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News of March 2007


German airline cuts ties with Southwest Florida International

22 March 2007

Condor, a German airline, will drop its twice-weekly service to Frankfurt, Germany, at the end of April, but LTU International will pick up some of the slack by increasing its service to Munich and Dusseldorf in May.

Every six months, Condor looks at its service and decides where to make changes, said Janet Gorecki, a sales and marketing manager for the North American division of the airline.

“‘For the summer season, Orlando is a stronger destination,’” Gorecki said. “‘It was decided to focus on that and possibly increase capacity to Orlando in the future.’”

source: naplesnews.com


Northwest adds Japan-Honolulu flight

21 March 2007

Northwest Airlines will add newer planes to its Hawaii service and add one more flight to Honolulu from Japan beginning this summer.

The airline will introduce newer wide-body A330 aircraft on its Tokyo-Hawaii flights starting July 1. The aircraft reportedly feature redesigned economy class seating and a fully interactive in-flight entertainment system.

source: Pacific Business News


Brazilian airline’s ticket sales soar following new routes

21 March 2007

Brazilian airline Gol on Monday announced a 186-percent rise in ticket sales on Brazil-Argentina air routes in 2006.

Gol’s sales of tickets to Argentina (and to Brazil from Argentina) amounted to 70 million U.S. dollars in 2006 from 24.4 million U.S. dollars in 2005.

The company opened the routes to and from Argentina in December 2004, its first international destination. The routes represented 4 percent of the company’s total sales in 2006.

source: people.com.cn


Virgin America plan for U.S. airline gets tentative OK

21 March 2007

The Transportation Department removed a barrier yesterday to Virgin America’s plans to start a U.S. airline, voicing support for its plan to comply with laws limiting foreign control of a domestic carrier.

The agency gave a tentative OK to a revised plan filed in January by Burlingame, Calif.-based Virgin America, saying in a prepared statement that the revised plan “‘should meet U.S. ownership rules'” that cap foreign control of a U.S. airline at 25 percent. The startup still faces opposition from several U.S. airlines.

source: Baltimore Sun


Frontier to offer direct flights from Jacksonville to Denver

20 March 2007

The Denver-based airline will have a flight departing Jacksonville at 6:10 a.m. and arriving in Denver at 7:50 a.m. mountain time. The return flight will depart Denver at 11:55 p.m. and arrive in Jacksonville at 5:15 a.m. The flights will be on 132-passenger A319 aircraft.

From its Denver hub Frontier flies to 48 U.S. destinations, eight in Mexico, and Calgary and Vancouver in Canada.

Senior Vice President for Operations Chris Collins said Jacksonville was a hole in Frontier’s schedule and the largest market in the U.S. without a direct flight to Denver.


Sky Express airlines is starting daily flights Moscow-Tumen-Moscow from April 12

20 March 2007

Sky Express airlines is starting daily flights Moscow-Tumen-Moscow from April 12, 2007, the company informed.

Sky Express Airlines was founded in March 2006 is first Russian low-budget airline performing flights on the European part of Russia. It is expected that by the end of 2007 its itinerary network will include 20 flight paths to Russian countries, located in 600-3000 from Moscow.


SkyEurope Airlines breaks its own world record

20 March 2007

SkyEurope Airlines, created a new world record in distance flown by a Boeing 737-700NG in commercial configuration. SkyEurope’s 10th brand new Boeing 737-700 Next Generation aircraft landed at Bratislava airport on Saturday 17 March 2007 at 4:36 p.m. after the record flyover of 9,101 kilometres without any fuel stop.

The longest documented distance flown by the Boeing 737 type until today was 8,382 kilometres on the route Seattle to Prague on 27 January 2007, also performed as a SkyEurope delivery flight. Christian Mandl, CEO of SkyEurope Airlines, came to the airport to welcome the record breaking crew personally:

source: Boarding.no


EasyJet dumps Malta

20 March 2007

EasyJet, which calls itself Europe’s leading airline, appears to have lost interest in Malta, The Malta Independent on Sunday has learnt.

Nonetheless, industry sources said negotiations have not been cut off completely.

Last August, EasyJet had submitted an application to operate from London Luton and Mulhouse-Basel. The airline had kept a very low profile compared to competitors Ryanair, which were negotiating with the Maltese government during the same period.

Minister for Tourism and Culture Francis Zammit Dimech had said EasyJet wanted to operate from Gatwick, but the government could not provide the airline with market support to operate from this major airport, as it is not one of the underserved routes.

source: Malta Independent


US Airways Whittles Away at Backlog

19 March 2007

With the skies and runways clear, US Airways struggled to accommodate a backlog of weary travelers stranded at Philadelphia International Airport days after a paralyzing ice storm struck the Northeast.

But late Sunday, conditions began to ease. US Airways went from trying to find seats for 100,000 passengers systemwide, to 30- to 45-minute lines in Philadelphia and Charlotte, N.C., by the end of the day.

“‘The lines are down to what is normal for a holiday weekend,'” said US Airways spokeswoman Andrea Rader.

The company hoped to be back to normal operations Monday, she said.

source: Chron


Lufthansa Flying Airbus A380 to U.S.

19 March 2007

For plane builder Airbus and German airline Lufthansa AG, the A380’s first flight to North America on Monday is a chance to show off the superjumbo to potential U.S. buyers and to the airports they hope will be flight bases for the double-decker jet.

“‘We’re talking about an airplane that is representing aviation in the 21st century in terms of efficiency,'” said Jens Bischoff, Lufthansa’s vice president for the Americas.

For Airbus, which has been beset by management and financial crises – including a two-year delay to the A380 that wiped more than euro5 billion ($6.61 billion) off profit forecasts – the flight is a chance to prove that the plane will be ready when the first deliveries are made in October to Singapore airlines.

source: Physorg