Trabber News

news about cheap fares and airlines from travel search engine Trabber


25 Passengers injured in flight incident

16 November 2006

Twenty-five passengers on a Taiwanese carrier’s plane were injured yesterday after the plane dived violently to avoid an aircraft.

Flight EF306 of Far Eastern Air Transport was trying to land at Jeju International Airport around 11:20 a.m., when it suddenly made an emergency dive, shaking the aircraft severely.

source: The Korea Times


Kolkata-Frankfurt Lufthansa flight resumes after 35 years

16 November 2006

Lufthansa would resume passenger services connecting Frankfurt and Kolkata from December 2, after 35 years with three weekly flights.

The airline would operate a 235-seater non-stop Airbus A340-300 between Frankfurt and Kolkata with a three class configuration establishing its presence across all metros with 45 weekly flights.

Its frequency could be increased with the hike in business, since the airline was permitted to operate 50 flights a week as per a new Indo-German Air Traffic Agreement.

source: rediff News


Brazil’s TAM Airline Buys 37 Airbus Planes

16 November 2006

Brazil’s largest airline, TAM, has signed a firm contract to buy an additional 37 Airbus aircraft, the European plane manufacturer announced Thursday. The purchase concerns 12 A319s, 16 A320s, three A321s and six A330 aircraft, Airbus said in a statement released in the southern French city of Toulouse, where the company has its headquarters.

source: Playfuls.com


Small tsunamis hit northern Japan

15 November 2006

Small tsunami waves have hit northern Japan, according to the country’s meteorological agency (JMA).

The JMA initially expected a tsunami of at least two metres (6.5 feet) high after an 8.1 magnitude earthquake shook the Kuril Islands, north of Japan.

Tsunami warnings for the area and for Russia’s Pacific coast were later called off.

source: BBC


EU set to act on emissions controls for airlines

15 November 2006

The airline industry on Wednesday hit back at plans to include it in Europe’s greenhouse gas trading scheme as early as 2011, accusing Brussels of acting unilaterally.”This is about politics, not the environment,” said Anthony Concil, communications director at IATA, which represents the world’s big carriers. “Air travel is responsible for two per cent of emissions and for Europe to act before a global agreement is putting the cart before the horse.”

source: MSNBC


US Airways proposes to merge with Delta

15 November 2006

US Airways Group said Wednesday it has made an $8 billion cash and stock offer for Delta Air Lines in a deal that would create one of the world’s largest airlines.

The offer to buy Delta once the Atlanta-based airline emerges from bankruptcy protection would give Delta’s unsecured creditors $4 billion in cash and 78.5 million shares of US Airways stock.

The offer is a 25% premium over the current trading price of Delta’s pre-petition unsecured claims as of Tuesday, and a 40% premium over the average trading price for Delta unsecured claims over the last 30 days.

source: USA Today


BA says buys American Airlines stake in Iberia

15 November 2006

British Airways said it had purchased American Airlines’ stake in Spanish carrier Iberia for 19 million euros ($24.29 million).

BA, Europe’s third-largest airline, said in a statement it now owned about 10 percent of Iberia, up from 9 percent previously.

source: Reuters


Airlines to integrate iPod into systems

14 November 2006

Apple Computer Inc. said Tuesday it its iPod music players will be integrated into the in-flight entertainment systems of six airlines.Passengers on U.S. airlines United Airlines, Continental and Delta, as well as Dubai-based Emirates, Dutch carrier KLM and Air France, will be able to power and charge their iPods during flights and watch the video content on their iPods on their seat back displays.

The service will be available on the airlines beginning in mid-2007.

source: BusinessWeek


American Airlines stock passes pre-9/11 level

14 November 2006

Shares of American Airlines parent AMR Corp. surpassed the price they reached the day before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as the world’s largest carrier benefits from more than five years of retooling.

“AMR has built itself a huge cash position and done a good job cutting its costs,” Jim Corridore, a New York-based airline analyst with Standard & Poor’s, said today in an interview. “The outlook has really brightened for the airlines that have done the hard work.”

American is simplifying operations after posting more than $8.2 billion in losses from 2001 through last year. The Fort Worth, Texas-based company cut its workforce by 27 percent, reduced its aircraft fleet by 16 percent and built its cash position to $5.5 billion as of Sept. 30.

source: Orlando Sentinel


Frontier Airlines and AirTran Airways Join Forces in First-of-Its-Kind Marketing Partnership Between Low-Cost Carriers

14 November 2006

The new partnership between the two carriers, which is expected to drive incremental revenue and new customers to both AirTran Airways and Frontier, consists of three key components which will allow customers to easily book tickets to over 80 destinations from one another’s sites.

source: Earthtimes.org