Air Transport World

Lufthansa's CityLine, Germanwings and Eurowings subsidiaries cancelled at least 62 flights yesterday owing to a morning wildcat pilot strike by members of Vereinigung Cockpit. An additional 36 flights were delayed, according to press reports. "Because employers haven't presented a negotiable offer in negotiations that have been going on for months, personnel representatives of all three airlines see no alternative but to declare talks a failure," VC said in a statement cited by the Associated Press.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport announced the following policies that will take effect when Tokyo Haneda's fourth runway opens in 2010, the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation reported: Night curfew will be reduced to 10 p.m. from 11 p.m. to "allow more convenient schedules for US and European flights," international slots will be restricted to 30,000 until October 2010 and eventually will increase to 60,000, with new slots going to "expansion of Asian city routes where business need is strongest," and domestic slots will double to 20,000 annually.
Airports & Networks

Brian Straus
Malaysia Airlines cited "higher operating expenses mainly from the increase in fuel costs" for a 9.5% dip in first-quarter profit to MYR120.5 million ($37.1 million) from MYR133.1 million earned in the year-ago period.

Transaero flew 3.83 billion RPKs in the first quarter, up 43% over the year-ago period, on a 44% increase in passenger numbers to 791,000. Freight rose 43% year-over-year to 367,000 tons. The Russian carrier also announced the completion of its IOSA certification. It operates 10 747s, 10 767s, 15 737s and one Tu-214. SAS Group airlines flew 2.96 billion RPKs in April, a 17.4% increase over the year-ago month. Capacity climbed 22.1% to 4.28 billion ASKs and load factor fell 2.8 points to 69.1%.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Southwest Airlines will launch thrice-daily flights from Denver to San Francisco and Omaha on Sept. 2. Delta Air Lines will begin four-times-weekly Atlanta-Kuwait City Nov. 7 and will increase its six-times-weekly ATL-Dubai to daily in October. Both services are aboard 777-200ERs.
Airports & Networks

Geoffrey Thomas
Boeing unveiled its first 777 freighter yesterday at its Everett facility just north of Seattle. The aircraft, which has attracted 78 firm orders from 11 customers, is capable of carrying 113 metric tons over 4,885 n.mi. The manufacturer plans to complete eight 777Fs this year, with two involved in flight tests. That pair is destined for launch customer Air France. The 2.5-month certification program will involve 350 flight test hr. and 700 ground test hr.
Aircraft & Propulsion

SR Technics reached a three-year deal with Quikjet Cargo for component management, maintenance and repair on the carrier's 737s. Contract includes access to a consignment stock in Bangalore and Chennai. Services extend from SRT's Integrated Component Solutions offering.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Grand Xinhua Express this week became the first Chinese mainland carrier to introduce the E-190. Launched in March 2007, GXE is a regional subsidiary of HNA Group, which placed an order for 100 regional aircraft with Embraer in August 2006 ( ATWOnline, April 2, 2007). The E-190 will seat 106 in a single-class layout. Since last September, Tianjin-based GXE has taken seven ERJ-145s and is expected to introduce the remaining aircraft, including 49 E-190s, over the next five years.
Aircraft & Propulsion

3M Aerospace and Aircraft Maintenance Dept. yesterday said it will construct a factory in Wroclaw to increase manufacturing capacity for structural bonding adhesives and surface protection products. Facility is scheduled to open in late 2009.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Great Wall Airlines will be represented by Wallace Air Cargo Group for 747-400 services in North America under a GSA agreement. Routes include Chicago O'Hare and Seattle to Seoul and Shanghai.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Cathy Buyck
Aegean Airlines' net loss widened to €4.4 million ($6.8 million) in the first quarter, traditionally its weakest period, from €2.6 million in the year-ago quarter. Revenue climbed 23% to €98.8 million on the back of international network expansion and a 6% rise in sectors flown. Fuel costs jumped 57% to €24.4 million and operating loss plunged to €6 million from €2.6 million.

JetBlue Airways flew 2.28 billion RPMs in April, a 0.8% increase over the year-ago month. Capacity rose 7.4% to 2.87 billion ASMs, dropping load factor 5.2 points to 79.5%. Gol and VRG flew 2.31 billion RPKs in April, up 17.8%, against a 25.1% increase in capacity to 3.65 billion ASKs. Load factor fell 3.9 points to 63.2%. Aer Lingus flew 1.38 billion RPKs in April, up 9.3% on the year-ago month. Capacity climbed 25.7% to 1.95 billion ASKs and load factor dropped 10.6 points to 70.5%.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Katie Cantle
Following the formation of an alliance with five other logistics companies in January, Shanghai Airlines took a further step toward strengthening its position in a city that commands 70% of the Chinese freight market through the injection of CNY260 million ($37.2 million) into its SAL Cargo International subsidiary.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Porter Airlines has been advised by the US Dept. of Transportation that it must reduce its Toronto City-Newark schedule less than two months after launching the seven-times-daily service ( ATWOnline, March 27). The cutback is part of DOT's effort to reduce congestion at New York area airports ( ATWOnline, May 19). Porter will eliminate one flight each weekday from June 20.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Spirit Airlines reported a $3.8 million loss in 2007, a significant improvement from its $79 million deficit in 2006, according to US Dept. of Transportation figures cited this week by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. A $14.2 million loss in the fourth quarter pushed Spirit into the red, the paper said. Full-year revenue climbed 41% to $761.6 million. Despite increased fuel costs, the low-fare carrier continues with its expansion plans, adding 20 new flights this summer. It operates A319s and A321s on 200 daily flights to 39 destinations.

Ryanair will begin charging passengers who check in online the same £4/ €5 for its priority boarding service as those who check in at the airport effective June 3. It previously had been free of charge for Web check-in customers. The LCC makes 40% of its seats (80) available for priority boarding on each flight. Separately, it will launch thrice-daily Dublin-Kerry on July 22.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Kurt Hofmann
Turkish government is planning to build a third airport in Istanbul, which already is the home of Ataturk International and Sabiha Gokcen. Plans soon will be announced for the facility, which will be located on the European side of the Bosporus like IST.
Airports & Networks

Aviareps was selected by Caribbean Airlines to serve as GSA in Venezuela.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

US FAA named Air Traffic Organization VP Vicki Cox as senior VP-NextGen and operations planning. "Given the aviation community's increasing need for faster modernization of our air traffic control system, we must implement NextGen at a quicker pace," Acting FAA Administrator Robert Sturgell said. "The FAA is putting an emphasis on near- and mid-term implementation, while the Joint Planning and Development Office continues its focus on long-term research and development and cross-agency cooperation."
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Kurt Hofmann
Turkish Airlines plans to announce a major fleet renewal program later this year and is considering the A340-600, 777, A350 XWB and 787 for its widebody orders, CEO Temel Kotil told ATWOnline yesterday in Istanbul, where the carrier celebrated its 75th birthday.

Brian Straus
Martinair suffered a €68.9 million ($107.2 million) loss in 2007, a steep fall from its €7 million deficit in 2006 on level revenue of €951 million, as operating loss deepened to €71 million from €5 million.

SAS Norge will pay NOK132 million ($26.3 million) in damages to Norwegian following a district court ruling in the nearly three-year-old proceeding into SAS's alleged misuse of information contained in Norwegian's Amadeus reservation system. SAS was acquitted in a 2005 criminal trial but was found to have misused confidential information ( ATWOnline, Nov. 20, 2006).

Virgin Blue and Hawaiian Airlines have cancelled maintenance work with Air New Zealand after ANZ warned that it is facing industrial action from engineers in Auckland and Christchurch. The strike by members of the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union and the Aviation and Marine Engineers Assn. is due to start June 6. While the action excludes third-party work, the two airlines decided to take their work elsewhere.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

Bombardier delivered the first of four Q400s ordered by Croatia Airlines, which holds options on two additional aircraft.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Airbus announced an order for six A350 XWB Prestiges (five -900s and one -800) from Middle Eastern company MAZ Aviation and n order for two A318 Elites and one Airbus Corporate Jetliner from Austria's Jetalliance Group.
Safety, Ops & Regulation