News from FlightGlobal – Page 2272

  • News

    A first class idea

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    While the rest of the airline industry promotes the idea of no-frills, virtually fat-free flying, Midwest Express is pampering its passengers with premium service. Meanwhile, in France Fairlines hopes to emulate this success. A handful of peanuts and a dribble of Coca-Cola never satisfied anyone, least of all an airline ...

  • News

    French pilots kick up fuss

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    A further reduction in costs is the key to Air France's partial privatisation later this year, but pilots are strongly resisting cuts in their salary. A strike over a 15per cent cut in pilots' pay started 1 June and is costing the carrier FFr100 million (US$16.7 million) a day, ...

  • News

    Indians lower airline stake

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The Indian government is to reduce its stake in Indian Airlines from 100 per cent to 49 per cent over the next three years as part of its strategy to turn the flag carrier around. The government has decided to restructure the airline's capital base and reduce its equity ...

  • News

    Isles single out air deal

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Island nations scattered across the tropical Pacific have agreed to study whether they should form a single aviation market and negotiate air service agreements as a bloc. The 14 island nations, which range in size from Papua New Guinea to tiny Tuvalu and span an ocean area larger than ...

  • News

    A leadership role

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Swissair's new president and CEO, Jeffrey Katz, thinks leadership is vital - both within the airline and among its alliance partners. Since his arrival in the president's office at Swissair this January, Jeffrey G Katz has been trying not to make too many waves. But a change in corporate ...

  • News

    Race for the bronze

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Aircraft lessors are jockeying for position as Asian airlines start to think more seriously about operating leases. No-one is challenging the two giants. International Lease Finance Corp and General Electric Capital Aviation Services remain the top aircraft operating lessors. But a three-way race is on to see who will ...

  • News

    Aer Lingus is to lose Team

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    With the disposal of an unprofitable non-core subsidiary finally on the horizon, Aer Lingus now has to confront the bigger questions of ownership and alliances. At presstime the management of the Irish flag carrier had still not convinced the 1,550 strong workforce of its unprofitable aircraft maintenance arm, Team, ...

  • News

    Love lost in Dallas brawl

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    US regional airline Continental Express has begun flying from Dallas/Love Field, becoming the latest carrier to join a surge of interest in the city's downtown airport despite legal attempts to stop the growth. The airport has become a hotbed of controversy, with lawsuits and countersuits flying across Texas. In ...

  • News

    Making waves

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    With a new regional venture, a consultancy and plans to invest in an African carrier, Air Mauritius is taking an increasingly aggressive stance in exploiting its standing in the region. When Air Mauritius chairman and managing director Nashir Mallam-Hasham arrived at his new desk a little over a year ...

  • News

    Narita nears new runway

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The second runway at Tokyo/Narita airport moved a step closer to reality in late May when another of the holdout farmers declared he was willing to sell. Japan's Ministry of Transport has taken the unusual step of predicting a date for opening Narita's second runway, even though two reluctant ...

  • News

    Pilot protest at Northwest

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Although the proposed alliance with Continental Airlines is said not to be high on the list of union concerns, management at Northwest Airlines is nevertheless struggling to reach agreement in contract negotiations with its pilots. The stalemate is bound to slow progress on the planned alliance, which depends on ...

  • News

    Feeding frenzy

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The small regional jet has become firmly established as a significant competitive weapon for feeding the North American majors' hubs. If all the regional jets now on order and option by US carriers were delivered tomorrow, the collective number of seats would exceed that provided by all the regional ...

  • News

    US alliances face scrutiny

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The US General Accounting Office has planted serious seeds for concern in politicians' minds by claiming that proposed US domestic alliances could mean a reduction in competitive service to almost 101 million American passengers. The GAO highlights the Delta Air Lines/United Airlines partnership as especially worrying because of its ...

  • News

    US airports face review

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    If major US airports thought they were immune from the Department of Transportation's surge of interest in anti-competitive behaviour, they can think again. DOT secretary Rodney Slater is establishing a taskforce with airports in mind. Details of what the taskforce will be looking at are not yet clear, although ...

  • News

    Regionals prepare to play politics

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The folks in Ohio and Kentucky have been provided with an infinitely easier path to paradise. On 6 June, a nonstop flight was launched that will transport sunseekers the 1,053 miles from Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Airport to Nassau in the Bahamas each Saturday and Sunday. It is not a major ...

  • News

    American and BA compromise to break alliance deadlock

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES American Airlines has guaranteed not to fully implement its proposed alliance with British Airways until 14 slots have been made available to enable other airlines to begin new daily services between the US and London Heathrow. The US airline believes the compromise could help break ...

  • News

    American ponders DC-10s' fate

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/DALLAS FORT WORTH American Airlines will decide on the fate of its remaining McDonnell Douglas DC-10s by the end of the month as part of a major restructuring process that will see its total jet fleet increase to more than 700 aircraft from 2000 onwards. "By the ...

  • News

    ARIA fumes over tax delays

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Aeroflot-Russian International Airlines (ARIA) has hit out at the Moscow Government for delaying signature of a decree exempting the airline from paying taxes on imported aircraft. Speaking during the delivery of ARIA's first Boeing 777, director-general Valeri Okulov (son in law of Russian president Boris Yeltsin) criticised the Government, saying: ...

  • News

    Air Canada sells Air Alliance

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada is selling its Quebec regional airline, Air Alliance, just two weeks after Canadian Airlines International sold its Quebec feeder, Inter-Canadian, to private investors. Air Alliance has been a drain on Air Canada's finances for several years. It lost several million dollars last year because of a prolonged ...

  • News

    Next Generation 737 CFM56 failure was a 'one-off', says CFMI

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Initial investigations into the failure of a bearing on a new CFM56-7 powering a Maersk Air Boeing 737-700 show that the incident was a "one-off", says CFMInternational (CFMI). The Maersk aircraft, delivered to the Danish operator in early March, suffered "a complete failure of the number four bearing" on ...