Aviation Daily

Staff
AirTran Airways clocked 83.7 million revenue passenger miles in May, a 217% increase over May 1995 while it flew 163% more capacity. Available seat miles totaled 124.9 million, up from 47.6 million. The load factor increased 11.5 points to 67%. AirTran carried 96,188 passengers during the month. For the first five months, RPMs rose 287% to 419.6 million as ASMs increased 209% to 613.6 million and the load factor jumped 13.7 points to 68.4%. Boardings grew 321% to 476,113. AirTran will accept its 11th 737- 200 in July.

Staff
Canadian Airlines International has signed a three-year contract with Pepsi-Cola Canada Beverages to serve the soft drink maker's products on its flights. Under the pact, which includes a two-year extension option, Pepsi will supply the airline with 250,000 cases of soft drink per year, including Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, 7-Up and 7-Up light. The deal took effect yesterday. As part of the pact, Pepsi has produced 10 million cans of soda showing the Canadian and Pepsi logos.

Staff
American Trans Air said yesterday it will add four destinations to its route map this summer, with nonstop flights from Orlando to Nassau and Montego Bay and direct flights from Orlando to San Diego and Seattle.

Staff
Northwest has asked DOT for exemptions to operate scheduled combination service from Detroit to Providenciales, Turks&Caicos Islands, and Antigua and Barbuda islands. The carrier proposes weekly service in both markets, using Airbus A320 aircraft in the former and Boeing 757s in the latter. Northwest also wants to operate service weekly A320 service between Minneapolis/St.Paul and San Jose del Cabo, Mexico. All the services are scheduled to begin Dec. 21. (Dockets OST-96-1439, OST-96-1440&OST-96-1441)

Staff
In a major cabinet reshuffle Taiwan's president Lee Teng-hui has named Tsai Chao-yang to succeed Liu Chao-shiuan as minister of transportation and communications. Tsai formerly served as deputy min-ister under Liu. Until recently, Liu had been expected to stay on as minister of transportation and communications in the new cabinet formed by President Lee following his re-election.

Staff
GE Engine Services said yesterday it was awarded a five-year contract valued at more than $60 million by the Gulf Aircraft Maintenance Co. on behalf of Gulf Air. GE Engine Services will maintain CFM56 engines that power 14 Airbus A320 and six A340-300 aircraft in Gulf Air's fleet. The work will be performed at GE facilities in Wales under a program that provides support at a flat rate per flying hour. GE says this enables customers to forecast expenses and manage costs better.

Staff
Computer reservations system fees have risen 211% in the past five years and are one of the main drivers of distribution costs, Delta Executive VP- Marketing Bob Coggin told business executives in Atlanta. Just as it did by introducing caps on travel agent commissions, Delta is exploring ways to reduce CRS fees through new technology, such as the Internet, and wants to offer electronic ticketing on all domestic flights by yearend. Distribution costs for the industry totaled $12.6 billion last year, or 18.6% of total costs, he said.

Staff
Another low-cost startup with ties to the U.S. plans to establish itself in Europe. Debonair intends to start flying from London Luton Airport next week with five BAe 146s. The airline will be run by Franco Mancassola, a principal of defunct Discovery Airways, launched in Hawaii in 1988. Jonathan Ornstein, another U.S. airline veteran, recently launched Virgin Atlantic's low-cost operation on the Continent.

Staff
Amadeus Global Travel Distribution has launched new fare displays that expand the number of columns in the first screen to include data on penalties, taxes, travel dates and days. Amadeus said the change to its Central System is one of the most significant enhancements it has made since the system became operational in January 1992. Separately, the company said it has been named the preferred CRS of SRG International, a global travel management company headquartered in France.

Staff
A ValuJet spokesman confirmed yesterday that the carrier has had talks with several airlines and intends to reduce the number of outside contractors that carry out its heavy maintenance. ValuJet now has four third-party sources of heavy maintenance work, compared with six before the May 11 crash of one of its DC-9s in the Florida Everglades, which killed all 110 aboard. The spokesman confirmed that there have been "initial discussions" with Air Canada, Northwest and American.

Staff
DHL Worldwide Express said its new domestic air express service for middleweight packages - the Jumbo Box - "combines convenient packaging, simplified pricing, an easy shipping document kit and door-to-door service." The service was introduced internationally last year. DHL said many small and medium-size companies without freight departments are now operating internationally for the first time.

Staff
As American and British Airways moved to unveil plans for their new, much-awaited transatlantic alliance this morning in New York, industry players began positioning themselves yesterday for the pact, which could provide pitfalls for some and opportunities for others. TWA, one carrier that stands to gain from the deal, applied formally yesterday to DOT for authority to fly between New York and London Heathrow. Currently, American and United are the only U.S. carriers allowed to fly to Heathrow, and TWA hopes the American-BA deal will open up access. Other U.S.

Staff
The Japan Civil Aviation Bureau's decision to offer two slots a day at Narita Airport beginning July 1 is a "very welcome concession by the JCAB to business aircraft," FAA Administrator David Hinson said yesterday in Washington. "We in the U.S. appreciate their willingness to do this," Hinson said (DAILY, June 7). He reported that FAA and JCAB are continuing a dialogue they began three years ago to "increase and improve" access, not only at Narita but at other Japanese airports.

Staff
Sony Trans Com has selected Hapag Lloyd to equip 16 of its Boeing 737-800s with integrated audio and video systems.

Staff
Siemens Nixdorf said it has created a Transportation Technologies unit that will offer consulting services and information technology products for airport, airline and rail industries. Siemens Nixdorf said it has worked with companies such as Delta, KLM, United, Lufthansa and Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, and Chicago O'Hare and Amsterdam Schiphol airports. It provides services in network designs, systems implementation, systems integration and business process re-engineering.

Staff
American's Hospitality awards, a new frequent flyer program feature, enables customers to redeem AAdvantage miles for hotel stays and car rentals. For 10,000 miles, customers get one night at a Fiesta Inn Mexico or Red Lion Hotel. Other hotels require more miles. A two-day weekday or three-day weekend rental from Alamo costs 12,000 miles, and from Avis, Hertz or National, 16,000 miles.

Staff
Taiwan's outgoing minister of transportation and communications, Liu Chao-shiuan, said June 8 that mainland China has at last approved the terms of a five-year reciprocal air rights pact agreed to by Taiwan and Hong Kong. Liu said Beijing authorities gave their nod following seven rounds of negotiations conducted over two years. The original agreement, which expired Oct. 29, 1995, was extended seven times because of Beijing's failure to approve the new pact.

Staff
Both China Airlines and EVA Airways were inundated by applications from job seekers when they recently announced openings for flight attendants. China Airlines, which wants to fill 250 positions this year, received nearly 5,000 applications, while more than 2,200 applications were submitted for the fewer than 100 slots to be filled by EVA. An official at EVA said most applicants are attracted by the comparatively high pay and the opportunity to travel.

Staff
Canadian Airlines International has launched fare cuts this summer for travel from Toronto to Montreal and Ottawa. The fares, which start at $98 roundtrip, are available for travel June 29 through Sept. 2.

Staff
Air Canada, facing stiffer competition from rivals in Canada, will increase travel agent commission for domestic flights while capping commissions for travel agents in the U.S., Lamar Durrett, recently installed as chief executive, said yesterday at an airline investment conference in Canada. Domestic commissions will grow to 9% from the current 8.25% as of Sept. 1. The cap on U.S. travel agents will be C$60 (US$50) for a roundtrip ticket or C$30 (US$25) one way, the same limits imposed last year on U.S. travel agents by most major U.S. airlines.

Staff
Moody's Investors Service upgraded the senior unsecured rating of Loral Corp. to A3 from Baa2 to reflect that Lockheed Martin has "unconditionally" guaranteed payment of Loral's existing debt obligations.

Staff
Boeing said yesterday its 777-300 program has reached the 25% production definition milestone - one-quarter of the information needed to build parts and tools for assembly have been completed and released to manufacturers for fabrication or procurement, said Jeff Peace, program manager. The stretched aircraft will be able to hold 20% more passengers than the initial version and will serve as a replacement for early model 747s, he said.

Staff
Reno Air's revenue passenger miles rose 65% in May to 256 million on 43% more capacity. Available seat miles totaled 394.5 million, driving up the load factor 8.7 percentage points to a record 65%. President Robert Reding said the load factor marks the ninth consecutive month of significant year-over-year increases.

Staff
The Association of Flight Attendants will meet with United this week in hopes of talking the company out of its plan to open flight attendant bases in Tokyo and Frankfurt, or at least delaying the move. But the union is not optimistic about the outcome. AFA's contract requires United to meet with the union before setting an opening date. United said Friday it intends to open the Frankfurt base Oct. 1 and the Tokyo base Dec. 1, bringing the number of foreign bases to seven, including Paris, London, Santiago, Taipei and Hong Kong.

Staff
A320-1/200 A310-300 America West Northwest United Average Delta ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Number of Aircraft 18 50 29 97 1 Operated TOTAL FLEET OPERATIONS Departures 93 197 103 394 2 Block Hours 211 531 307 1,049 14