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Government more open to Ryanair’s Aer Lingus bid

8 December 2008

Irish government opposition is weakening to Ryanair’s 750 million euro ($952 million) bid for former state airline Aer Lingus.

The government, which owns more than 25 percent of the loss-making flag carrier, opposed Ryanair’s 2006 bid for Aer Lingus, which was blocked by the European Union on competition grounds.

A spokeswoman for the transport ministry said it would not comment until Ryanair submits its formal bid for Aer Lingus. Europe’s biggest budget airline said on Thursday it would publish the formal bid within the next two weeks.

source: Reuters


IATA Warns on airline industry

3 December 2008

The International Air Transport Association said that international air traffic fell in October, the second month in a row, and warned the airline industry is in a dangerous condition.International passenger traffic — measured in revenue passenger kilometers, which factor in how far passengers are flown — fell 1.3% from a year earlier in October, a less-steep decline than the 2.9% drop in September.

source: The Wall Street Journal


British Airways-Qantas deal may create global airline

3 December 2008

British Airways is in merger talks with the Australian airline Qantas in a deal that could create the world’s first global airline.

BA has also been discussing a merger with Iberia, the Spanish national carrier, and hopes to expand its alliance with American Airlines. The combination of the four would create the largest airline in the world which would be capable of carrying 198 million passengers a year – nearly six times BA’s current traffic.

Historically, the aviation industry has been highly fragmented, with each country trying to operate its own flag carrier and guard against competition.

source: Times Online


Lufthansa launches Italian airline

1 December 2008

Lufthansa has launched an Italian subsidiary based in Milan and will begin services to the city four times a day from Heathrow at the end of March.

The German airline’s move comes as Italian carrier Alitalia remains in bankruptcy protection as it undergoes privatisation and a restructuring that will lead to a significant reduction in its network.

Lufthansa Italia will commence operations at Milan Malpensa on February 2 with a fleet of six aircraft. It will fly from Barcelona and Paris Charles de Gaulle to begin, adding services from Brussels, Budapest, Bucharest and Madrid in early March, and from Heathrow and Lisbon at the end of that month.

source: travelweekly.co.uk


Ryanair in new Aer Lingus offer

1 December 2008

The budget airline Ryanair is to make a fresh takeover offer for the Irish flag-carrier Aer Lingus. The all-cash offer would value Aer Lingus at 748m euros ($950m; £619m).

Ryanair’s previous offer for Aer Lingus, which valued it at 1.5bn euros, was blocked by the European Commission on competition grounds.

Other major shareholders include the Irish government and Aer Lingus employees, both of which rejected the takeover offer last time.

source: BBC


Flybe in talks to buy bmi regional, bmi baby

1 December 2008

British airline Flybe is in talks to buy British Midland’s subsidiary operations bmi regional and bmi baby, the Mail on Sunday reported.

Lufthansa took over British Midland last month, but the German airline has indicated it is more interested in bmi’s long-haul routes and valuable Heathrow slots than in the two subsidiaries.

Bmi regional is UK-focused, while bmi baby is a low-cost airline that flies to a number of European destinations.

source: Reuters


Low-cost US carriers top airline quality rankings

28 November 2008

Low-cost carriers topped the rankings of U.S. airlines for being on-time and uniting bags with passengers, while the big guys such as American Airlines brought up the rear.

Hawaiian Airlines was rated best at being on-time, at 92 percent for the January-June period. AirTran Airways was tops at handling baggage, and Southwest Airlines Co. best in customer complaints, at one for every 300,000 customers. JetBlue Airways had the fewest denied boardings.

AMR Corp.’s American Airlines was the worst in on-time performance, at just 63.2 percent. UAL Corp.’s United Airlines had the highest rate of customer complaints, seven times more than Southwest.

AMR’s American Eagle, a feeder airline for American, was the worst baggage handler, mishandling luggage more than three times as often as AirTran.

source: iht.com


BA to restart flights to Saudi Arabia

28 November 2008

British Airways is to resume flights to Riyadh and Jeddah, in Saudi Arabia, in March, after a four year gap in services.

The growing importance of Middle-Eastern investors to Western economies means the routes which British Airways abandoned in 2005, as oil prices started to climb, are now commercially viable.

Previously the routes had been dogged by security problems, with the airline having to suspend services at certain times in the years immediately after 9/11.

source: Times On Line


New Zealand Airline Airbus A320 Crashes Off French Coast

28 November 2008

A New Zealand airliner crashed off the coast of France on Thursday afternoon and rescuers recovered two bodies from the Mediterranean Sea.

Five other people who were aboard the Air New Zealand (ANZ) Airbus A320 are missing and are feared dead. Aboard the ill-fated plane were a captain and three engineers of ANZ, an inspector of New Zealand’s Civil Aviation Authority and two pilots of German charter company XL.

source: AHN


Malaysian carrier eyes European tourists with new flights

28 November 2008

European visitors are expected to flock to Southeast Asia next year as a low-cost airline starts flying from a London-based hub for European budget airlines to Kuala Lumpur in March.

AirAsia X started accepting bookings on Tuesday for its new direct flights between London Stansted and the Kuala Lumpur International Low-Cost Carrier Terminal.

source: BusinessWorld