UPS pilots are facing layoffs for the first time in the company’s 103-year history—with 169 to be furloughed from May 23 through Nov. 17, according to the Independent Pilots Association (IPA), the collective bargaining unit for the airline’s 2,800 flight crewmembers. The furlough schedule for the remainder of the 300 pilots facing layoffs is expected to be available in early 2011. Since April 2009, the IPA has tried to preserve pilot jobs by producing $117 million in guaranteed savings for UPS through voluntary program efforts that included pay cuts and unpaid leaves.
Key air force procurement ambitions will be deliberated in the Malaysian parliament by July, possibly determining the fate of fighter and airborne early-warning aircraft acquisitions.
The protracted effort to bring Sea Launch out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection has forced Intelsat to turn to Arianespace to launch its Intelsat 17 commercial telecom satellite. A Ku-/C-band spacecraft being supplied by Space Systems/Loral to serve Africa, the Indian Ocean region, Russia, the Middle East and Europe, Intelsat 17 was initially on the Sea Launch manifest.
Honeywell’s Boeing 757 testbed is used to evaluate an HTF7000 engine on a special fuselage-mounted strut attachment as it banks over Catalina Island, Calif. Engine manufacturers are stepping up investment in flying testbeds despite the availability of sophisticated ground test facilities (see p. 52). In coming weeks, the number of dedicated engine testbeds in North America will grow to comprise an unprecedented fleet of four Boeing 747s and a 757. Paul Bowen photo.
Amy Butler (Washington), Michael A. Taverna (Paris)
Orbital Sciences Corp. expects its acquisition of the satellite business of General Dynamics to spur the company’s drive to joint the ranks of the major government satellite prime contrators.
Aegean Airlines expects to post losses in the next two years, as it deals with the effects of the Greek financial crisis and significant costs in integrating Olympic Airlines.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is a “bloated, ineffective bureaucracy . . . teetering on the brink of disaster” and ought to be reorganized, says Rep. John L. Mica (Fla.), the top Republican on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. TSA spent a whopping $5.2 billion on passenger screening in Fiscal 2009, the General Accountability Office says.
Tokyo Haneda Airport will open its fourth runway and new international passenger terminal on Oct. 21 and begin handling scheduled international flights on Oct. 31. Japan Airlines will begin flying from the conveniently located airport to San Francisco, Honolulu, Paris, Bangkok and Taipei Songshan on Oct. 31. The move confirms that Haneda is now a serious competitor to Tokyo Narita, which has had a near monopoly on international traffic to the city. All Nippon Airways says it has applied to fly between Haneda and the U.S. West Coast.
In a sign of confidence in its long-haul business, Lufthansa will be using its Airbus A380s for growth rather than as replacements for its sizable Boeing 747-400 fleet.
Is Boeing Co. preparing to up the ante in the race to build a better passenger jet? Morgan Stanley analyst Heidi Wood is predicting the company will spend as much as $13 billion to develop an all-new aircraft to replace the Boeing 737, bypassing a less ambitious move to outfit the aircraft with more efficient engines.
June 1-3—FAA’s Shared Vision of Aviation Safety Conference: “The Current Status & Future of Voluntary Flight Safety Programs.” San Diego Marriott Hotel and Marina. Call +1 (856) 667-6770, ext. 163 or see www.aviationsafetyconference.com June 2-3—Hegan Basque Aerospace Cluster’s Aerotrends 2010. Bilbao Exhibition Center, Teruel, Spain. See www.hegan.com/aerotrends June 4-6—Australian and New Zealand Societies of Air Safety Investigators Conference. Lakeside Rydges Hotel, Canberra, Australia. See www.asasi.org/anzsasi.htm
SAS Group CEO Mats Jansson is quoted in “Endangered Species” (AW&ST April 26, p. 41) as saying: “It’s naive to dream about a structural solution if the base is not robust.” This may be backward. Structural network and operating features determine its economic performance. SAS’s structure is its base, as it is for all airlines.
United and Continental airlines have started to form their integration management team, and expect planning for their merger “to begin in earnest” next month. A leadership group comprised of United CFO Kathryn Mikells and Chief Administrative Officer Pete McDonald and Continental CFO Zane Rowe and Chief Marketing Officer Jim Compton, with the carriers’ chief executives, will review recommendations from an Integration Management Office, itself led by McDonald and Continental’s Assistant Counsel Lori Gobillot.
Although cancellations for commercial helicopters are starting to slow, Eurocopter still saw 18 in the first quarter. And while demand is improving over 2008, EADS warns that “commercial appetite is still far below 2007 and 2008 levels.” Deliveries also were down to 86 units from 93. For the first quarter, EADS reports revenue of €9 billion, up from €8.5 billion for the first three months of 2009, and net income of €103 million, down 39% in part because the current hedge position compared to last year’s first quarter has worsened.
European airlines are starting to see their financial situation improve, but face a difficult road back to profitability. The scale of the challenge is illustrated by Air France-KLM, which is forced to dig out from a €1.6-billion ($2-billion) loss in the latest financial year. Moreover, while the underlying economics are improving, a return to profitability is not guaranteed in the near-term.
The Swedish defense ministry is looking to field the AAI Shadow 200 unmanned aircraft by the end of 2011. AAI will serve as a supplier to Saab, which is prime contractor on the 500-million-kronor ($63-million) deal. The contract calls for Saab to deliver two full tactical UAV systems, including the aircraft, ground stations and other equipment. Saab would operate them for the military as part of the company’s plan to grow its services business.
Scaled Composites has pressurized and powered-up Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo from the WhiteKnightTwo (WK2) carrier aircraft in flight for the first time. The milestone was achieved on the second captive-carry test flight, which took the vehicle to its planned launch altitude at around 51,000 ft. The 4.7-hr.-long mission also included avionics tests as well as several circuits to provide pilot proficiency training. Virgin Galactic, which named the first spaceship VSS Enterprise, says the test flight program will continue through 2011.
I think it was in Road & Track that someone wrote that automaker Honda was not in the business of making cars but in the business of staying in business. What started as an automobile manufacturer many years ago has diversified out of its core product line. Airlines should be as nimble. Perhaps it is the attachment to our colors on aircraft tails. Growth is always identified with our core business. When I read about the “threat” posed from high-speed trains to China’s airlines (AW&ST April 19, p.
Four F/A-18C Hornet Tactical Operational Flight Trainers (TOFT) provided by L-3 Link Simulation & Training for Switzerland’s F/A-18 Flight Simulator Upgrade program are being readied to enter service one month ahead of schedule. The simulators are equipped with flight program upgrades, a 360-deg. field-of-view visual display and other features that allow joint air-to-air and air-to-ground simulated tactical maneuvers. In addition, the improved TOFTs feature a Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing System and night-vision goggles.
Readers Carl Ehrlich and David Ashford assert that spaceplanes are the correct choice for space transportation (AW&ST April 12, p. 8), in a classic case of solutions looking for problems.
Cyber- and electronic weaponry are rapidly moving to the head of the line as operational users of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) data. The U.S. Army has grasped the idea that to enable success of digital weapons on the battlefield, ISR must be available to find emitters, identify them, map the networks they operate with and precisely locate the nodes of importance for digital or electronic attack or exploitation.
When NASA discovered water frozen in the dark bottom of a south pole lunar crater last year, it renewed visions of astronauts one day supporting habitats with resources mined from the Moon’s surface. But a computer study of the strange effects the solar wind creates as it blows unimpeded across the Moon raises another vision—one of hundreds of volts of static electricity lurking in potentially resource-rich craters just waiting to zap an astronaut.
The abrupt departure of Dennis Blair as director of national intelligence (DNI) comes after the Senate Intelligence Committee last week lambasted Office of the DNI and intelligence community (IC) shortfalls regarding the attempted Dec. 25, 2009, bombing of Northwest Airlines Flight 253. Pressure inside the Beltway to do something different mounted with the recent Times Square bombing attempt. But the resignation also follows an uncertain tenure by Blair, who clashed with CIA director and Democratic stalwart Leon Panetta in ongoing turf disputes.
Cathay Pacific Airways awarded Iberia Maintenance a five-year contract to repair and maintain 49 CFM56-5C engines that power the Asian carrier’s 11 Airbus A340-300s. The carriers are both members of the Oneworld airline alliance. And, China Airlines has selected Lufthansa Technik to provide long-term component support for 18 A330-300s and six A340-300s.