd

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The narrowbody engine market has heated up since International Aero Engines snatched the market lead from CFM International on the A320. And a third competitor, Pratt & Whitney, is set to make the chase even more intense. Report by Karen Walker. A large banner hangs over workers at the CFM56 ...

  • News

    News in Brief

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    BA's pilot deal - BA has sealed a comprehensive agreement with pilots union BALPA, which provides pilots flying for its controversial long-haul charter arm AML and short-haul routes out of Gatwick with the same terms and conditions as BA mainline pilots. In return pilots have agreed to relax some flying ...

  • News

    Malaysia's spring clean

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    A house-cleaning exercise appears to be taking place at Malaysia Airlines (MAS), as the loss-making airline undergoes a major shake-up in its top ranks. In mid-February, MAS, which in the second half of the last calendar year had a debt of 11.8 billion ringgit ($3.1 billion) and was ...

  • News

    SAA profits just in time

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    After a radical restructuring, South African Airways (SAA) has claimed it is again profitable just as the South African Government confirmed the timetable for its privatisation. The corporatisation of SAA as a separate entity will be completed by the end of March. Privatisation is on schedule for mid-June with ...

  • News

    CAL and EVA go Canadian

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Taiwan is changing the face of its presence in Canada and in the process has added a second player. Now the question is whether Ottawa will do the same in Taipei. Before the latest update in the Taiwan-Canada bilateral, Mandarin Airlines, a subsidiary of China Airlines (CAL), was Taiwan's ...

  • News

    JAL slows on oneworld

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan Airlines is in no hurry to join the oneworld alliance, despite its growing array of codeshare and reciprocal frequent flier agreements with its members British Airways, American Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Qantas and Canadian Airlines. For now, JAL says it wants to keep these only as bilateral pacts. "Membership of ...

  • News

    PIA takes action on fleet renewal

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    It was a decision years in the making, but Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has taken action over its fleet renewal. The long-troubled state-owned carrier has signed a letter of intent with Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways to lease all six of its Boeing 747-300s, to replace ageing 747-200s. ...

  • News

    Routes

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    United extra - United Airlines is to introduce an additional daily non-stop flight from San Francisco to Hong Kong, from 10 June to 7 September. United already operates a regular daily non-stop service between the two cities and says demand for US-Hong Kong routes remains strong. China Southern ...

  • News

    Beijing talks with USA break down

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite early optimism that a deal could be struck ahead of a high-level delegation of Chinese leaders to the USA in April, talks on a new air services agreement between Beijing and Washington broke down in February. During meetings between US and Chinese negotiators in Beijing from 24-26 February, ...

  • News

    Better times beckon for Asia

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    As Asian airlines start to report last year's results, the grip of the region's financial winter is clear. But a few hints of spring suggest the worst may be over, and this year could start a broader recovery. Thai Airways International released the most promising results. It reported ...

  • News

    Europe breaks ranks on noise

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Europe's controversial action on hushkits could be just the start, as the region prepares to break international ranks to tighten up controls on noise and pollution. Europe's moves to suspend hushkitting have already caused one transatlantic row. But more controversy is in prospect as the European Commission (EC) prepares ...

  • News

    Austrian spring

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Six years ago, Austrian Airlines was in severe difficulties. Then Mario Rehulka and Herbert Bammer took the helm. Peter Bennett talkes to the two presidents about their carrier's dramatic transformation. It is early spring in Vienna. It has been a cold and snowy winter, but now the first buds ...

  • News

    Cheating on aviation

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Electronic systems continue to transform the airline industry, bringing savings, efficiency gains and-an increase in fraud. The potential to "earn" big money quickly in a multi-million-dollar business like the airline industry has already bred fraudulent activities in the shape of bogus spare parts, false maintenance records and fictitious frequent flyer ...

  • News

    Fictitious aircraft

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Some transactions that may fall short of criminal fraud can nevertheless result in heavy losses, court actions and deep unhappiness. When businessman Thor Tjontveit and his Dallas-based company Air Alaska (also trading as World Pacific Air Lease Inc) were ordered by a New York court to pay compensatory and ...

  • News

    Spanair in the works

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Straddling the charter-schedule boundary, Spanair is making a name for itself in Europe while also trying to gain a foothold in the transatlantic market. This will be a pivotal year for Spanair, Spain's fast-growing, charter-cum-scheduled airline. Eleven years old this spring, Spanair started scheduled flights just five years ago, ...

  • News

    Premium Sales

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    With the worst over in the airliner discount wars, John Leahy is focused on securing a premium for Airbus technology. Salesmen stuck with a mundane commodity product must look with green-eyed longing at the airliner market. What could be further from the stack it high and sell it cheap philosophy ...

  • News

    The size equation

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Airbus forcasts show that demand for the A3XX rests partly on the shifting balance between high and low yield traffic. Few new airliner births can have had such an agonisingly slow and controversial labour as that which has accompanied the launch of a new large aircraft. After almost a ...

  • News

    All kinds of everything

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Boeing believes its comprehensive range of airliners sets it up well for the next industry upturn, when each airline will seek out the product that most closely matches its requirements. All the sizes in all the colours. If Boeing's product range was available in the local department store, even the ...

  • News

    Get your aircraft economics right

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Operating ageing aircraft can be an expensive business, as cost figures for the US majors clearly demonstrate. But how great is the cost difference between old and new? There has always been a trade-off between the cheap acquisition cost of older aircraft and the slick operating economics of modern types. ...

  • News

    Iberia gets down to business

    1999-04-01T00:00:00Z

    With the BA equity deal all but sealed, membership of oneworld under its belt and full privatisation slated by year end, Iberia has much to be cheerful about. But while the Spanish flag carrier reinvents itself as a serious international business airline, it will need to keep a close eye ...