Aviation Industry Updates – Week 40
After a quiet
period on this website, I will make sure frequent new additions will be
made in the future. Part of this commitment is a returning item with
various small new features concerning the aviation industry in general.
This will complement more extensive news articles and analyses, press
releases and a new item concerning my four month stay in Istanbul, more
information on the latest will follow soon. – This week includes first
A350 for Qatar Airways, first 777-300ER’s for China Eastern and China
Airlines, Boeing increases 737 production and more.
Adria Airways to phase out Bombardier CRJ-200’s
CEO Mark Anzur confirmed that Adria Airways plans to operate its final scheduled flights with the Bombardier CRJ-200 in March 2015. One of the two remaining aircraft will be used for charter operations afterwards, while the other one will be scrapped. The Slovenian airline will replace the aircraft with additional CRJ-900’s of which the airline already operates six. The CRJ-900 has, depending on the configuration, 84 or 86 seats compared to just 48 in the CRJ-200’s. This is part of Adria’s strategy to operate less frequencies with bigger aircraft, this enables them to offer lower, more competitive prices. Adria will also wet-lease an extra Airbus A320 in 2015 and expects to add five to six aircraft to its fleet by 2016 with aircraft potentially bigger than the A320 (180 seats).Boeing will increase 737 production to 52 per month in 2018
Boeing announced its plans to further
increase monthly 737 production to 52 in 2018, that brings the yearly
delivery target to 624 per year. Boeing already announced that it would
increase production from the current 42 per month to 47 in 2017,
coinciding with the 737MAX introduction in the third quarter of that
year. In 2015 Boeing will launch a third 737 final assembly line in
Renton (Washington State, USA) to support assembly of the 737MAX test
fleet which will start halfway through 2015. The current generation of
737’s, the 737NG, will be produced until the second quarter of 2019 with
the last delivery to Ryanair. When all three available production lines
will run at maximum capacity, Boeing could produce up to 63 737’s per
month in the future. The aircraft manufacturer currently holds a backlog
of 4,000 737NG and 737MAX aircraft. — Flightglobal –
Xiamen Airlines considers Nice, France
Chinese company Xiamen Airlines
considers launching flights to Nice (France) as its first long haul
route, later this year. In September Xiamen government functionaries
paid a visit to Europe. The new route will probably be operated by the
new Boeing 787-8, of which Xiamen Airlines received the first one
in late August. It would be only the second European destination served
from Xiamen, in addition to the 3-weekly flights to Amsterdam, operated
by KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, this route is operated by Boeing 777-200ER
aircraft. — CH-Aviation –
China Airlines and China Eastern take delivery of their first Boeing 777-300ER
In late September China Eastern took delivery of its first of twenty Boeing 777-300ER’s, in a new paint scheme. The Chinese airline will use the new aircraft on routes to North America, starting with Shanghai (Pudong) to New York (JFK) on November 15th, replacing Airbus A340-600 aircraft. The new 777’s are fitted with six First Class suites, 52 Business Class seats (1-2-1 configuration) and 258 Economy seats (3-4-3 configuration). This 777-300ER was also the first aircraft on which China Eastern introduced its newOn 3 October, China Airlines (Taiwan) celebrated delivery of its first of ten 777-300ER’s. The airline launches 777-300ER operations to Hong Kong this month and will later introduce the type on North American routes such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York (JFK). The new type is fitted with 40 Business Class seats, 62 Premium Economy seats, 30 Economy Family Couch seats and 226 regular Economy Class seats. The Family Couch seats are a version of the Skycouch seats introduced by Air New Zealand, also on the 777-300ER. — China Airlines/Boeing –
Alitalia retired Air One brand
Part of the new Alitalia, after the
strategic deal with Etihad Airways, is the closure of Air One, which
happened on September 30th. Air One was once the second largest airline
in Italy, when it merged with Alitalia in early 2009, part of a deal to
save the biggest Italian carrier. Air One was transformed into a
low-cost subsidiary as Air One “Smart Carrier”, operating 10 Airbus A320
aircraft with 180 seats. Air One had bases at Milan-Malpensa, Venice
Marco Polo, Catania, Palermo, Pisa and Verona. By the end of October,
Alitalia will resume several Air One routes with Alitalia-branded
aircraft. — Alitalia –
Air China takes delivery of first Boeing 747-8i
After Lufthansa, Air China is only the
second airline to take delivery of the latest passenger version of the
iconic Boeing 747. The new 747’s are fitted with a total of 365 seats,
12 in First Class, 54 in Business Class and 299 Economy Class seats. On
October 26 the first of seven 747-8i’s will start operating from Beijing
Capital (PEK) to Guangzhou and Shanghai Hongqiao, followed by Chengdu
in December. International flights will begin in early January, flying
daily between Beijing and Frankfurt (Germany). — Air China –
More revenue for easyJet thanks to Air France strike and expects higher profit
While Air France lost tens of millions
due to a two-week pilot strike, easyJet received 6.4 million Euro, or 5
million Pound of additional revenue thanks to this strike. Combined with
lower fuel costs and beneficial currency effects, this is one of the
reasons why easyJet now expects a higher profit for the financial year
which ended on September 30, the British low-cost airline now expects
between 575 and 580 million Pounds of profit (EBT) compared to 545 to
570 million Pounds before. EasyJet will present its annual results on
November 4. — easyJet –
Cimber will cease operations from April 2015
Danish ACMI operator Cimber will cease
to exist as from April 2015 as SAS Scandinavian Airlines decided to
terminate its ACMI contract with the carrier. Cimber wet-leases five
Bombardier CRJ-200’s and one ATR72 to SAS, the only customer and
foundation of Cimber’s existence. Cimber was born from the ashes of
low-cost airline Cimber Sterling in May 2012. 150 jobs will be lost,
though the management is looking for alternatives for the company and
its staff, the future doesn’t look bright. Cimber experiences the same
fate as Contact Air (2012) and Augsburg Airways (2013) when Lufthansa
stopped its wet-lease contracts with these operators. Conact Air was
taken over by OLT Express Germany, but that company ceased to exist only
a few months later in January 2013. — Cimber –
Airbus rolls out first delivery A350-900 for Qatar Airways
Airbus unveiled the first A350-900
(MSN006) for its launch customer Qatar Airways in Toulouse (France).
Qatar Airways expects to take delivery of its first A350 XWB in December
2014. Airbus recently received Type Certification from EASA for its
newest aircraft type, powered by Rolls Royce XWB engines. Qatar Airways
and Airbus are now working closely together towards delivery, finishing
the cabin interior and executing ground and flight tests. Airbus
currently holds 750 orders from 39 customers for the A350XWB, competing
with the 787 and 777(X) of Boeing. — Airbus –
JAL Express merged with JAL Japan Airlines
JAL Express was a fully owned subsidiary
of JAL, but is now fully integrated in its parent company since October
1. It was decided during a directors meeting in March 2014 that JAL
Express would be integrated in JAL in the form of a simplified merger,
with JAL absorbing JAL Express’ assets and liabilities. JAL took this
decision to stabilise its domestic network, having better control over
its capacity and product offer. JAL Express operated 41 Boeing 737-800
aircraft on its domestic network as well as under wet-lease operation
for parent company JAL. All aircraft will be repainted by 2016 — JAL
Japan Airlines –
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