09 October, 2014

Virgin Consolidates Routes

There are changing times ahead for loss making Virgin Atlantic.  The vibrant and colourful airline is all set to increase flights between the UK and the US but is cutting destinations further away as part of its push to return to profitability.
Virgin Atlantic is majority-owned by Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Management company and is consolidating its route pan after a review of its network, working in partnership with its American shareholder Delta Airlines. Delta snapped up Singapore Airline’s 49 percent stake in Virgin Atlantic for $360m (£219m) in 2012, and established a joint venture in January of this year, following regulatory approval.

This latest shake-up sees Virgin intensify its service across the Atlantic, a move to ensure its aircraft service more profitable routes.   Mr Kreeger, who took over from long-standing chief executive Steve Ridgway in February last year and has said he wants Virgin to break-even by the end of the current financial year. These changes are intended to create what he hopes will be a successful and sustainably profitable business.
Facing the axe are flights to far-away destinations including Mumbai, Tokyo Narita, Vancouver and Cape Town which will all end over the next nine months.  In their place come a new service to Detroit, also on the way are extra services to New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, San Francisco and Miami. 

Virgin are also swapping some services with Delta, allowing the US airline to fly an extra flight from Heathrow each day, whilst Virgin will be adding a flight between Manchester and Atlanta.
“Transatlantic flying has always been at the heart of our network, and our most financially successful region,”  Mr Kreeger said.
Continuing that the restructuring allowed Virgin to play to its “strengths” and focus on routes “most important to our customers.”
Commenting on the current speculation of airport expansion in the UK's south east, Mr Kreeger added that Virgin would “love to” re-enter the four international cities to which it is cutting services if Heathrow were to be expanded. The airline has long been a supporter of an expanded Heathrow.
Virgin is not just a US destined carrier,  even after the cuts that airline will still have international flights to a number of cities including Delhi, Johannesburg, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Dubai, as well as an impressive array of Caribbean routes.
Virgin also confirmed it was committing £300m over the next four years to the benefit of customers, alongside the introduction of the airline’s first Boeing 787 Dreamliners, due to launch in late October.

News roundup

Emirates Boss No Need For Plane Tracking Systems
The head of Emirates Airlines, one of the world’s largest carriers, said there was no need to improve modern aircraft tracking systems even after a commercial jet disappeared earlier this year, according to Spiegel magazine.
The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 on a Boeing 777 jet in March has led to calls for real-time tracking of aircraft, and an airline-industry-led task force is looking at ways of improving tracking.
Tim Clark, president of Emirates Airline, told the German online magazine that modern planes already had the necessary equipment but measures should be taken to ensure pilots can’t turn off tracking devices.





Will-i-am Throws a hissy fit at United.


Pop star 'will-i-am'  has lashed out at United Airlines for apparently giving away his seat after he arrived at the airport 45 minutes before departure.

The musician and Voice UK coach whose real name is William Adams. complained on Twitter that the US airline had given his first class seat on a flight from New York to China to another passenger.In a series of tweets, he said: "Make sure when you fly to china via @united you get to the airport 1day before because they'll give your seats away."Plane leave at 1:15 I got to the airport at 12:30... @united is the worse...I should have learned from the last @united experience.




Airline Cabin Cleaner Strike Over Ebola.

Nearly 200 airline cabin cleaners walked off the job at a New York City airport overnight, striking over health and safety issues that include fears over possible exposure to Ebola.

The protest involves Air Serv cabin cleaners in Terminal D at New York's LaGuardia airport, a contractor that serves Delta, as well as supporting workers from LaGuardia and JFK International airports. Protesting workers carried signs and chanted during today's rally, protesting against conditions that they say often find them encountering hypodermic needles, vomit and blood.

Click here to read more.

Air France Strike Costs 500 Million

Air France-KLM has put the total cost of last month’s two-week pilots’ strike at 500m euros, sending its shares to a 13-month low.
Europe’s second-biggest network carrier by revenue had already revised down its target for 2014 earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) from 2.5bn euros to between 2.2bn and 2.3bn in July. At the time, it mainly cited overcapacity on long-haul routes and weak cargo demand. The strike, combined with a warning note on forward demand, have added to its woes. 



The World's Oldest Airline is 95

Tuesday marks the 95th anniversary of Dutch carrier KLM, the airline generally regarded as the world's oldest airline. The company was established on Oct. 7, 1919.
KLM added a special "95 years" decal to one of its MD-11 jets, part of a series of KLM events this week meant to commemorate the occasion.   "Thanks to the efforts, pride, expertise and energy of our 33,000 employees, KLM is now the world's oldest airline still operating under its original name," said Camiel Eurlings, CEO of KLM Royal Dutch Airlines.




07 October, 2014

The World's Oldest Airline is 95 Years Old

The Royal Dutch Airline - KLM turned 95 this week.


10 August, 2014

JetBlue Engine Blows Up

Passengers on a JetBlue Airways flight had to evacuate the aircraft via the emergency slides at Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in San Juan, Puerto Rico, when one of its engines caught fire, according to a Federal Aviation Administration statement.

According to a JetBlue spokesperson,  there were no known injuries among the 186 passengers and six crew members on board that had to use the slides to escape. The aircraft was taxing to the runway when the engine problems started. The flight was headed to New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. 

Iran Plane Crashes

A civilian aircraft has crashed just moments after it had taken off from Iran's capital Tehran, according to state media 38 people on board have been killed. 

The aircraft was heading to the eastern city of Tabas from Mehrabad airport, when it crashed into a road at about 9:18am local time on Sunday.   According to witnesses at the scene, the aircraft was very low, with one wing closer to the ground than the other and it then crashed into a road in the Azadi neighbourhood area, a little west of central Tehran. 
ry families.

Initial reports claimed all 48 passengers and crew on board had been killed, however the state media later reported that some passengers had been injured and had been transferred to hospital. The local news report 38 people died instantly and 10 were injured and were transferred to hospital in critical condition.

Malaysian Government to Nationalise Troubled Malaysia Airlines

The Malaysian government announced this week that it was going to take over or nationalise the troubled Malaysia Airlines. The airline was ailing long before the loss of two aircraft this year. It had been struggling with increasing losses, vast debts, a flawed business and increasing competition on its key routes. 

On Friday, came an announcement that many in the airline industry had been expecting for quite some time, that the Malaysian government, would take full control of the company through a stock buyback and restructure its operations in an attempt to restore confidence in the troubled business. 

Delta Wins Award

Delta Airlines is the best all around pick for consumer fliers, that us according to Airfarewatchdog’s annual rankings.  Other major US legacy carriers didn't rank quite so highly, United and American, flounder at the bottom of the list, Delta rose to the top spot from number six last year.

05 August, 2014

EU Sanction Halt Russian Airline.

The economic sanctions imposed on Russia by the west have forced the hand of the state funded and owned airline Aeroflot to cancel all flights of its budget subsidiary.

The low-cost airline suspended all its flights Monday, because Western sanctions had forced leasing deals for its aircraft to be canceled.  The airline, Dobrolet, was founded late last year as purely as a budget option for domestic travel within Russia, however its maiden flight took place in June from Moscow to Simferopol, the main city on the Crimean peninsula, annexed from Ukraine in March.

"Due to sanctions imposed by the EU ... we are forced to temporarily suspend flights on all routes from August 4, 2014," Dobrolet said in a statement on its website.

Fly Olympic AB Goes Bust


Fly Olympic AB, the new Swedish carrier that operated flights from the UK's London Gatwick to Africa, has cancelled all flights reporting bankruptcy.


The airline, which is an affiliate of Aero Pacific launched flights from Stockholm in February and offered flights from Gatwick to Eritrea and Somalia via Stockholm and Athens. The airline blames poor sales for forcing it out of business, saying it 'performed dramatically below all reasonable expectations'. 



"The losses sustained were too great for a company of our size to survive," the company said in a statement, "We had discussed with several investment groups over the last 10 days in a bid to save the company but unfortunately time ran out. - All flights are cancelled and all reservations are therefore also cancelled."


Passengers who booked directly with the airline via a credit or debit card should contact their card provider and may be able to get their money back. Passengers who booked via a travel agent should return to their agent for further advice and information. 


ANA Confirms Boeing Order.

A massive order for Boeing has come from All Nippon Airways this week when the asia airline selected 20 777-9Xs, 14 787-9 Dreamliners and six 777-300ERs from the American manufacturer as part of the airlines ongoing strategic long-haul fleet renewal plan.

The massive order is valued around  US$13billion based on list prices and  was originally announced back in March as an option.  ANA President and CEO, Shinichiro Ito, said, “The aircraft we have selected will enable us to modernise and expand our fleet further.  These new aircraft will give us maximum flexibility and improved fuel efficiency, and will allow us to meet the growth in demand, both internationally and in our domestic Japanese market.”

ANA, has shown faith in the 787, not only was it the launch airline of the type, but it ha so far ordered 80 examples of the Dreamliner, 29 are already in the fleet, with  51 more awaiting delivery. 

Boeing Commercial Airplanes president and CEO, Ray Conner, added: “This order from ANA demonstrates the strength of our 50-year partnership.”


WestJet Confirms Aircraft Options

Canadian airline WestJet has signed a firm purchase order for five Q400 NG turboprops following a similar conversion from option to firm in March of this year. 

The new aircraft will be utilised by the airlines regional subsidiary, WestJet Encore and will increase the carrier’s fleet to 30 Q400 aircraft.

Launched in June 2013, WestJet Encore operated 10 departures daily to two destinations with two Q400 aircraft. Its rise has been rapid, now it flies 90 flights from Alberta, Calgary and Toronto with 13 Q400s.

No meals for American First and Business Class

American Airlines is all set to drop all meals for its premium passengers on most short flights from next month. The largest American carrier will offer just snacks instead of a meal to first and business class passengers on most flights under two hours and 45 minutes. 

The change means a continuity of service between American with US Airways, which this spring reduced its meal cutoff to 2:45 from three hours and 30 minutes. The two airlines merged in December, the new rules will cover flights in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean. They were detailed on American's website, however there is no reduction in the fares charged by the airline.  

Lufthansa is Europes Leading Airline.

The German airline Lufthansa has been named Europe’s leading airline for an impressive seventh time, at the Oscars of the travel world - the World Travel Awards.
Lufthansa won the award at the World Travel Awards Europe, taking place in Athens, Greece this year, for the fourth successive year, further cementing its reputation as a European standard bearer for service. 
One of the features that set the German carrier apart from its main rivals has been the introduction of internet wifi on over 90% of its long-haul aircraft, the largest internet-enabled, long-haul fleet in the world. 

Emirates Halts Flights In Wake of Ebola

Emirates Airlines has responded to the deadly Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa by halting its flights to the infected region. The Dubai based airline is the first major international airline from outside Africa to impose a flight ban in response to the outbreak, suspended services to Guinea. So far this latest outbreak of Ebola has killed 730 people in four countries and shows little sign of easing. 

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has described this as by far the worst outbreak ever recorded in the disease’s four-decade history. It originated in Guinea and spread to Liberia and Sierra Leone.  A further case had been reported after a man flew to Lagos, Nigeria, sparking fears the disease would be spread further by international air travel.

Emirates said its flights to Conakry, the capital of Guinea, were suspended from Saturday until further notice.  “We apologise for any inconvenience caused to our customers, however the safety of our passengers and crew is of the highest priority and will not be compromised,” a statement read.

The airline, which does not operate services to Sierra Leone or Liberia, said it would continue to provide flights to Dakar in Senegal. It said further decisions on West Africa would be “guided by the advice and updates from the government and international health authorities”.

02 August, 2014

Hawaiian Airlines Launches New Premium Economy

201407-hd-hawaiian-airlinesjpg
Hawaiian Airlines has launched a new premium economy class on its Airbus A330 aircraft. These new super Extra Comfort seats have five more inches of legroom - giving a total of 36 inches. Other benefits of the new service include priority boarding, free on-demand, in-seat entertainment and personal power outlets.
 On international flights, travelers will also receive a souvenir pillow and blanket and premium meals.
Hawaiian Airlines is undergoing a programme of enhancements and changes at the moment, earlier this year they launched an inter-island operation called ‘Ohana by Hawaiian. They offer flights between Honolulu International Airport and Moloka’i and Lana’i. 

Passenger Attacks with a prosthetic leg.

A rather drink woman on-board a Thomson Airlines flight from Tunisia caused a bit of a stir when she began swearing, slapped a child, and threw food at cabin crew before tossing her prosthetic leg at them.
The female passenger, 48, had her meltdown on Thomson Airlines flight 297 from Enfindha in Tunisia bound for Edinburgh in Scotland.   “She was shouting ‘I want cigarettes’ and that she wanted a parachute to jump off the plane,” fellow passenger John Smith, 48, told Edinburgh Evening News
“She slapped a young girl and then assaulted the cabin crew with her prosthetic leg. They took it off her, but she started kicking them with her good leg.  It sounds funny, but it was not a laughing matter at the time. It was serious. She was totally drunk. It was pretty shocking.”

Flying Over Iraq?

Since the MH17 disaster many more passengers are taking more notice of what the actual routing of their flights will take. Many are asking questions regarding the safety of flying over various troubled areas, including Iraq. 
Many airlines are divided on whether it is currently safe to overfly war-torn Iraq, Virgin Atlantic, Air France, Qantas and Emirates have all announced they are not or will not be flying over Iraq.  Bullish British Airways said it had no plans to alter its routes.
The FAA, the US regulators have ordered all American carriers to take a higher altitude over the country “due to the potentially hazardous situation”. 
Willie Walsh, chief executive of International Airlines Group, the parent company of BA, arrogantly proclaimed  “We fly over Iraq because we consider it safe – if we thought Iraq was unsafe we would not fly over Iraq.”
Emirates decision to re-route flights came after it emerged the US was investigating whether Isis troops had acquired weapons capable to shooting down planes flying at 30,000ft or more. The Dubai-based airline had the largest number of flights overflying Isis-held territory in Iraq, over 50 a day.  Sir Tim Clark, chief executive of the airline, said he was "not comfortable" with Emirates planes crossing the troubled state, since the horrific MH17 downing,  "The horrors that this created was a kick in the solar plexus for all of us. Nevertheless having got through it we must take stock and deal with it.”
Iraq sits below the main flight path between Europe and Asia and hundreds of civilian aircraft pass over it each day. However alternative routes are already well used and fly over Saudi Arabia, the Red Sea and Egypt, alternatively there is an Iranian route which some airlines use. 

27 July, 2014

Gatwick Gives

Gatwick Airport announced this last week £256 million in local benefits if it were allowed to build a second runway.


The airport on the border between Surrey and West Sussex is hoping to open a second runway by 2025 at a cost of £7 billion. The pledge would include spending £131 million on the compulsory purchase of homes, £46.5 million to subsidise new houses and £45 million to pay the council tax of 4,100 people blighted by noise. 

Other promises include improvements to the M23 and A23 and a £3.5 million scheme for 2,500 apprenticeships. Chief executive Stewart Wingate said: “We’ve listened to local people and have created £256 million of pledges to deliver improvements in many of the areas that matter to them most, from new jobs and housing, to business support and noise mitigation.” 




More Restructuring for Thai Airways.

Thai Airways International's board approved a restructuring plan aimed at cutting costs and strategising routes to help return the loss-making airline to profit as soon as the middle of next year, at a meeting held on Thursday.
Thailand's new military rulers have singled out the country's troubled national carrier as the first state enterprise to undergo reform after seizing power in May from a government accused of corruption. Thai Airways, which employs 25,000 people and another 5,000 in subcontracted staff, has racked up four quarters of losses partly due to high operating costs.
The carrier is planning early retirement of hundreds of employees and aims to cut overtime shifts, acting President Siwakiat Jayema told reporters after a board meeting on Thursday. "It's quite challenging for Thai Air. The cost-cutting scheme should be done immediately, while the airline needs to come up with a clearer strategy to boost revenues," said Amnart Ngosawang, an analyst at Finansia Syrus Securities.

26 July, 2014

Boeing / Iran Deal

US aircraft manufacturer Boeing has confirmed a deal with Iran Air to provide the heavily sanctioned airline special spare parts.  The new deal marks the first time the US firm will be doing business with Iran since the US embargo of 1979.
According to a regulatory filing published on July 23, Boeing will supply goods and services "related to the safety of flight" to Iran Air, the country's flag carrier. According to the report filed the agreement was reached in the second quarter and includes the provision of airplane parts, manuals, navigation charts and data to the airline, in line with the US company's recommendations to customers for such things as an aircraft modification, a parts replacement or inspection.
Boeing also reported it had discussions with the flag carrier's subsidiary, Iran Air Tours, on the potential sale of similar goods and services. In April, the US government issued a license allowing Boeing, for a "limited period of time," to provide "spare parts that are for safety purposes" to Iran. Boeing, like most western manufacturers are still not allowed to sell new planes to Iran.

25 July, 2014

American Profits Up.




  US mega airline, American Airlines has reported record quarterly earnings!  According to Thursday report, th airline detailed a net profit of $1.5 billion -- a record for any quarter in companies history. 
. 

The American Airlines Group announced a record GAAP net profit of $864  million, compared to $220 million in the second quarter of 2013, which was prior to its merger with US Airways. 

 "We are very pleased to report the highest quarterly profit in the history of American Airlines," said Chairman and CEO Doug Parker. "Our merger is off to a great start and our 100,000 team members are doing a wonderful job working together to take care of our customers." 

TransAsia Crash Investigation Launched.

 The Taiwan authorities have already launched an investigation into the crash of a TransAsia Airways turboprop plane which killed 48 people. 
The aircraft, a 70-seat ATR 72, crashed on Wednesday evening near the runway while trying to land on the small island of Penghu, west of Taiwan island, after a typhoon had passed earlier in the day.


The aircraft had 54 passengers and four crew on board when it came down and two of the dead were French nationals according to the French foreign ministry.

'No Survivors' of the Air Algerie Crash

It was a sombre and subdued French President Franсois Hollande talking when he confirmed that there were no survivors found at the site of the Air Algerie crash in Northern Mali. During the special televised speech he adding that French troops dispatched to the scene. 
"There are, alas, no survivors," Mr. Hollande somberly told reporters on the steps of the Élysée Palace. The French leader added that it was too soon to determine what caused the crash, but added that poor weather was one of the factors being considered. France's transport secretary has ruled out a surface-to-air missile as a cause.

No Return to Tel Aviv for German Carriers

Germany's two largest airlines say they are not yet resuming flights to Israel even though the European Aviation Safety Agency has lifted a recommendation that airlines refrain from flying to Tel Aviv airport, according to reports from AP news agency. 
Air Berlin says flights to Tel Aviv remain suspended at least through midday Friday, while Lufthansa says all Friday flights to the airport have been canceled because of ongoing security concerns after a Hamas missile landed near it this week.
Lufthansa says it "acknowledges the considerable efforts made by Israel to provide the best possible protection for Ben Gurion Airport" with its missile defense system. It says flights will resume "as soon as this protection can be verifiably guaranteed."

Uzbekistan Airlines Change Routes

Uzbekistan Airlines has made a decision to perform all flights from Uzbekistan to European cities and back, bypassing Ukraine's airspace.
The routes of flights to London, Frankfurt, Paris, Rome and Milan have been changed, according to Uzbekistan Airlines. The specialists of the company have also developed a safe route for the Tashkent-Kiev-Tashkent flight.
As a result of the changes, the duration of flights on this route will increase on average by 10-15 minutes. Airlines of many countries have changed the routes of their flights over Ukraine's territory after the crash of a Malaysian airliner in Ukraine's Donetsk city.

17 July, 2014

Malaysian Airlines MH17 - 777 Shot Down

BREAKING NEWS


The aviation industry is in shock tonight after the news breaks of a Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 crashing in Eastern Ukraine. The flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was carrying 296 passengers and crew and is believed to have been shot down by a ground to air missile – however this has yet to be confirmed.

Official information is extremely limited and most of the information available coming from unconfirmed sources and social media.  Flight MH17 was approximately 50 kilometres from entering Russian airspace when it came down with what appears to be the loss of all souls on-board.



Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, said the aircraft would have been shot down, "We do not exclude that the plane was shot down and confirm that the Ukraine armed forces did not fire at any targets in the sky," he said in a statement. Later he said this was not an accident but “An act of terrorism.”

Dozens and dozens of bodies were scattered around the smouldering wreckage of the plane, close to  the village of Grabovo, some  25 miles from the Russian border, according to reporters at the scene. Grabovo is in an area controlled by the Russian separatists who have been known to shoot down Ukrainian military aircraft. Unconfirmed reports advise that moments after the incident a tweet from a twitter account previously used to publicize Russian Separatists shooting down Ukrainian military aircraft, claimed it had shot down another military transporter.

It's believed that there were 8 Britons on the downed aircraft, however this has yet to be confirmed as the passenger manifest has not been publically released at this time. Other unconfirmed reports state as many as 20 could you US citizens with the majority of the rest mixed between Malaysian and Dutch.

Emergency workers at the scene of the incident commented that at least 100 bodies had been found so far, with wreckage scattered across a wide area,  "I was working in the field on my tractor when I heard the sound of a plane and then a bang and shots. Then I saw the plane hit the ground and break in two. There was thick black smoke," a witness, named only as Vladimir, told a Reuters reporter close the area.

On a tweet and in a statement, Malaysia Airlines confirmed that Ukraine's air traffic control lost contact with flight MH17 at 2.15pm GMT, approximately 30 miles from the Russia-Ukraine border. Flight MH17 codeshare flight with Dutch carrier KLM was operated on a Malaysian Boeing 777 and departed Amsterdam at 12.15pm [local] and was estimated to arrive at Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 6.10am the next day. The flight was carrying 280 passengers and 15 crew onboard."

Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine's interior minister commented on social media that the plane had crashed in Ukrainian territory after being hit by a missile fired from a Buk launcher.  News agency Associated Press advised one of its journalists had seen a similar launcher near the town of Snizhne earlier on Thursday.

So far the leaders of the self-declared Donetsk people's republic denied any involvement and according to a Russian news agency Russian Separatists may also have retrieved and are holding the black boxes of the aircraft. Emergency workers have been reported as saying that armed separatists are hampering and interfering with any rescue attempts.

"This is the third tragic incident in recent days after Ukrainian military An-26 and Su-25 jets were shot down from Russian territory. We don't rule out that this plane was also shot down, and we stress that the Ukrainian military didn't take any actions to destroy targets in the air," said Ukrainian President.

Speaking in Delaware USA, President Barack Obama said his administration was seeking "to determine whether there were American citizens onboard.  That is our priority. And I've directed my national security team to stay in close contact with the Ukrainian government. The United States will offer any assistance we can to help determine what happened and why. As a country our thoughts and prayers are with all the families of the passengers, wherever they call home."
Earlier, Obama and Russian leader Putin spoke on the phone regarding new US sanctions imposed on Moscow over its alleged failure to halt the flow of weapons and fighters to separatist forces in eastern Ukraine. Diplomatic relations between the two nations are ‘tense’ at the moment and if it process that MH17 was shot down by Russian made and supplied missiles relations will be pushed to breaking point.

Several airlines, including British Airways, Virgin, Aeroflot, Turkish Airlines and Russia's Transaereo airlines have all announced they would avoid Ukrainian airspace with immediate effect. German airline Lufthansa confirmed it would steer clear of airspace over eastern Ukraine.



The Malaysian prime minister, Najib Razak, said via Twitter: "I am shocked by reports that an MH plane crashed. We are launching an immediate investigation."  The country's defence minister tweeted that he was "monitoring closely" claims that MH17 had crashed, saying: "No comfirmation [sic] it was shot down! Our military have been instructed 2 get on it!"

J Shaw

Twenty Injured on SAA Flight.

South African Airways says 20 people on a Hong Kong-bound flight were injured when the plane ran into severe turbulence.
The airline said in a statement that SA286 departed Johannesburg on Tuesday and landed in Hong Kong on Wednesday, and that medics were waiting to assist the passengers when the aircraft arrived.
Airline spokesman Tlali Tlali says 17 passengers and three crewmembers were injured. The Hong Kong fire department adds that two people were critically injured. The victims were taken to three hospitals.
The airline says 165 passengers were on the plane when the turbulence struck as the plane was flying over Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital.

16 July, 2014

Airline Of The Year - Cathay Pacific

The airline of the year has been announced at the Skytrax awards, held at the Farnborough airshow this week.  The winner was Cathay Pacific!

The airline from Hong Kong beat off much competition to take the top slot in Skytrax annual awards. Pictured here is Ivan Chu with the 2014 award.  
Winner: Ivan Chu of Cathay Pacific Airways is seen holding the Airline of the Year 2014 award

Farnborough Airshow Update......




Airbus and Boeing came close to  $100 billion worth of orders at the this years Farnborough Airshow so far, clearly demonstrating the demand for new passenger jets is rising despite the companies already full order books. 
Despite the good news,  shares in Airbus closed down 2.5 percent after the company told analysts it may have to cut output of its best-selling twin-aisle A330 passenger jet to get through a three-year transition towards an upgraded model launched at the show.

14 July, 2014

Govt Aid for SAS Legal

It was all smiles for Scandinavian airline SAS last week when A 400 million euro credit arrangement given to them by the governments of Sweden, Denmark and Norway back in 2012 was not illegal under European Union state aid rules.
The EU Commission opened its investigation into the revolving credit facility in 2013, after it "doubted" it had been carried out under market conditions because the exposures of the governments and the banks involved were different.

Staff Shortages Effect Services

A labour shortage in Japan is reaching crisis point for many key industries and has the potential to cripple the third largest economy in the world.  This is forcing airlines, stores and restaurant chains to reassess expansion plans and even cancel or close existing operations, simply because they cannot get the staff. 
Peach Aviation, the airline backed by Japan's largest airline, ANA confirmed last month it would have to cancel more than 2,000 flights over the rest of this year. Budget carriers Jetstar Japan and Vanilla Air have also cancelled hundreds of flights this summer, all because they cant get enough pilots. 
"There aren't enough captains and training one takes time and money," said Peach Aviation spokesman Hironori Sakagami.  "We wanted to increase the number of flights, but we had to delay that."

13 July, 2014

Emergency Landing in Tel Aviv for Delta 747

A Delta Air Lines 747 flight from Israel's Tel Aviv Ben Gurion airport heading for New York had to turn back and make a emergency early this morning. The sudden return to Ben Gurion was caused when flaps on the 747's wings failed to retract properly on take-off.

Delta have confirmed  that the  Boeing 747 (N668US), Flight 469, which had 370 passengers and 17 crew members aboard landed safely back in Israel around 2.30am local time Sunday Morning. Two hours after it had departed bound for New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The Delta spokesperson, Jennifer Martin, claimed the flight crew made the emergency landing 'out of an abundance of caution.'

There is no evidence the issue with the Delta 747's flaps had anything to do with the continuing unrest between Israel and the Palestinians. However, Delta has issued a travel advisory regarding the 'Israel Unrest' advising the airline would continue to operate its New York-Tel Aviv service, but  would allow passengers to cancel or rebook their plans whilst the conflict goes on, which could be some time.

The 747 restarted its flight to New York at 12.30 local today. 


American Carriers Cut Venezuelan Flights

United Airlines' planes are seen at the Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, July 2, 2013. REUTERS/Eduardo MunozUnited Continental Holdings Inc said on Friday it would drop its daily flight to Caracas, Venezuela, from Houston, starting in September, joining other U.S. carriers who have cut service over the country's foreign exchange controls.
United said it will operate four flights a week to the country, starting Sept. 17.

United Flight Diverts to Midway

A United Airlines flight carrying 348 people from Honolulu to Guam was forced to divert to the tiny Pacific island of Midway because of a  “mechanical issue,”  the airline confirmed yesterday.
An electrical odor filled the Boeing 777 aircraft and the airline was reviewing the mechanical problem that caused the diversion that occurred Thursday night local time.
Midway Island — a remote, 2.4-square-mile atoll — is located about 1,300 miles northwest of Hawaii and was the site of an important U.S. military base during World War II. It is now home to a national wildlife refuge and has roughly 60 residents.
The airline told the Los Angeles Times on Saturday that it flew the 335 passengers and 13 crew members aboard Flight 201 back to Honolulu and scheduled a new flight for them to Guam.
The stricken flight arrived in Guam at 6 p.m. local time Saturday.
Passenger Teresita Smith of Maryland told ABC News that the airplane had smelled as if it were burning.
“In the back section of the plane alarms were going off,” Smith said.
After the pilot announced the plane would be landing in Midway, Smith said the power seemed to go out and the plane suddenly dropped.
“It was very scary,” she said. “It shook a lot of people up.”

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