Air Transport World

American Eagle unveiled new direct service between Columbia, S.C., and Dallas/Ft. Worth. It will operate thrice-daily flights aboard 50-seat ERJ-145s. Qantas will offer another flight between Sydney and Los Angeles each Tuesday from Dec. 20 through Jan. 24, adding more than 2,000 seats. Air France introduced a 777-200 to its nightly Paris-Dubai service, increasing weekly capacity by 16%. The aircraft will seat 270 in a three-class configuration. AF's five-times-weekly daytime flights will continue aboard A330-200s.
Airports & Networks

BWIA West Indies Airways appointed GM Nelson Tom Yew as CEO and a new five-person board chaired by Arthur Lok Jack. The management restructuring was part of a deal negotiated with the government of Trinidad and Tobago, which pumped $250 million into the airline last month, the Associated Press reported. UAL Corp., parent of United Airlines, announced the appointment of William R. Norman as senior VP-United Services, the company's maintenance and engineering division.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Thai and South Korean investors have partnered to launch Sky Star Airways, a Bangkok-based airline hoping to position itself as a full-service carrier with fares between LCCs and large conventional airlines. The Bangkok Post reported that SSA was registered with capital of 400 million baht ($9.8 million) and expects to obtain its license and be airborne as early as December with service between Bangkok and Incheon.

Goodrich Corp. was chosen by Hamilton Sundstrand Power Systems to supply an integrated fuel injection system for the APS5000 APU for the 787. Boeing earlier awarded Goodrich contracts for the 787's cargo handling system, wheels and electronic braking, exterior lighting, nacelles and thrust reversers, proximity sensing system, fuel quantity indicators and fuel management software.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes yesterday announced a record third-quarter net profit of R$138.2 million ($61.1 million), a 19.8% margin and up 42.6% from net income of R$96.9 million in the year-ago period.

AITAL, the Latin American Airline Assn., rescheduled its annual Latin American Airline Leaders Forum to Dec. 13-15 at the Fairmont Turnberry Isle Resort in South Florida. The event originally was scheduled for last week and was postponed due to Hurricane Wilma.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Saint-Gobain Flight Structures is expanding its Ravenna, Ohio, plant in order to manufacture lightweight aerospace composites used in components such as cargo doors and wingtips. The Ravenna plant is a self-contained operation specializing in design, manufacture, repair and certification of composites and Saint Gobain's Norton radomes.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Denim Air's new CEO, Matthijs Boertien, said the carrier is evaluating larger aircraft including the F70/F100 or members of the Embraer 170/190 family. A decision could be made by spring. Denim currently operates 14 F50s and five Dash 8s on an ACMI basis. Most recently, it secured agreements to operate F50s for Air Mauritania and Air Senegal, Boertien said. The airline also unveiled an ACMI Plus service, which provides full operational support that includes sales distribution and marketing support.
Aircraft & Propulsion

American Airlines launched its first new international service from Terminal D at Dallas/Ft. Worth International Airport yesterday, flying nonstop to Osaka. The daily flights will be aboard 777s equipped with 16 first class, 35 business class and 185 coach seats. Osaka is AA's 33rd international destination from its DFW hub and its fifth nonstop route to Japan.
Airports & Networks

Pinnacle Airlines reported a third-quarter net loss of $21.4 million and an operating loss of $32.4 million, which company officials attributed to an after-tax charge of $34.5 million for items related to the recent bankruptcy filings of Northwest Airlines and Mesaba Airlines. The Northwest Airlink carrier posted a net income of $12.6 million in the year-ago period. Excluding the charge, Pinnacle reported pro forma net income of $13.1 million for the 2005 quarter.

Aeroflot Russian Airlines will add a total of 50 flights from Moscow to Novosibirsk, Samara, Ufa, Kemerovo, Paris, Rome, Milan, Venice, Bucharest, Sofia, Zagreb, Belgrade, Geneva, London, Nice, Vienna (10 new flights), Beijing, Baku and Tbilisi in its winter schedule Oct. 30-March 26. Qantas is expanding its QantasLink regional network into South Australia effective Dec. 18.
Airports & Networks

ANA Group's profit of ¥19.7 billion ($170.3 million) for the fiscal first half ended Sept. 30 was down 34% from ¥29.8 billion earned in the year-ago period owing to the adoption of asset impairment accounting methods. However, the company reported record revenue of ¥690.9 billion and a record operating profit of ¥69.5 billion for the first half of the fiscal year, up 16.4% from ¥59.7 billion in 2004.

Continental Airlines today will become the first carrier to inaugurate scheduled nonstop service between the US and India with the launch of daily flights between its hub at Newark Liberty International Airport and Delhi's Indira Gandhi International. It will use a 283-seat 777-200ER.
Airports & Networks

Boeing will install Class 3 Electronic Flight Bags on two 777-200ERs and four 737-700s for TAAG Angola Airlines beginning in third-quarter 2006, making TAAG the first African carrier to fly the Class 3 EFB in commercial service, the first commercial operator to use the EFB on a 737NG platform and the first carrier to use it on multiple fleet types.
Aircraft & Propulsion

CIT Group selected IAE's V2500 to power up to 24 A320s, comprising 12 firm and 12 option aircraft. If fully realized, the contract will be worth more than $400 million to IAE. CIT already has 33 V2500-powered aircraft in service and another 10 on order.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Perry Flint
United Airlines parent UAL Corp. posted a third-quarter net loss of $1.77 billion as $1.84 billion in bankruptcy-related noncash charges overwhelmed a strong performance at the operating level where the company reported a profit of $165 million, reflecting a 3.5% operating margin, compared with an operating loss of $80 million a year ago.

Emirates and Korean Air signed a codeshare agreement for service between Dubai and Seoul affecting 10 weekly flights between the cities. Emirates launched daily nonstop service to Seoul in May.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Aviation Partners Boeing said Virgin Express ordered four 737-300 Blended Winglet shipsets, the first of which will be installed by Sabena Technics in December. The carrier leases its 737s from GECAS but will purchase the winglets directly.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Sandra Arnoult
After an all-night flight to Brazil, JetBlue CEO David Neeleman was ready to take delivery of the first 100-seat, GE CF34-powered Embraer 190. But there was an unexpected snag: He had forgotten to pack a necktie for the ceremony. Aides scrambled to find one. After a few phone calls, someone came up with a yellow silk print tie that would go with Neeleman's dark blazer and tan pants. And who helped out early that September morning? "My job is to make David look good," says JetBlue COO Dave Barger with a laugh. "I'm the operations guy, so it is expected that I should have a tie."
Aircraft & Propulsion

Jim Glab
In 1920, the Australian states of Queensland and Northern Territory lent their names to a new airline that would grow to be, 85 years later, one of the premier air transportation companies in the world. Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd., or Qantas, was formed in the years after World War I to serve the vast reaches of the Outback.
Airports & Networks

Cathy Buyck
Dubai International Airport is gaining momentum as a world cargo hub. Year after year it moves upward in the Airports Council International ranking of freight throughputfrom No. 29 in 2000 to No. 22 in 2001, No. 20 in 2002, No. 19 in 2003 and No. 18 in 2004.
Airports & Networks

Leonard Hill
How would you define the current market situation in general? Overall demand is finally reaching and starting to exceed the levels of 2001. But even this modest upturn in the MRO industry, linked especially to the strong growth of many new low-cost providers, is being diminished to some extent by counter-trends, with market consolidation occurring only slowly. Worldwide, downward pressure on prices persists and market recovery per se does not mean yield is recovering. Size matters in MRO. High market penetration and a certain throughput level are key to success in this
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Geoffrey Thomas
Japanese politicians have been banned from using them, Italian politicians are having loudspeakers installed under their parliamentary seats to drown them out and many prestigious golf clubs ban them at the entry gate. They are the most annoying thing in our lives and 70% of air travelers say they do not want them on aircraft. They are mobile phones.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Michele McDonald
Sabre lost a bid to end the U.S. Transportation Department's authority to regulate independent GDS companies. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that in a 1952 law that gave the department the authority to regulate ticket agents, Congress' definition of "ticket agent" was "sufficiently broad" to include GDSs.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Aeromexico appointed Carlos De Uriarte regional dir.-US West Coast. Air Transport Assn. named David Castelveter VP-communications. Alaska Air Group announced the retirement of Executive VP-Operations George Bagley. ASIG tapped David L. Aschenbach as VP-sales & customer service. Atlantic Southeast Airlines welcomed Bryan T. LaBrecque as president & COO. Boeing chose Ahmed Jazzar as president-Boeing Saudi Arabia and Michael Probasco as president-Boeing Middle East Ltd.