Aviation Daily

Steven Lott
Midwest Air Group cut its fourth-quarter net loss to $13.8 million and boosted its Milwaukee hometown market share but still suffered from high fuel costs, executives reported.

Steven Lott
Indian startup Indigo yesterday named former North American Airlines executive Steven Harfst as its new chief operating officer, in preparation for its planned launch this summer. Harfst will be responsible for all operational functions of the airline, which has ordered 100 Airbus A320 family aircraft. It is planning to take the first plane in July and will have a fleet of about 15 aircraft by the end of 2007. The carrier will start flights from Delhi but is expected to expand its network throughout India.

Staff
Roger Fones, former chief of the transportation, energy & agriculture section of the antitrust division of the U.S. Justice Dept., joined the Morrison & Foerster law firm. Fones will practice in the firm's antitrust and competition law practice group in the Washington office. He was with the antitrust division for nearly 30 years and was chief of the transportation, energy and agriculture department for 10 years. He supervised the DOJ's lawsuits against American for monopolizing its Dallas/Fort Worth hub and Northwest for buying control of Continental.

Staff
Dallas/Fort Worth Airport expects to see a 15%-20% improvement in runway and airspace capacity from the use of very precise approach and departure tracks known as RNAV procedures, introduced last year. American said it is saving $15 million a year in fuel costs due to 16 RNAV standard instrument departures at DFW. About 87% of aircraft operating at DFW are equipped to fly the RNAV procedures.

Eclat Consulting

Annette Santiago
US Airways will gain a new rival for the New York LaGuardia-Bermuda market, as Spirit Airlines plans to introduce new service on May 15. The carrier will use Airbus A319s seating 138 and like US Airways will offer the service daily. Spirit wants the U.S. Transportation Dept. to expedite its exemption application so that it can start marketing the flights as soon as possible [OST-2006-237- 28]. -ARS

By Adrian Schofield
FAA says it has seen dramatic reductions in overtime spending and sick leave at its New York terminal radar approach control (TRACON) since the agency investigated alleged abuses of the system by controllers and introduced a new scheduling system.

Steven Lott
El Al this week unveiled plans to introduce a new passenger calling service that will provide worldwide telephone connections in flight through the Iridium satellite network. The service will use prepaid calling cards with rates of US$1.60 per minute. El Al will offer the service in all classes on its fleet of Boeing 767s. Passengers will be able to buy the calling cards duty-free on the aircraft. The cards will be valid for 12 months and will be usable on future flights. El Al expects to complete the installations on all 767s during the next few months.

William Dennis
Air New Zealand will suspend its twice-weekly nonstop Christchurch-Los Angeles flight from April 3 to Oct. 28. During the suspension, passengers from Christchurch will be able to connect to Los Angeles via ANZ's offerings from Auckland. Cargo will also be carried via Auckland. The airline plans to reinstate the three weekly Christchurch-Los Angeles flights on Oct. 29. Explaining the decision, ANZ official Norm Thompson said passenger numbers during the April-October period were insufficient to sustain a nonstop service.

Lori Ranson
Most of GOL's capacity growth this year should come from the Brazilian market as the country's traffic levels continue to soar. Analysts at Raymond James estimate that in 2004 about 7.5 million passengers traveled by air, compared with 135 million interstate bus travelers in 2003. They also predict Brazil's air passenger numbers could grow to 20 million annually.

Seabury Airline Planning Group

Annette Santiago
American and United are opposing Flyglobespan's application for permits and exemptions to operate to the U.S. (DAILY, Jan. 9) because of BAA's fuel rationing plan at London Heathrow Airport. BAA instituted the fuel rationing after oil fires at Buncefield depot, which supplies about one-third of Heathrow's fuel, damaged pipelines (DAILY, Dec. 12, 2005).

Lori Ranson
Ryanair will impose a charge for checked baggage, starting March 16, in addition to lowering fares by 9%. An increase in baggage allowance accompanies the charge. Each passenger's allowance will rise from 25kg to 30kg. Ryanair plans to charge EUR3.50 for checked bags per flight for passengers who book on the carrier's web site and EUR7.00 for those who do not.

Annette Santiago
US Airways finally won a handful of exemptions to serve some open-skies countries, after one and one-half years of waiting. The carrier in August 2004 applied to the U.S. Transportation Dept. for exemptions for Austria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Poland, Romania, the Slovak Republic, and Sweden to "develop its presence in Europe further and to offer consumers and shippers expanded, competitive service options to/from that region."

Steven Lott
Japan Airlines Group and Lawson, a Japanese convenience store chain, signed a deal to issue a joint credit card to "improve customer service and create new demand."

Steven Lott
China Eastern Airlines yesterday took delivery of its first A330-300, becoming the launch operator of the aircraft on the Chinese Mainland.

Martial Tardy
The European Parliament is expected to back new rules creating a single license for all European Union air traffic controllers, as Parliament's transport committee this week nodded through the draft legislation. The new rules aim "to ensure high safety standards and make it easier for air traffic controllers to work outside their home country," a Parliament source said. There is a shortage of about 1,800 air traffic controllers in Europe, the Parliament estimates, and job mobility is expected to help alleviate the problem.

Steven Lott
Dragonair yesterday reported it flew a record number of passengers and carried a record amount of freight last year. The airline transported more than 5 million passengers in 2005, an increase of 9.9% from 2004. Cargo volumes climbed 12.5% to top 385,000 metric tons. "The results are good, considering the difficult operating environment we endured, with record prices for oil and greater competition," said CEO Stanley Hui. "Traffic for both passengers and cargo continued to be underpinned by demand to and from the China Mainland."

Martial Tardy
SAS pilots decided on Jan. 25 to end a three-day wildcat strike that caused the cancellation of nearly 1,000 flights in Copenhagen and Oslo.

Staff
ASA will introduce nonstop Delta Connection service between Atlanta and Kingston, Jamaica, on June 8, pending approval from the U.S. Dept. of Transportation. The carrier is seeking an exemption to operate flights directly, via intermediate points and beyond. ASA will use 70-seat CRJ-700s for the daily service [OST-2006-23689].

Annette Santiago
Frontier will hold out service to Canada through its code share with Horizon, starting on or around May 24, as it won from the U.S. Transportation Dept. an exemption to operate between any point in the U.S. and any point in Canada. Initially, Frontier will offer service from Denver to Canada through the Horizon code share, but it wants exemption authority to launch its own service, if necessary [OST-2006-23558]. -ARS

Steven Lott
Bangkok's new Suvarnabhumi Airport is expected to open by July, predicted Thailand's Prime Minster Thaksin Shinawatra, despite several new problems, such as fire that broke out last week at Thai Airways' catering building and runway repairs.

Steven Lott
Northwest management and its pilots met yesterday after the bankruptcy court judge earlier in the week recessed the Section 1113c hearing until Jan. 31, encouraging both sides to reach an concession deal.

Staff
Delta this summer plans to launch a new nonstop point-to-point flight from Raleigh/Durham to Los Angeles. The service will start on June 8 and will be operated with a 150-seat Boeing 737-800. "In 2006 Delta is continuing to aggressively transform its network, especially expanding into new or underserved routes," said Bob Cortelyou, VP-Network Planning. Delta will be the only airline serving the route nonstop.

Wings Club