All Ops & safety articles – Page 1208

  • News

    Jockeying for position

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Tom Gill While European and US hubs remain buoyed by healthy traffic flows across the Atlantic, the airports of Asia-Pacific have yet to see concrete signs of recovery in passenger numbers to fill the bright new capacity that has been coming on stream. If growth through the world's airports ...

  • News

    Tackling IFE

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    As aircraft deliveries continue to ramp up, Airbus is aiming to take a tighter grip over the scope for Buyer Furnished Equipment (BFE) - basically the seats, galleys and in-flight entertainment (IFE) systems specified by the customer. Late delivery or faults with such items, especially IFE, has begun to cause ...

  • News

    Hong Kong fees fly high

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines should not count on any cut in landing fees when Hong Kong's airport authority completes its operational review in June. That is the warning from the authority, which explains that lower-than-forecast traffic means fees must stay high to avoid a shortfall in predicted revenues for the city's Chep Lap ...

  • News

    euros can wait

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Airline customers are beginning to angle for their first aircraft deals in the new European single currency. But there are good reasons why Airbus is not yet pushing too hard for the euro as an international replacement for the dollar. Dietrich Russell, Airbus chief operating officer, says that "a ...

  • News

    KAL reshuffle disappoints

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Nicholas Ionides ATI/SINGAPORE Troubles continue to pile up for KAL, with criticism from the country's president adding to its woes April and May are two months that Korean Air (KAL) may want to forget. Hurt by a 15 April Boeing MD-11 freighter crash in Shanghai - its fourth hull ...

  • News

    Deadlock continues at Narita

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Japan's transport ministry has confirmed what many have long suspected: it will not be able to open a second runway at Tokyo's congested Narita airport by the end of the 2000 fiscal year as promised. While officials say efforts will continue to break a deadlock with landowners to allow ...

  • News

    FAA plans safety change

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Carole Shifrin MIAMI The US Federal Aviation Administration has signalled forthcoming changes in its controversial international aviation safety assessment (IASA) programme, but not enough to make carriers suffering under the programme any happier. Nicholas Lacey, director of the FAA's Flight Standards Service, says the agency expects to place ...

  • News

    US first quarter causes concern

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    US first quarter results are perhaps the clearest indication so far that the current cycle's downturn might be just around the corner. While there is no need yet for tears, overall revenues are flat compared with the 1998 first quarter and net results are down. The sobering effect on overall ...

  • News

    US carriers flock to China

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE US carriers collectively have applied for almost twice as many frequencies as the new China-USA bilateral allows. In selecting which requests to approve, Washington faces an array of policy choices. The application by United Airlines is the most modest and straightforward. Of the 17 new ...

  • News

    Storming the capital

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones Stansted has evolved from a little known local airport in the south-east of England to be the new rising star of the London airport scene, and still holds ambitions to become a base for global alliances launching long-haul services It is the tale of a poor relation which ...

  • News

    Lufthansa's global authority

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Peter Bennett FRANKFURT Lufthansa would like to see airline alliances and competition subject to a global authority German flag carrier Lufthansa has called for a global licensing authority with the ability to rule on airline alliances and competitive structures. "The European Union [EU] is investigating all transatlantic alliances ...

  • News

    Opening Arab skies

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Tom Gill JEDDAH Unity among Arab airlines is being tested over proposals for a single aviation market in the region as they struggle against a weak economic background. With the Middle East peace dividend yet to materialise, weak oil prices , a continuing UN economic embargo on Iraq and ...

  • News

    Anti-trust and open skies head south

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE The alliance between LanChile and American Airlines is about to become the first in South America to gain US antitrust immunity. It also could mark the start of an open skies regime between Chile and the USA that has languished pending this approval. The US Department ...

  • News

    Airbus still challenged by need to restructure

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole TOULOUSE At its annual press briefing, Airbus Industrie appeared surprisingly subdued given that it has just achieved its 30-year goal of parity with Boeing. But then there are still plenty of hurdles ahead, not least, its conversion to a commercial company. When an Airbus salesman admits to ...

  • News

    Revolution ahead

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Fairchild Aerospace believes the regional jet industry is poised at the "beginning of a revolution" that will be even more dramatic over the next 10 years than in recent times. Carl Albert, Fairchild Aerospace chairman and chief executive, believes the revolution will come in the 50-plus seat sector, where ...

  • News

    European safety moves ahead

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Alan George BRUSSELS Brussels hopes that formal talks about the establishment of a European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) can be started with non-European Union (EU) states by the end of the year and that the new body can be inaugurated in 2001 or 2002. Well-placed officials in Brussels say ...

  • News

    Airlines press on 777 ETOPS

    1999-06-01T00:00:00Z

    The Federal Aviation Administration may be receptive to a request that would allow Boeing's 777 to fly further from land on transpacific routes. Boeing and four US airlines - American Airlines, Continental Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines - have asked the FAA to raise the 777's extended-range twin-engine ...

  • News

    Routes

    1999-05-26T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada launched daily non-stop Airbus A319 services between Chicago and Calgary on 17 May, with plans for twice-daily flights. United Airlines will codeshare on the route. Lufthansa Cargo will reintroduce and increase freighter service to Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, on 31 May, having previously announced that it would suspend flights ...

  • News

    US probes launches

    1999-05-26T00:00:00Z

    The US launcher industry may be grounded for up to six months as President Bill Clinton has ordered Defense Secretary George Cohen to investigate recent launch failures of Lockheed Martin Titan IV, Athena and Boeing Delta III boosters. Six failures between July 1998 and May this year have cost over ...

  • News

    Japan private sector expansion needed

    1999-05-26T00:00:00Z

    Japan needs to expand the private sector's role in the nation's space projects to help prevent space programme failures, says a government panel. The report, compiled by a policy subcommittee of the Space Activities Commission - Japan's top space policy-setting body - calls for easing the operational burden and ...