Air Transport World

Brian Straus
Silverjet's recent roller coaster ride, which appeared to end happily for the all-business-class carrier earlier last week with an acquisition and relaunch agreement with a Swiss investment firm, took a plunge for the worse Friday as the deal suddenly collapsed.

Serbian government said Friday that it will offer for sale a 51% stake in Jat Airways for a starting price of €150 million ($231.9 million). The tender, set to published July 15, according to press reports, will include an option to acquire up to 75% of the airline. "Anyone can bid, but bidders outside the EU will have to run in a consortium," Economy Minister Mladjan Dinkic said. "Our main request is to keep Jat as the national carrier and keep the Serbian flag on it." It reportedly has assets worth $150 million and is carrying €209 million in debt.

Luxair narrowed its full-year loss to €860,000 ($1.3 million) in 2007. It did not provide the year-ago result. It cited the addition of three Q400s, implementation of a "new, clear, transparent pricing structure," expanded e-ticketing and route rationalization for the improvement. Parent LuxairGroup, which counts the airline as one of four subsidiaries, reported a profit of €18.2 million.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Missouri state government authorized up to $240 million in tax credits to entice Bombardier to build its CSeries assembly plant at Kansas City International, the Associated Press reported. Bombardier said it also is considering a site near Montreal. The $400 million plant reportedly would create up to 2,100 jobs. Bombardier hopes to announce a launch customer for the new 110/130-seat jets by year end.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

International Brotherhood of Teamsters filed a petition with the US National Mediation Board last week seeking a vote to represent Atlas Air and Polar Air Cargo crewmembers.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Delta Air Lines' voluntary severance offer has been accepted by 4,000 employees, double the number of workers it originally planned to slash via the program. The carrier, which plans to cut domestic capacity by 10% year-over-year in the second half of 2008 ( ATWOnline, June 3), said the workers accepting the severance offer will leave in the fall.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Air Transat parent Transat A.T. posted net income for its fiscal second quarter ended April 30 of C$40.7 million ($39.8 million), down 32.2% from C$53.8 million earned in the year-ago quarter. The company said earnings were affected negatively by a C$17.9 million writedown related to asset-backed commercial paper holdings.

Genesis Lease of Ireland will lease two former Aloha Airlines 737-700s to Brazil's VRG for seven years each. Delivery is expected before August.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Geoffrey Thomas
Australia's Virgin Blue announced Friday a range of capacity reductions and a A$50 million ($46.9 million) cost-savings package in response to continuing record fuel prices.

SITA signed a $6.2 million deal with Sweden's Skyways Express to overhaul passenger management processes and manage seasonal variations in passenger traffic. Five-year contract calls for migration to SITA's Passenger Management and Revenue Optimization Solution Suites.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

SR Technics signed five 10-year agreements with Aer Lingus to provide line maintenance services at Dublin for A320, A321 and A330 aircraft. Contracts cover A checks, ground handling, deicing and cosmetic service. Work is scheduled to begin July 6. Contracts are expected to deliver anticipated maintenance cost savings "in excess" of €20 million ($31 million) in the first full year, EI said. It signed agreements with three other maintenance providers as part of its cost-reduction program.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Kurt Hofmann
Finnair announced yesterday that it will begin negotiations with personnel regarding cuts in production that it anticipates will affect approximately 500 employees through layoffs and terminations, an adjustment in the number of temporary staff and reducing workers to part-time status.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Nav Canada yesterday announced a proposal to maintain a 1% reduction in its service charges that was implemented on a temporary basis on Aug. 1, 2007, and was set to expire Aug. 31, 2008. The air navigation services provider said continuation of the lower rates will save customers an estimated C$13 million ($12.7 million) in FY09.
Airports & Networks

UK CAA said flight punctuality fell in the first quarter. Overall ontime performance of scheduled flights at the 10 UK airports monitored dropped by 4 points year-over-year to 68%. London Luton, Gatwick, Stansted and Birmingham all improved, whereas the situation at Heathrow deteriorated by 9 points to only 56% and London City dropped 12 points to 58%. Average delay across all flights monitored rose to 18 min. from 16 min. in the first quarter of 2007.
Airports & Networks

Brian Straus
US Airways yesterday unveiled a range of initiatives designed to negotiate what Chairman and CEO Doug Parker called "this new and challenging environment," including introduction of a $15 charge for the first piece of checked baggage, aircraft returns and up to 1,700 job cuts. Similar to its domestic rivals, US is facing a fiscal crunch as a result of soaring fuel costs. It said its 2008 fuel expense will increase by $1.9 billion from the previous year to 39% of the mainline and regional total. It lost $236 million in the first quarter.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

ATA Airlines, which shut down early last month ( ATWOnline, April 4), is suing FedEx Corp., saying its decision to cancel a contract for military charter operations forced ATA into bankruptcy, the Associated Press reported. The charter operation was a key component of ATA's business and generated some $400 million in annual revenue.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Cathy Buyck
The European Commission this week confirmed the launch of an in-depth investigation into the Italian government's €300 million ($465 million) emergency bridge loan to Alitalia, granted in April under a specific decree-law. A second decree-law on May 27 allowed AZ to incorporate that sum into its equity capital, enabling it to avoid bankruptcy proceedings and permit its possible privatization ( ATWOnline, June 3).
Safety, Ops & Regulation

American Airlines flew 11.76 billion system RPMs in May, down 1.1% from the year-ago month. Capacity fell at the same rate to 14.39 billion ASMs and load factor was level at 81.7%. American Eagle flew 726.6 million RPMs, down 9.5%, against a 6.5% decline in capacity to 994.1 million ASMs. Load factor dropped 2.4 points to 73.1%. Continental Airlines said May consolidated unit revenue rose an estimated 6.5%-7.5% year-over-year. It flew 8.28 billion consolidated RPMs, up 1.8%, against a 2.2% increase in capacity to 10.2 billion ASMs. Load factor slid 0.3 point to 81.2%.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Air Malta and Turkish Airlines signed a codeshare agreement under which THY will place its code on KM's twice-weekly Malta-Istanbul Ataturk. The carriers said the deal "is expected to pave the way for further cooperation. . .in the near future."
Airports & Networks

Cyprus Airways is considering a partial renewal of its fleet to cut down on its growing fuel bill, it said this week. "We are looking at the possibility of a part renewal of our aircraft in some depth. We expect to have a partly renewed fleet by the next summer season," Chairman Kikis Lazarides said at a Nicosia news conference, Reuters reported. It said CY's fleet of two A319s, seven A320s and two A330-200s has an average age of 12.5 years. The airline reported a rare profit in 2007 ( ATWOnline, Feb.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Aaron Karp
Boeing began the 787 power-on process this week, a critical step toward the company's being able to meet a revised schedule that has first flight slated for the 2008 fourth quarter, and said full power-on likely will be achieved in 10-14 days following tests of various systems during coming days.
Aircraft & Propulsion

United Airlines yesterday joined American Airlines and US Airways (see story above) in announcing that it will charge $15 to check a first bag on North American flights. The fee will apply for trips from Aug. 18 for tickets purchased from today for flights within the US and to/from Canada, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. First and business class passengers will be exempt as will UA and Star Alliance "premier status" members. The carrier estimated that the fee and $25 it is charging for a second checked bag will generate $275 million in revenue annually.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Continental Airlines yesterday detailed route closures stemming from its decision last week to downsize ( ATWOnline, June 6), leading to a mainline system capacity reduction of 6.8% year-over-year in the fourth quarter. From Sept. 3 it will discontinue a number of routes. Most prominently, it will stop flying Houston Intercontinental-Washington Dulles, IAH-Oakland, Newark-Cologne/Bonn, EWR-Salt Lake City, Cleveland-IAD and Guam-Bali.
Airports & Networks

Brian Straus
Silverjet announced that it has reached "principal terms" with Kingplace, an Irish-registered investment group managed by Geneva-based Heritage, to acquire and re-launch the all-business-class carrier. Silverjet shut down two weeks ago when it failed to secure promised funds from a UAE-based investor ( ATWOnline, June 2). The London Luton-based airline's administrators said the transaction is expected to be completed by Friday.

Pratt & Whitney reached multiyear agreements with United Airlines and Southwest Airlines to provide its EcoPower engine wash system offered by its Global Service Partners division. Technology, which is expected to result in significant fuel savings and emissions reductions, features a closed-loop system with atomized water that works to prevent contaminant runoff.
Aircraft & Propulsion