All Strategy articles – Page 1080
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News
Condor studies long-range 757
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES German charter airline Condor Flugdienst is studying a longer-range version of the Boeing 757 as well as the recently launched 767-400 as part of a long- term strategy to introduce extended range and higher payload aircraft into its fleet. Condor, which was the ...
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P&W effort to improve PW4000 reliability starts to pay dividend
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Pratt & Whitney says that an upgrade effort to counter reliability problems on more than 1,600 PW4000 engines is showing results, with a "dramatic reduction" to in-flight shutdown rates. The upgrade effort, known as the Number 1 reliability programme, involves around 100 service ...
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KAL jettisons A300B4s in fleet modernisation
Korean Airlines (KAL) is phasing out all of its Airbus Industrie A300B4s and replacing them with newer, leased A300-600Rs as part of a wider move to modernise its fleet of widebody and narrowbody jet airliners. Ansett Worldwide (AWAS) has acquired two of KAL's eight A300B4s and will take ...
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IBA
UK aviation consultancy the International Bureau of Aviation (IBA) has appointed Phil Seymour, formerly vice-president, technical at Exxtor, as director of technical services. He has also worked at British Airways, Dan-Air, Air Europe, Ambassador and Saudi Arabian Airlines. Source: Flight International
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EVA turns sights on Europe in search for partner
Following confirmation of its tie-up with Continental Airlines, Taiwan's EVA has now turned its attention to finding a European partner. The two front runners are believed to be existing Continental partner, Air France, or Virgin Atlantic. "Air France is a good alliance for us, and could be for ...
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ValuJet probe shows cockpit shortcoming
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Improved cockpit emergency training might have prevented pilots of a ValuJet McDonnell Douglas DC-9 from being overcome by smoke and fumes from a cargo fire, says the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). The verdict follows its probe into the fatal crash of ...
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Asiana gains widebody approval
Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Asiana Airlines has finally been given government approval to order its first tranche of 14 new Airbus and Boeing widebody aircraft, following commitments from the manufacturers to meet last-minute South Korean demands for offset work. Tentative agreement on the question of industrial concessions has ...
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Chinese airlines propose flotations
China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines are each planning to sell additional shares on the domestic Shanghai exchange, following their successful initial public offers in Hong Kong and New York. Shanghai-based China Eastern plans to sell shares representing around 6.5% of the airline to Chinese investors, raising ...
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SASCommuter confirms selection of 15 Dash-8 400s
SASCOMMUTER confirms that it plans to sign a $350 million deal for 15 Bombardier de Havilland Dash 8-400 turboprops, plus 18 options, representing the largest single order to date for the Canadian manufacturer's new high-speed 70-seat aircraft. The Dash 8-400 selection will fill a gap between the mainline ...
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Appointments
Royal Brunei Airlines has appointed Pg All bin Haji Ahmad as director of corporate affairs, Haji Yahya Cheman as director of customer services, George Tan as director of sales, and Brian Johnson as director of technical services. Don Washburn has been named executive vice president flight operations at ...
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Suppliers
Galileo International's initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange raised US$784 million, giving the company a market value of $2.45 billion. Galileo acquired the Traviswiss distribution company for $8 million in July. The Sabre Group is to install its passenger reservation, yield management, passenger control, frequent ...
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PIA scraps sale
Pakistan International Airlines has shelved its planned partial privatisation. Instead the airline will look to tap the capital markets to fund restructuring and fleet renewal - PIA is looking at replacing its long-haul fleet. The airline also plans to cut costs by 20 per cent by the end of the ...
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Tough on TAM
Just kick them where it hurts most - this is standard parental advice given to daughters the world over to arrest ardent advances. Translate the formula into airline terms and the equivalent way to stall an airline's overzealous advances is to damage its safety record. Well, TAM (Transportes Aereos Regionais) ...
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Together we stand
As the major airline alliance groups begin to solidify, they are becoming more controversial than ever. This table reveals the truth behind the groups which seek to dominate the airline industry. The Star Alliance is well on the way to being the largest alliance group. Once Varig joins in October, ...
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Time to sprint
The pace of business life in Brazil is slow. The Brazilians tend to advocate the 'Mañana' approach introduced by their Portuguese forefathers and add an extra week onto the deadline for virtually any urgent task. Liberalisation is proceeding at a leisurely pace. 'Any new step towards open skies will ...
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Peru regains top ranking
Peru has become the first Latin American country to regain Category I status for safety oversight from Washington, but officials in the region are wary over claims that the US Federal Aviation Administration will upgrade other Latin American countries still on the 'black list.' 'This as not at ...
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Seven in a pickle over ticket tax
The US ticket tax debate has turned into something of a pretty pickle for the Seven Sisters. The campaign by seven major US airlines, officially known as the Coalition for Fair FAA Funding, to replace the current tax with a user fee has backfired so spectacularly that they now find ...
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Time to measure up
The airport industry has been caught up in the trend towards benchmarking and should accept performance indicators as a valuable source of information to both managers and investors, argues Peter Mackenzie-Williams. Airports beware. In many business fields managers have for some time increasingly been seeking to compare the performance ...
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Stretched to the limit
Vasp's ambitions spread far and wide, but are its financial resources equally expandable? Lois Jones reports. Vasp chairman and president Wagner Canhedo Azevado is a man who likes to think big and be in control. The chairman likes to consider South America, and not just Brazil, as a single ...