Sunday, 14 September 2014

Air France launches new private jet service

Take a seat in a private jet, fly off on time and with no constraints. Air France is offering its La Première customers with connections at Paris-Charles de Gaulle a new way to travel which is faster and easier. An exclusive trip from departure to destination with attention to detail: an exceptional offer.
Starting today, Air France, in partnership with Wijet, is offering a new range of private jet services. This service is exclusively dedicated to connecting passengers at Paris-Charles de Gaulle, before or after their long-haul flight on Air France in the La Première cabin and their travel companions traveling in the Business cabin.
After revealing its new «haute couture» La Première suites, the Company is continuing to upgrade its most exclusive cabin. The trip is totally bespoke, from the customer’s departure to their arrival at desti-nation, including optimized connection time at Paris-Charles de Gaulle.

Sydney airport passenger accidently given bomb by police

Photo of a sniffer

A passenger in Australia has accidentally been given a bomb in a suitcase by staff at Sydney airport.
The training device was planted in the case by police in August to train sniffer dogs.
However, after the exercise, it was forgotten about and given to the unnamed passenger after her own case was damaged.
The bomb contained real explosives, but officials say it was deactivated.
Australian Federal Police have apologised to the woman.
According to an official statement, the device, containing 230g of plastic explosive, was originally placed in a case at the domestic terminal on August 14 to be used in a training exercise for sniffer dogs.
Planting real explosives, drugs and other items in real airport luggage is quite common practice - it's seen as an essential training tool for dogs.
Nearly a month later after the exercise, the passenger was handed the abandoned case as a replacement after hers was damaged in flight.
She took the bag, left the airport, and drove home with the bomb still inside.
When the passenger finally discovered it and handed it in to police in Cessnock, more 90 miles from the airport, the station had to be evacuated.
Federal police Sydney airport Commander Wayne Buchhorn told reporters: "Although the travelling public was not in danger at any time, we regularly review our processes in this area, and we will do again in the light of this incident.
"The police takes this error seriously and the canine instructor who inadvertently left this device behind has been identified and will be the subject of a formal professional standards investigation.

Star Wars surprise: Millennium Falcon and X-Wing pictured

Australian Helicopters Signs For Six AW139 Helicopters For EMS Missions by Air Ambulance Victoria

AgustaWestland and Australian Helicopters are pleased to announce the signature of a contract for AW139 intermediate twin-engine helicopters that will be operated for Ambulance Victoria under a 10 year agreement to perform Emergency Medical Service (EMS) missions.
The aircraft, which are expected to enter service in January 2016, will be based at Essendon, Bendigo, Latrobe Valley and Warrnambool airports. The new fleet will replace Ambulance Victoria’s present five helicopters and includes a dedicated back-up aircraft to maintain services when heavy aircraft maintenance is required.
The AW139 is a new generation helicopter that sets new standards of safety, comfort and performance in the intermediate twin-engine helicopter market. Designed with inherent multi-role capability and flexibility of operation, the AW139 has the most spacious cabin and the best power reserve of any helicopter in its class. The internal dimensions of the AW139's roomy unobstructed cabin make it an ideal choice for EMS applications. The flat floor, large cabin doors and unobstructed cabin provide easy and quick access for stretchers and survivors. The new technology Honeywell Primus Epic® fully integrated avionics package, a 4-axis digital AFCS and large flat panel color displays in the cockpit, reduce pilot workload and allow the crew to concentrate on the demanding missions they are often tasked to perform.
The AW139 has become the benchmark intermediate twin-engine helicopter with orders for more than 770 helicopters having been placed by over 200 commercial and government customers in over 60 countries. The AW139 perform a wide range of roles including search and rescue, emergency medical services, offshore transport, VIP/corporate transport, law enforcement, homeland security and utility. Particularly, the AW139 has rapidly become the intermediate twin-engine helicopter of choice for search and rescue and Emergency Medical Service missions having already been selected by customers in Asia, Middle East, Europe, North America, Australasia and Africa.

UK to refund Chinese tourist visas

George Osborne meeting Chinese Vice President Ma Kai

Chancellor George Osborne has announced plans to refund the cost of up to 25,000 visas for Chinese tourists in an attempt to attract more visits to the UK.
It was one of a series of measures announced at an economic summit in London, attended by Chinese vice premier Ma Kai.
"The more Chinese tourists the merrier," the chancellor said.
He also announced deals worth £2.6bn between Chinese and British firms.
The visa refund plan would apply to Chinese tourists visiting Britain in organised tour groups.
The government will also exempt approved tour groups from needing a transit visa, making it easier for Chinese tourists to use British airports as hubs for international travel.
"I think that will strengthen British aviation, strengthen British airports as hubs for direct routes to China, so that people use British airports as a jumping off point for trips around Europe," Mr Osborne said.
"Of course one of the really exciting things we see all around is more and more Chinese tourists coming to the United Kingdom and they are very, very welcome," he added.
More flights between the two countries have also been agreed and £1.6m will be spent marketing Britain in China.
National tourism agency VisitBritain welcomed the visa plan, describing it as "the perfect catalyst to enable Chinese tourists to not only visit Britain, but travel right across the country".
Other deals agreed include British businesses helping to build Chinese websites and rail infrastructure as well as Chinese investment in areas such as UK shipping, golf courses, and healthcare.

Embraer Executive Jets delivered the 25th Phenom 300 to NetJets

A Purchase Agreement for 50 Phenom 300, plus 75 options, was signed in October 2010. The total value of the deal may exceed USD 1 billion, if all options are exercised.
“We are absolutely delighted with this delivery to NetJets, just over a year after the first Phenom 300 joined their fleet,” said Marco Túlio Pellegrini, President & CEO, Embraer Executive Jets. “The Phenom 300 was the most delivered business aircraft in 2013, and we are thrilled with its success among NetJets’ customers.”
The aircraft delivered today is the 200th Phenom 300 manufactured by the Company. The delivery ceremony took place at the Embraer assembly facility in Melbourne, Florida, where this aircraft was produced. Over 70 Phenom jets have been assembled in Melbourne, and delivered primarily to customers in the North American market. The Phenom 300 is in service in over 25 countries.
“The Signature Series™ Phenom 300 is our best-selling aircraft right now and a core part of our NetJets fleet,” said Chuck Suma, Senior Vice President of Global Asset Management, Global Procurement, and Global Process Improvement, NetJets Inc. “In fact, it is selling so well that we have asked Embraer to accelerate the delivery schedule, which will add four additional jets this year. By the end of 2014, we will have 35 Signature Series™ Phenom 300s in our fleet.”
The Melbourne facility began operations in 2011, with the assembly of the Phenom 100, and the first aircraft was delivered in December of the same year. Production of the Phenom 300 at this facility began in August 2012, and the first delivery took place in December of the same year. The balance of NetJets’ Phenom 300 order, in addition to any options exercised, will also be produced in Melbourne.
Source and image: Embraer Executive Jets

Airline boss suggests Malaysian MH17 tragedy could have been avoided

The boss of Emirates has suggested that airlines would have avoided flying over Ukraine long before flight MH17 crashed, if information about missiles in the area had been passed on.
Sir Tim Clark told the BBC there had been evidence of weapons for weeks.
But he claimed those in the know didn't share it with most of the carriers flying across the country.
If the airlines had all been told, he suggests, the industry would probably have by-passed the danger zone.
And he added that some carriers did appear to know because they were avoiding the area, but they didn't share the information.

Start Quote

We have a concern that that information was known by certain stakeholders”
Sir Tim ClarkPresident, Emirates
It's widely believed that a missile downed Malaysian flight MH17 on 17th July, killing all 298 people on board.
Planes had been cleared to fly in the area as long as they stayed above a certain height, and a report earlier this week highlighted the fact that three other large passenger jets were in the same area at roughly the same time as the Malaysian flight.
Sir Tim said: "There was evidence that these missiles had been on site, in situ for a number of weeks beforehand.
"Emirates did not know of that fact, and I don't think many others did. Had we known that, we would probably have reacted in a manner that would have seen a complete avoidance of Ukrainian airspace, probably as an industry.
"We have a concern that information was known by certain stakeholders... and should have been passed... at least to the industry, to the organisations that regulate the industry.
"We understand now that certain carriers were aware of that and had already taken avoidance action."
British Airways was among several airlines that had been avoiding Ukraine for weeks. But in a recent BBC interview, the overall boss of the company, Willie Walsh, said that decision was based on information that was publicly available at the time.
Sir Tim is calling for an information "clearing house" to be set up, that can warn all airlines, quickly, if there are any new threats in an area.
At the moment it's down to each individual airline to decide whether to travel over a war zone, based on information from local air traffic control and from their own government. And carriers aren't obliged to pass on the information to each other.
Airport expansion
Sir Tim, who is one of the most respected voices in the industry, also says that a "Yes" vote for Scotland would heighten the need for a new runway in the south of England.
Although he made clear that he didn't want to get involved in the politics of the decision, he told us: "Clearly, if they do become independent they will develop their own civil aviation strategies, they will probably develop Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen. But therefore there is more impetus required for the remaining parts of the UK to develop their aviation strategy, to fill a gap."
Like so many others in the business world, the Emirates' president says that doing nothing is not an option, be it expansion at Heathrow, Gatwick, or even at the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson's preferred location, in the Thames Estuary.
After four decades in the business Sir Tim says he's seen airport expansion plans come and go, but there really does seem to be an urgency to do something this time,
"I witnessed the Maplin Sands episodes in the 70s. Clearly there wasn't a buy-in to the level that I believe there is today. When you see the likes of Mayor Johnson, you may not agree with his Estuary project... the fact is that a person like this, who is politically, extremely powerful, he has championed this cause, he has raised the profile of the need for London and the South East to have more access."
Maplin Sands was another proposal to build a floating airport in the Thames Estuary. They'd even begun building the place, but it was swiftly ditched in 1974 by the new Labour government in the wake of the oil crisis.
Finally, Sir Tim made the point that the UK needs to grow all of its regional airports too, including Manchester, Birmingham, Newcastle and Cardiff, which he described as having great potential.

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