Aviation Daily

By Sean Broderick
While new airplane sales drive most of Boeing’s commercial sector growth, the company is putting renewed emphasis on grabbing a larger share of the lucrative but fragmented aftermarket business, and two recent purchases indicate its strategy is a mix of acquisitions and organic expansion.

The Transportation Department’s delay in granting Norwegian Air International (NAI) permission to fly to the U.S. is unprecedented and suggests that the department is bowing to arguments that have nothing to do with the carrier’s fitness to operate, former DOT Secretary Mary Peters told Aviation Week.

By Adrian Schofield
Aviation Week named Copa Airlines as the industry’s strongest carrier in this year’s Top-Performing Airlines (TPA) study, with Allegiant Air and Japan Airlines also featuring prominently in the rankings. Copa achieved the highest score overall and was ranked first among mid-sized carriers, edging out Allegiant, which was second overall and best in the small airline category. Japan Airlines (JAL) won the large airline category.

You can now register online for Aviation Week events. Go to www.aviationweek.com/conferences or contact: Lydia Janow, 212-904-3225 or 800-240-7645 ext. 5 (U.S. and Canada only) June 10-11 —MRO Eastern Europe, Baltics and Russia, Sheraton Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland July 16-20—Farnborough Commercial Manufacturing Briefings and Farnborough Air Show, U.K. Oct. 7-9—MRO Europe, Madrid Spain

To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected] . (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) June 4-5 —RTCA 2014 Global Aviation Symposium, Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC http://symposium.rtca.org/ June 8-10—2014 Airport Board & Commissioners Conference, Whitefish, Mont. http://aci-na.org/event/3220

By Maxim Pyadushkin
Russia and China have formally begun a cooperative program to develop a widebody airliner that is expected to go into service in 2023-25. The program appears not to have entered full-scale development, however, since the Russian partner, United Aircraft Corporation (UAC), says the two sides will now “define the design of the aircraft’s major subsystems, the sales strategy and the most effective forms of participation from both sides.”

By Karen Walker
Airbus completed test flights of two A350 XWB aircraft on the same day, flying them side by side at one point, as the French manufacturer heads towards the entry-into-service date for launch customer Qatar Airways at the end of this year.

The NTSB wants the FAA to begin convening a panel of “independent technical experts” to advise the agency how to certify the safety of certain new technologies for new or existing aircraft.

BRUSSELS — Ryanair is short of capacity for the summer 2015 and may take additional aircraft from Boeing if they were to become available, the airline’s Deputy CEO and CFO Howard Millar says.

HOP!, the combination of Air France’s three French regional airlines Brit Air, Regional and Airlinair formed last year, will need to reach profitability before making a decision on its future fleet needs, an executive at the airline said.

In observance of the U.S. Memorial Day Holiday, Aviation Daily will not be publishing a May 27 issue. The next issue will be dated May 28.

Alaska Airlines, seeking to broaden its Pacific Northwest footprint, has asked the Transportation Department (DOT) for permission to operate seasonal flights between Portland, Ore., and San Jose del Cabo and Puerto Vallarta in Mexico. If permission is granted, Alaska would be the first U.S. carrier to operate between Portland and the two Mexican cities. By the terms of the U.S.-Mexico bilateral agreement, each government must approve a maximum of three carriers to operate those routes.

People Express has withdrawn its application for an interstate air transportation certificate, potentially signaling an end to its two-year-long attempt to start an airline. The Transportation Department (DOT) notified People Express on May 20 that it would dismiss its application unless the company provided more information on its fitness to operate.

The Thailand army’s May 22 takeover has triggered tighter security and identity checks at airports, and carriers are bracing for longer-term challenges--such a prolonged dips in traffic--if routine travel and tourism slump. The chairman of Airports of Thailand (AOT), Sita Divari, said that “despite the coup d’etat, the operations of all AOT airports are continuing as usual.” Sita said that so far no orders on access to airports have been given, and that AOT “is not aware of such an order, if there is any.”

The NTSB is calling on the FAA to “review the methods of compliance” used to certify all permanently installed, rechargeable lithium-ion batteries in the active fleet and “require additional testing” if the results indicate the design and installation do not adequately protect against cell thermal runaway.

By Victoria Moores
Central and Eastern European low-cost carrier Wizz Air plans to float its shares on the London Stock Exchange, with the aim of raising €200 million (

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The May 22 story “UPS, Pilots Struggle Over Fatigue” (p. 3) did not attribute a survey of UPS pilots to the correct source. The survey was

UPS says it is “evaluating an upgrade” to the software of its enhanced ground proximity warning system (EGPWS) as a result of the A300-600 crash in

BRUSSELS — Luxair Luxembourg Airlines’ decline in the number of passengers traveling in business and economy class with full-fare flexible tickets in

Etihad Airways has received a $3 billion interest-free loan from the Abu Dhabi government that becomes due only in 2027, Booz & Company and Etihad