Trabber News

news about cheap fares and airlines from travel search engine Trabber


Airlines oppose total liquid ban

7 September 2006

European airlines and the European Union’s justice and security commissioner said on Wednesday they opposed any attempt to ban passengers from carrying all forms of liquids on flights.

EU security experts were meeting on Wednesday and Thursday to make recommendations after Britain said on August 10 it had foiled a plot to blow up U.S.-bound trans-atlantic airliners. Officials said the plot involved homemade liquid explosives.

Any change to the rules on the transport of goods on flights would be decided by the European Commission as a whole after the security experts made their recommendations, said a Commission official.

source: scotsman.com


Southwest Airlines August traffic up 10 pct to 6.2 bln revenue passenger miles

7 September 2006

Southwest Airlines Co said it flew 6.2 bln revenue passenger miles in August, up 10 pct from the same month last year, while the load factor for the month rose to 77.1 pct from 76.1 pct a year ago.

The airline said available seat miles increased 8.5 pct to 8.1 bln in August from 7.5 bln a year ago.

source: Forbes


Discount Airlines Have Doubled Capacity Since 2002

6 September 2006

Southwest Airlines Co., Ryanair Holdings Plc and the world’s other low-cost carriers have doubled capacity in the past four years, OAG Worldwide, a travel and transportation data provider, said.Low-cost carriers are offering 46 million seats on more than 323,000 flights this month compared with 22 million seats on 169,000 flights in September 2002, Dunstable, England-based OAG said in an e-mailed statement today.

Budget airlines now account for 17 percent of all seats on sale worldwide. Discounters have been taking market share from network carriers since Southwest cut costs, slashed prices and increased demand in the U.S., and Ryanair adapted the model to the European market.

source: Bloomberg


New low-cost airlines enter Maltese market

6 September 2006

Two major low-cost airlines, Ryanair and Easy Jet, have received the go-ahead from the Maltese government to operate new routes to the Mediterranean island.

Accepting incentives worth some $3 million a year to operate year-round services, Ryanair will within eight weeks be offering a daily service to Malta from London’s Luton airport and a thrice-weekly flight from Pisa, Italy.


CanJet Airlines suspends scheduled service

6 September 2006

CanJet Airlines, a four-year-old company that has tried to muscle business from Canada’s two big carriers, is grounding its scheduled service, blaming high fuel costs, rising landing fees and stiff competition, it said Tuesday.The move by CanJet, a unit of privately held IMP Group Ltd., leaves a gap in domestic flight services, especially in Atlantic Canada, and represents the latest in a series of failed attempts at establishing major discount carriers.

source: USA today


Budget airlines complain as work begins on Berlin airport

6 September 2006

A symbolic ground-breaking ceremony Tuesday marked the start of work on a huge new airport for the German capital after 14 years of planning, legal wrangling and political disputes.Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee and Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit took part in the ceremony at the new site adjacent to the current ex-East German airport at Schoenefeld.

But complaints by budget airlines that the new airport ignores their needs have cast a shadow over the 2-billion-euro (2.5-billion- dollar) project, which is expected to give a boost to the economy and eventually generate around 40,000 jobs.

source: Expatica


Ryanair carries more passengers despite chaos and cancellations

5 September 2006

Ryanair shrugged off the cancellation of 265 flights last month to post a 23% increase in the number of passengers in August. The low-cost airline carried just over 4 million passengers, up from 3.3 million in the same month last year, as it benefited from new routes and more frequent flights from Dublin, Liverpool, Nottingham and Pisa. Ryanair was one of the hardest-hit airlines when the government imposed emergency security restrictions at airports last month, forcing it to cancel hundreds of flights from its Stansted base.

source: Guardian


GOL Launches Flights to Ilheus in Bahia

5 September 2006

GOL Linhas Aereas Inteligentes, Brazil’s low-cost, low-fare airline, yesterday began operating daily flights to the city of Ilhes, in southeast Bahia. The new flights will operate on the Sao Paulo (Guarulhos) – Ilheus – Salvador route.

Located 458 km from Salvador, Ilheus is the most important city in the Costa do Cacau region of Bahia. The city, which is over 470 years old, has been the setting of several novels by the renowned Brazilian author Jorge Amado (1912-2001), for whom Ilheus’ airport is named. Main attractions include the city’s beautiful beaches and Atlantic Forest Reserves. Last year, the number of passengers flying to and from Ilheus was approximately 238,075, a 13.1 percent increase over 2004.

source: PR news wire


Northwest Airlines to London cancelled due to smoke in cabin

5 September 2006

A Northwest Airlines flight to London made an emergency landing after smoke was reported in the cabin, and passengers waited aboard for nearly 10 hours before the trip was cancelled.

Flight 44 from Minneapolis landed without incident just before 9:50 pm (0820 hours IST) at Duluth International Airport, as airport fire trucks stood by. Passengers remained aboard until about 7:30 am (0600 hours IST) yesterday.

According to airport officials, no injuries were reported among the 255 passengers and 10 crew members.

source: The Hindu


Airlines see heavy summer demand

4 September 2006

This weekend, as travelers flock to the skies for their final vacations of the season, the nation’s airlines will cap what’s likely to be the strongest and most-profitable summer travel season since 2001.The summer months saw heavy travel demand, coupled with higher fares and a slowing of competition among the airlines. That pushed the struggling industry to a profitable second quarter and is likely to produce another industry profit in the third quarter, which ends Sept. 30. Although overall passenger traffic was down slightly in June and July compared with last year, airplanes, on average, were flying fuller than ever.

source: kansas.com