Monthly Archives: July 2020

Bluebird Aviation crash lands at Beledweyne, Somalia

Bluebird Aviation Bombardier DHC-8-402 (Q400) 5Y-VVU operating a cargo flight from Djibouti to Beledweyne, Somalia on July 14, 2020 with three crew members, crash landed and burst into flames.

Bluebird Aviation Limited is a locally registered Kenyan air charter company based at Wilson Airport, Nairobi and incorporated in 1992.

The crash on social media:

Emiratesโ€™ Airbus A380s return to the skies

Emirates Airline has made this announcement:

Emirates will deploy its iconic Airbus A380 on its daily Amsterdam service, and add a second daily A380 service to London Heathrow starting from 1 August.

This announcement follows the Emirates A380โ€™s return to the skies today with EK001 to London Heathrow taking off from Dubai International airport at 0745hrs, and EK073 at 0820hrs, carrying commercial passengers onboard this flagship aircraft for the first time since March.

Emirates flight EK073 will receive a special welcome on arrival at Paris Charles De Gaulle, as it becomes the first and only scheduled A380 flight to operate at this major European airport since the pandemic began.

Throughout the day, Emirates will also mark the restart of scheduled passenger services to seven more cities – Athens, Barcelona, Geneva, Glasgow, Larnaca, Munich, and Rome โ€“ offering its customers more travel options.

Over the next two days, the airline will resume flights to Malรฉ (16 July), Washington DC (16 July), and Brussels (17 July).

Emirates currently serves over 50 destinations in its network, facilitating travel between the Americas, Europe, Africa, the Middle East and the Asia Pacific through a convenient connection in Dubai for customers across the world.

Premium customers can enjoy Emiratesโ€™ Chauffeur Drive service and relax in its Lounge facility at Dubai International airport, with the restart of these signature services after a full health and safety review.ย Emirates has also re-opened its dedicated Emirates Skywards counters at Dubai International airport to serve its frequent flyers.

Emirates aircraft photo gallery:

Emirates aircraft slide show:

https://airlinersgallery.smugmug.com/frame/slideshow?key=jDStWV&speed=3&transition=fade&autoStart=1&captions=0&navigation=0&playButton=0&randomize=0&transitionSpeed=2

Delta Air Lines announces second quarter financial results and update on COVID-19 response actions

Delta Air Lines has made this announcement on its second quarter financial results:

  • Second quarter 2020 GAAP pre-tax loss of $7.0 billion and loss per share of $9.01 on total revenue of $1.5 billion
  • Second quarter 2020 adjusted pre-tax loss of $3.9 billion and adjusted loss per share of $4.43 on adjusted revenue of $1.2 billion
  • Delta ended the June quarter 2020 with $15.7 billion in liquidity

Delta Air Lines today reported financial results for the June quarter 2020 and outlined its continued response to the COVID-19 global pandemic. Detailed June quarter 2020 results, including both GAAP and adjusted metrics, are on page four and are incorporated here.

โ€œA $3.9 billion adjusted pre-tax loss for the June quarter on a more than $11 billion decline in revenue over last year, illustrates the truly staggering impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business.ย In the face of this challenge, our people have acted quickly and decisively to protect our customers and our company, reducing our average daily cash burn by more than 70 percent since late March to $27 million in the month of June,โ€ said Ed Bastian, Deltaโ€™s chief executive officer. โ€œGiven the combined effects of the pandemic and associated financial impact on the global economy, we continue to believe that it will be more than two years before we see a sustainable recovery.ย In this difficult environment, the strengths that are core to Deltaโ€™s business โ€“ our people, our brand, our network and our operational reliability โ€“ guide every decision we make, differentiating Delta with our customers and positioning us to succeed when demand returns.โ€

June Quarter Financial Resultsย 

  • Adjusted pre-tax loss of $3.9 billion excludes $3.2 billion of items directly related to the impact of COVID-19 and the companyโ€™s response, including fleet-related restructuring charges, write-downs related to certain of Deltaโ€™s equity investments, and the benefit of the CARES Act grant recognized in the quarter
  • Total adjusted revenue of $1.2 billion, which excludes refinery sales, declined 91 percent versus prior year on system capacity reduction of 85 percent compared to the prior year
  • Total operating expense decreased $4.1 billion over prior year. Total adjusted operating expense decreased $5.5 billion or 53 percent in the June quarter compared to the prior year, driven by lower capacity- and revenue-related expenses and strong cost management throughout the business
  • At the end of the June quarter, the company had $15.7 billion in liquidity

Update on COVID-19 Response

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the company has prioritized the safety of customers and employees, the preservation of financial liquidity and ensuring it is well positioned for recovery. Actions under these priorities include:

Protecting the health and safety of employees and customers

  • Adoption of new cleaning procedures on all flights, including disinfectant electrostatic spraying on aircraft and sanitizing high-touch areas before each flight
  • Taking steps to help employees and customers practice social distancing and stay safe, including requiring employees and customers to wear masks, blocking middle seats and capping load factor at 60 percent and modifying boarding and deplaning process
  • Installing plexiglass shields at all Delta check-in counters, Delta Sky Clubs and gate counters, adding social distance markers in the check-in lobby, Delta Sky Clubs, at gate areas and in jet bridges
  • Launching a Global Cleanliness organization dedicated to evolving Deltaโ€™s already high cleanliness standards, seeking to bring the same focus and rigor that has underpinned Deltaโ€™s reputation for unmatched operational reliability
  • Providing COVID-19 testing for employees in partnership with the Mayo Clinic and Quest Diagnostics
  • Giving customers flexibility to plan, re-book and travel including extending expiration on travel credits through September 2022. Delta has provided more than $2.2 billion in cash refunds in 2020

Preserving financial liquidity

  • Raising nearly $15 billion in financing transactions since early March, at a blended average interest rate of 5.5 percent, including the unsecured loan portion received under the CARES Act payroll support program (โ€œPSPโ€)
  • Reducing cash burn (see Note A) throughout the June quarter with target to achieve breakeven cash burn by year end
  • Amending credit facilities to replace all fixed charge coverage ratio covenants with liquidity-based covenants
  • Extending maturities of $1.3 billion of borrowings under revolving credit facilities from 2021 to 2022
  • Aggressively managing costs through lower capacity, reduced fuel expense and cost initiatives including reduced work schedules and voluntary employee leaves of absence, parking aircraft, consolidating facilities and eliminating nearly all discretionary spend
  • Obtaining $5.4 billion of grant funds and unsecured loans through the PSP of the CARES Act to be paid in installments through July 2020
  • Continuing to evaluate future financing opportunities by leveraging unencumbered assets. We are eligible and submitted a non-binding Letter of Intent to the U.S Treasury Department for $4.6 billion under the CARES Act secured loan program. The company has not yet decided whether it will participate and has the ability to elect participation until September 30, 2020

Defining Deltaโ€™s recovery path

  • Positioning Delta to be a smaller, more efficient airline over the next several years by accelerating fleet simplification with the retirement of entire MD-88, MD-90, 777 and 737-700 fleets and portions of the 767-300ER and A320 fleets in 2020
  • Taking advantage of reduced demand to accelerate airport construction projects in Los Angeles, New-York LaGuardia and Salt Lake City, in an effort to shorten timelines and lower the total cost for the projects
  • Launching voluntary separation and early retirement programs to proactively manage headcount and rescale operations. Programs provide cash severance, fully paid healthcare coverage, enhanced retiree healthcare for certain participants, and enhanced travel privileges to eligible employees who elect to participate

Revenue and Capacity Environment

Demand for air travel declined significantly in the June quarter as a result of COVID-19, with enplaned passengers down 93 percent year over year. As a result, Deltaโ€™s adjusted operating revenue of $1.2 billion for the June quarter was down 91 percent versus the June 2019 quarter. Passenger revenues declined 94 percent on 85 percent lower capacity. Non-ticket revenue declined 65 percent, as Cargo, MRO and Loyalty revenues declined at a lower rate than ticket revenue.

Cost Performance

Total adjusted operating expense for the June quarter decreased $5.5 billion or 53 percent versus the prior year quarter excluding a $1.3 billion CARES Act benefit, and $2.5 billion in restructuring charges from fleet-related decisions and other charges. This performance was driven by a $1.9 billion or 84 percent reduction in fuel expense, a 90 percent reduction in maintenance expense from parking over 700 aircraft and significantly lower volume- and revenue-related expenses. Salaries and benefits expense was down 24 percent, helped by more than 45,000 employees electing to take voluntary unpaid leaves.

โ€œOur June quarter cost performance reflects extraordinary work by the entire Delta team, as we removed more than 50 percent from our adjusted cost base,โ€ said Paul Jacobson, Deltaโ€™s chief financial officer. โ€œWe expect to achieve a similar 50 percent year-over-year reduction in the September quarter despite a sequential increase in capacity, reflecting the increased variability we have achieved in our cost structure.โ€

Balance Sheet, Cash and Liquidity

Delta ended the June quarter with $15.7 billion in liquidity. Cash used in operations during the quarter was $290 million. Daily cash burn averaged $43 million for the quarter with an average of $27 million for the month of June, a 70 percent decline from levels in late March.

At the end of the June quarter, the company had total debt and finance lease obligations of $24.6 billion with adjusted net debt of $13.9 billion. During the quarter, the company raised $11 billion in new liquidity at a blended average rate of 6.5 percent. New financing completed during the quarter included $5.0 billion in slots, gates and routes secured financing, $2.8 billion in sale-leaseback transactions, $1.4 billion of the PSP loan, $1.3 billion in unsecured notes, $243 million in B tranches of Enhanced Equipment Trust Certificates (โ€œEETCsโ€) and an additional $250 million on its 364-day secured term loan.

At the end of the June quarter, the companyโ€™s Air Traffic Liability totaled $5.0 billion including a current liability of $4.7 billion and a non-current liability of $0.3 billion. The noncurrent air traffic liability represents our current estimate of tickets to be flown, as well as credits to be used, beyond one year. Travel credits represent approximately 60 percent of the total Air Traffic Liability.

โ€œOur average daily cash burn has improved sequentially each month since March and we remain committed to achieving breakeven cash burn by the end of the year,โ€ Jacobson continued. โ€œWe successfully bolstered our liquidity to $15.7 billion at the end of June through new financings and CARES Act funding during the quarter, with adjusted net debt of $13.9 billion increasing by $3.4 billion since the beginning of the year. By raising cash early and aggressively managing costs, we are prepared to navigate what will be a volatile revenue period while making decisions that position Delta well for the eventual recovery.โ€

CARES Act Accounting, Restructuring Charges and Investment-Related Write Downs

In April 2020, Delta was granted $5.4 billion in emergency relief through the PSP of the CARES Act to be paid in installments through July 2020. In the June quarter, the company received $4.9 billion under the PSP, consisting of $3.5 billion in grant funds and a $1.4 billion low-interest, unsecured 10-year loan. The remaining $544 million will be received in July 2020. In the June quarter approximately $1.3 billion of the grant was recognized as a contra-expense, which is reflected as โ€œCARES Act grant recognitionโ€ on the Consolidated Statements of Operations over the periods that the funds are intended to compensate. The remaining $2.2 billion of the grant was recorded as a deferred contra-expense in other accrued liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheets. The company expects to use all the proceeds from the PSP by the end of 2020.

During the June quarter, the company made the decision to retire the entire MD-90, 777 and 737-700 fleets and portions of its 767-300ER and A320 fleets by late 2020. This is in addition to the decision in the March quarter to accelerate retirement of its MD-88 fleet from December 2020 to June 2020. The company also cancelled its purchase commitment for four A350 aircraft from LATAM. Primarily as a result of these decisions, the company recorded $2.5 billion in fleet-related and other charges, which are reflected in โ€œRestructuring chargesโ€ on the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

During the June quarter the company recorded a write-down of $1.1 billion in its investment in LATAM Airlines and a $770 million write-down in its investment in AeroMexico following their financial losses and separate Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings. Delta also wrote down its investment in Virgin Atlantic during the quarter, resulting in a $200 million charge. Write-downs related to equity partners are reflected as โ€œImpairments and equity method lossesโ€ on the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

June Quarter Results

ย June quarter results have been adjusted primarily for the CARES Act accounting, restructuring charges, and investment-related write downs described above.

airBaltic and Icelandair announce codeshare agreement

Icelandair and airBaltic have signed a codeshare agreement that opens new markets for the carriers by allowing them to sell and issue airline tickets jointly throughout their networks. airBaltic customers will benefit from convenient access to Iceland and North America. At the same time, Icelandair passengers can now purchase a ticket to a number of airBaltic destinations in the Baltics and beyond.

Currently airBaltic performs direct flights from Riga to various European business hubs and to such popular leisure destinations as Dubrovnik, Rijeka and Split in Croatia, Barcelona in Spain, Nice in France, Larnaca in Cyprus as well as Rome, Catania and Milan in Italy. In addition, during upcoming weeks airBaltic will launch direct flights from Riga to Billund (Denmark), Reykjavik (Iceland), Madrid (Spain), Zurich (Switzerland), Turku (Finland), Warsaw (Poland), Prague (Czech Republic), Stuttgart (Germany), Budapest (Hungary) and Liepaja (Latvia). By the end of August 2020, airBaltic plans to connect Baltics on 69 routes. airBaltic also offers various direct services from Tallinn and Vilnius.

KLM adds Cork (Ireland) to its European network

KLM expands its European network with Cork (Ireland). As of 3 August, the second largest city of Ireland will be connected to Schiphol every day by KLM. Flights will be operated with the Embraer 175, with a capacity of 88 passengers.

KLM is in the process of slowly and carefully rebuilding its network. The number of destinations is growing rapidly, but the number of flights is still far from the pre-crisis level. KLM has opted to first offer customers as much choice of destinations as possible. After that, we will examine whether the number of flights to a destination can be increased or whether capacity can be increased by using a larger aircraft.

The opening of Cork was initially planned for the end of March. Due to the corona crisis it was postponed.

Flight schedule

Cork is the second destination in Ireland for KLM, next to Dublin. As of 3 August 2020, KLM will operate daily flights between Amsterdam Airport Schiphol and Cork Airport. The Embraer 175 has 20 seats in Business Class, 8 in Economy Comfort and 60 in Economy Class.

The flight schedule is as follows:

– KL1085 departs from Amsterdam daily at 12.05 and arrives in Cork at 12.55.

– KL 1086 departs from Cork daily at 13.25 and arrives in Amsterdam at 16.10.

All times are local.

Brisbane Airport opens its second runway

Brisbane Airport made this announcement:

Brisbane Airport, which is usually connected with five nonstop air services to North America,ย inaugurated its second runway yesterday. The airport, which is a major hub for both Qantas and Virgin Australia, had four air services to the United States pre-COVID: Honolulu (Hawaiian Airlines); Los Angeles (Qantas and Virgin Australia); and San Francisco (Qantas);ย as well as one Canadian route to Vancouver (Air Canada). Qantas was alsoย originally scheduled to launch a new non-stop service on September 14 this year to Chicago.
With the second runway now open, when international border restrictions lift, BNE will be the best gateway to Queensland and Australia. BNE has the largest domestic network of all Australian airports and the most flights into the South Pacific islands. The Gold and Sunshine Coasts are within driving distance and tropical north Queenslandโ€™s heritage-listed barrier Great Barrier Reef and rainforests are only two hours flight away. The spectacular outback of Queensland is also within easy reach.
With sustainability as a focus, the new runway is the first 100 percent LED ‘Cat 1’ lighting system in the Southern Hemisphere. Some additional key facts include:
  • The runway, located on a 360-hectare site, is 3,300m long x 60m wide x 3.2m deep, with more than 12km of taxiways, 300 hectares of airfield landscaping and approx. 16km of drainage pipes.
  • 11 million cubic meters of sand was pumped (dredged and hydraulically placed) onto the site.
  • 330,000 wick drains measuring 8 million linear meters were installed (largest wick drain project in Australia).
  • Approx. 5,000,000m3 of earthworks were manually undertaken on site.
  • Approx. 260,000m3 of topsoil was generated from on-site, supplemented with approx. 15,000m3 imported from local sources.
  • Approx. 750,000 tonnes of quarry products were used (sourced and transported locally).
  • Approx. 100,000 tonnes of aircraft-grade asphalt were used (prepared on-site from local products).
  • Approx. 380,000 tonnes of aircraft-grade concrete were used (prepared on-site from local products).
  • More than 1.2 billion liters of recycled water were used during construction and to irrigate the landscaping.
  • More than 6,780 liters of paint were used on the runway and taxiways, spanning 120 kilometers in length. With two coats of paint, there is enough paint to create a straight line between Brisbane and Hervey Bay.
  • The paint for the taxiways incorporated more than 1.3 tonnes of glass beads – tiny balls that help make the paint reflective.
COVID measurements and results in Brisbane and Queensland:

ย 

The management of the spread of COVID within Queensland has been exceptional with strict measures ensuring low transmission throughout the state.ย  Travelers can rest assured that traveling to and through Queensland is safe.

Some further figures:

ย 

  • Pre COVID โ€“ BNE facilitated a daily average of 48,700 pax

ย 

  • During the border lockdown, the average daily pax numbers drop more thanย 97 percent to between 1000 to 2000 pax per day

ย 

  • First week of July โ€“ BNE experienced a daily average of pax 10,200 as intrastate travel increased

ย 

  • Since interstate borders opened, there’s been a further increase – ย today 13 July, 16,045 domestic pax are expected, which shows domestic travelers are choosing Qld as the place to visit while international borders remain closed.
Ribbon cutting

Brisbane Airportโ€™s new runway was opened on July 12 with a celebration of Queenslandโ€™s rich aviation history.ย Three vintage aircraft the first to land, following a breath-taking aerial acrobatics display above the airfield.

Virgin Australia, BNEโ€™s home carrier, had the honour of the first historic departure, flying to Cairns in celebration of Brisbaneโ€™s deep connection with the regions and Queenslandโ€™s tourism industry.

Following an official ribbon cutting on the runway, invited VIP guests gathered airside with 150 Brisbane Airport Corporation staff and 10 local plane spotters, who won a place at the event in a lucky draw, to watch the first aircraft movements and sky show.

In a first for an Australian capital city airport, the air space above BNE was briefly closed to allow the aerobatics display by โ€˜Fighter Pilot Adventure Flightsโ€™, a Brisbane-based private aircraft collection and flight experience company specializing in warbird operations.

Flying at speeds of up to 500 kilometers per hour at an altitude of 100 meters the aerobatics display included a breath-taking series of linked maneuvers, V-formation flying, and a tail chase.

Harking back to Brisbane Airportโ€™s historical past, the Great Nephew of pioneer Australian Aviator Bert Hinkler, Mitch Palm, joined the celebrations today.

A copy of todayโ€™s The Sunday Mail was the last item added to a special Time Capsule, along with items donated by schools, elected officials, and members of the public. The sealed Time Capsule will be stored on display at BNEโ€™s Kingsford-Smith Memorial until it is opened in 2070.

BAC Chief Executive Gert-Jan de Graaff said, โ€œIt is with great pride we are commissioning Brisbaneโ€™s 01L/19R runway today, announcing it open for business.

โ€œThis is more than just a formality and a slab of very expensive asphalt. When I look at that 3.3 kilometer stretch of runway, I see hope.

โ€œI see hope because I believe, absolutely, that travel is at the heart of modern society, and the human need to explore means that ultimately nothing will keep us grounded forever.

โ€œWhile current world challenges mean less demand right now, the timing of this opening is fortuitous. Had we been any later, the project may have been delayed significantly creating more burden on the economy and dampening our spirits further.

โ€œInstead Brisbane is an ideal position to take advantage of all opportunities on the road to recovery from COVID.

โ€œToday we are making history. We are creating the future. And very soon, once again, we will be connecting the world.

โ€œWe are generating the jobs of tomorrow. We are reuniting people. We are creating new opportunities. We are fuelling the economy.

โ€œAnd best of all, we are providing hope and inspiration. This runway is a beacon of hope for a very bright future. Our immediate future. The future of generations to come.

โ€œA future we are ready for. A future we welcome and a future our community deserves.

โ€œI acknowledge and thank every one of the thousands of people involved in the project.

โ€œFrom those 50 years ago, who had the foresight to include this runway in their planning, to those involved in the design and construction over the last two decades.

โ€œThis runway is your legacy. You should be incredibly proud,โ€ Mr de Graaff said.

 

Fast Factsย ย 

  • The $1.1 billion privately funded project is the largest since the modern Brisbane Airport opened in 1988, and worth nearly as much as the price paid by Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC) when it purchased the airport for $1.38 billion in 1997.
  • More than 3,740 people were involved in the construction phase, with a peak of 650 people on site in mid-2019.
  • Project Director, Paul Coughlan has overseen every aspect of the runwayโ€™s construction since December 2004.
  • 324 different subcontractors were engaged during the airfield works contract alone – 90 percent of which were based in South East Queensland โ€“ putting in approximately 3.3 million manhours.
  • The runway, located on a 360-hectare site, is 3,300m long x 60m wide x 3.2m deep, with more than 12km of taxiways, 300 hectares of airfield landscaping and approx. 16km of drainage pipes.
  • 11 million cubic meters of sand was pumped (dredged and hydraulically placed) onto the site.
  • 330,000 wick drains measuring 8 million linear meters were installed (largest wick drain project in Australia).
  • Approx. 5,000,000m3 of earthworks were manually undertaken on site.
  • Approx. 260,000m3 of topsoil was generated from on-site, supplemented with approx. 15,000m3 imported from local sources.
  • Approx. 750,000 tonnes of quarry products were used (sourced and transported locally).
  • Approx. 100,000 tonnes of aircraft-grade asphalt were used (prepared on-site from local products).
  • Approx. 380,000 tonnes of aircraft-grade concrete were used (prepared on-site from local products).
  • More than 1.2 billion liters of recycled water were used during construction and to irrigate the landscaping.
  • More than 6,780 liters of paint were used on the runway and taxiways, spanning 120 kilometers in length. With two coats of paint, there is enough paint to create a straight line between Brisbane and Hervey Bay.
  • The paint for the taxiways incorporated more than 1.3 tonnes of glass beads – tiny balls that help make the paint reflective.
  • Brisbaneโ€™s new runway is the firstโ€ฏ100 percent LED โ€˜Cat 1โ€™ lighting systemโ€ฏin the Southern Hemisphere.
  • Virgin Australia flight VA781 was piloted by Captain John Ridd and First Officer Troy Parker. Cpt Ridd is one of the initial group of pilots to start with Virgin Blue in 2000, he has flown the B737 exclusively and clocked up 20 years of service in July 2020. First Officer Parker flies B737, B777 and Embraer 170/190 and has just complete 10 years of services with Virgin Australia.
  • The vintage aircraft that participated in the celebrations included: L39 Albatrosโ€ฏflown by Steve Boyd, Mark 16 Spitfire (Mk XVI)โ€ฏflown by Cameron Rolph-Smith, P51D Mustang flown by Brad Bishopp), and a CAC Wirrawayโ€ฏflown by Ross Parker.

All photos by the airport.

WestJet expands August schedule, updates July flying

WestJet today released its updated August schedule featuring more than 200 daily flights to 48 destinations across Canada, the United States, the Caribbean, Mexico and Europe. The schedule features service to 39 domestic airports and further highlights the airline’s commitment to ensuring air service and regional connectivity is available to Canadians from coast-to-coast.

The updated schedule is supported by the layeredย framework WestJet has built to ensure Canadians can continue to travel safely and responsibly through the airline’sย Safety Above Allย hygiene program. The airline continues to provide flexibility in booking, change and cancellation policies for guests.

“With the many safeguards and procedures in place, we are certain Canadians can safely resume travel to destinations across our network,” said Arved von zur Muehlen, WestJet Chief Commercial Officer. “We continue to adapt our schedule to meet the needs of our guests and through our continued investments economies can begin to recover with the support of domestic tourism driven by air travel.”

Between July 15 through to September 4, 2020, WestJet will increase domestic frequencies and offer operations to 48 destinations including 39 in Canada, five in the U.S., two in Europe, one in the Caribbean, one in Mexico.

The airline will reintroduce non-stop Dreamliner service from Calgary to London (Gatwick) and Pariseffective August 20, 2020 and will continue to serve five key transborder destinations including Atlanta, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York (LaGuardia) and Orlando. The airline will also offer service to Cancun, Mexicoand will resume operations once-weekly to Montego Bay, Jamaica.

Continued von zur Muehlen, “Despite these headwinds, we are committed to ensuring air travel remains affordable and accessible to Canadians from coast-to-coast during this difficult time. While an increase in flying is a positive sign, we are prudently monitoring our guests loads to ensure we are managing our airline and the health of our guests and crew responsibly.”

The August schedule reflects approximately a 10 per cent increase in flying from July, but a decrease of 75 per cent less flying from August 2019. It also includes select frequency reductions and temporary domestic route suspensions between stations across Canada due to continued border closures and provincial travel restrictions.

“The patchwork of domestic travel restrictions and quarantine periods that are currently in place within our own borders are severely limiting Canada’s economic recovery and putting hundreds of thousands of jobs in our critical industry at risk,” said von zur Muehlen. “We must standardize intra-provincial travel advice to ensure Canadians can move safely and freely across our country.”

At this time, the airline is planning on operating the following domestic routes and frequencies from July 16 to September 4. The below frequencies represent peak service within this time frame:

ALBERTA AND NORTHWEST TERRITORIES

Calgary-Abbotsford

2x daily

Calgary-Comox

1x daily

Calgary-Cranbrook

4x weekly

Calgary-Fort St. John

2x daily

Calgary-Kamloops

1x daily

Calgary-Kelowna

3x daily

Calgary-Nanaimo

1x daily

Calgary-Penticton

1x daily

Calgary-Vancouver

7x daily

Calgary-Victoria

2x daily

Calgary-Edmonton

6x daily

Calgary-Fort McMurray

3x daily

Calgary-Grande Prairie

3x daily

Calgary-Lethbridge

3x weekly

Calgary-Lloydminster

2x weekly

Calgary-Medicine Hat

2x weekly

Calgary-Yellowknife

4x weekly

Calgary-Brandon

3x weekly

Calgary-Regina

3x daily

Calgary-Saskatoon

3x daily

Calgary-Winnipeg

3x daily

Calgary-Hamilton

4x weekly

Calgary-Kitchener/Waterloo

4x weekly

Calgary-Toronto

6x daily

Edmonton-Comox

2x weekly

Edmonton-Kelowna

6x weekly

Edmonton-Vancouver

3x daily

Edmonton-Victoria

1x daily

Edmonton-Calgary

6x daily

Edmonton-Fort McMurray

6x weekly

Edmonton-Grande Prairie

6x weekly

Edmonton-Regina

5x weekly

Edmonton-Saskatoon

6x weekly

Edmonton-Winnipeg

6x weekly

Edmonton-Toronto

3x daily

Fort McMurray-Calgary

3x daily

Fort McMurray-Edmonton

6x weekly

Grande Prairie-Calgary

3x daily

Grande Prairie-Edmonton

6x weekly

Lethbridge-Calgary

3x weekly

Lloydminster-Calgary

2x weekly

Medicine Hat-Calgary

2x weekly

Yellowknife-Calgary

4x weekly

BRITISH COLUMBIA AND YUKON

Abbotsford-Calgary

2x daily

Comox-Calgary

1x daily

Cranbrook-Calgary

4x weekly

Fort St John-Calgary

2x daily

Fort St John-Vancouver

4x weekly

Kamloops-Calgary

1x daily

Kelowna-Vancouver

1x daily

Kelowna-Calgary

3x daily

Kelowna-Edmonton

6x weekly

Nanaimo-Calgary

1x daily

Penticton-Calgary

1x daily

Prince George-Vancouver

3x daily

Terrace-Vancouver

1x daily

Vancouver-Kelowna

1x daily

Vancouver-Prince George

3x daily

Vancouver-Terrace

1x daily

Vancouver-Victoria

2x daily

Vancouver-Calgary

7x daily

Vancouver-Edmonton

3x daily

Vancouver-Winnipeg

6x weekly

Vancouver-Toronto

4x daily

Victoria-Vancouver

2x daily

Victoria-Calgary

2x daily

Victoria-Edmonton

1x daily

ONTARIO

Hamilton-Calgary

4x weekly

Kitchener/Waterloo-Calgary

4x weekly

London, ON-Toronto

6x weekly

Ottawa-Calgary

6x weekly

Ottawa-Toronto

4x daily

Ottawa-Halifax

2x weekly

Thunder Bay-Winnipeg

2x weekly

Thunder Bay-Toronto

6x weekly

Toronto-Vancouver

4x daily

Toronto-Calgary

6x daily

Toronto-Edmonton

3x daily

Toronto-Regina

3x weekly

Toronto-Saskatoon

3x weekly

Toronto-Winnipeg

3x daily

Toronto-London, ON

6x weekly

Toronto-Ottawa

4x daily

Toronto-Thunder Bay

4x weekly

Toronto-Montreal

4x daily

Toronto-Quebec City

4x weekly

Toronto-Charlottetown

6x weekly

Toronto-Deer Lake

4x weekly

Toronto-Fredericton

5x weekly

Toronto-Halifax

3x daily

Toronto-Moncton

5x weekly

Toronto-St. John’s (NL)

1x daily

SASKATCHEWAN AND MANITOBA

Brandon-Calgary

3x weekly

Regina-Calgary

3x daily

Regina-Edmonton

5x weekly

Regina-Toronto

3x weekly

Saskatoon-Calgary

3x daily

Saskatoon-Edmonton

6x weekly

Saskatoon-Winnipeg

2x weekly

Saskatoon-Toronto

3x weekly

Winnipeg-Vancouver

6x weekly

Winnipeg-Calgary

3x daily

Winnipeg-Edmonton

6x weekly

Winnipeg-Saskatoon

2x weekly

Winnipeg-Thunder Bay

2x weekly

Winnipeg-Toronto

3x daily

QUEBEC

Montreal-Calgary

6x weekly

Montreal-Toronto

4x daily

Quebec City-Toronto

4x weekly

ATLANTIC CANADA

Charlottetown-Toronto

6x weekly

Deer Lake-Toronto

4x weekly

Fredericton-Toronto

5x weekly

Halifax-Calgary

1x daily

Halifax-Ottawa

2x weekly

Halifax-Toronto

3x daily

Halifax- St. John’s (NL)

1x daily

Halifax-Sydney

2x weekly

Moncton-Toronto

5x weekly

St. John’s (NL)-Toronto

1x daily

St. John’s (NL)-Halifax

1x daily

Sydney-Halifax

2x weekly

At this time, the airline is planning on operating the following transborder and international routes from July 16 to September 4, 2020.

Market

Planned frequency

Calgary – Los Angeles

3x weekly

Calgary โ€“ Las Vegas

2x weekly

Calgary – Atlanta

4x weekly

Calgary โ€“ London Gatwick

3 weekly effective August 20

Calgary โ€“ Paris

2x weekly effective August 20

Vancouver โ€“ Los Angeles

3x weekly

Toronto – LaGuardia

5x weekly

Toronto – Orlando

1x weekly

Toronto – Cancun

1x weekly

Toronto โ€“ Montego Bay

1x weekly

Temporary domestic route suspensions for July 16 โ€“ September 4, 2020.

Market

Previous frequency

Vancouver โ€“ Nanaimo

2x daily

Vancouver โ€“ Comox

1x daily

Vancouver โ€“ Saskatoon

1x daily

Vancouver โ€“ Cranbrook

1x daily

Vancouver – Ottawa

2x daily

Vancouver – Montreal

13xย weekly

Vancouver – Halifax

6x weekly

Kelowna โ€“ Victoria

2x daily

Calgary – Prince George

1x daily

Calgary โ€“ London, ON

2x daily

Calgary โ€“ Quebec City

4x weekly

Calgary – Charlottetown

4x weekly

Calgary – St. John’s

1x daily

Edmonton โ€“ Yellowknife

1x daily

Edmonton – Ottawa

4x weekly

Edmonton – Montreal

3x weekly

Edmonton โ€“ Halifax

10x weekly

Edmonton – St. John’s

4x weekly

Winnipeg โ€“ Regina

1x daily

Winnipeg โ€“ Ottawa

1x daily

Winnipeg โ€“ Montreal

1x daily

Winnipeg – Halifax

1x daily

Toronto – Victoria

4x weekly

Toronto โ€“ Kelowna

1x daily

Toronto โ€“ Sydney

6x weekly

Halifax – Montreal

2x daily

WestJet and WestJet Encore continue to connect all 39 of the airline’s domestic airports, with a reduced frequency, to ensure essential travel, trade and cargo can continue during the COVID-19 pandemic.

WestJet aircraft photo gallery:

WestJet aircraft slide show:

https://airlinersgallery.smugmug.com/frame/slideshow?key=6bVcDv&speed=3&transition=fade&autoStart=1&captions=0&navigation=0&playButton=0&randomize=0&transitionSpeed=2

QANTAS operates its first Boeing 747 farewell flight

QANTAS Airways Boeing 747-438 ER VH-OEJ (msn 32914) BNE (Peter Gates). Image: 908305.

QANTAS Airways today (July 13) operated its first Boeing 747-400 farewell flight from Sydney with VH-OEJ.

Video:

The special flight s continue on July 15 in Brisbane and on July 17 in Canberra.

Previously QANTAS announced a program of events to farewell its last remaining Boeing 747 and provide Australians the opportunity to say goodbye to the much loved โ€œQueen of the Skiesโ€ ahead of its retirement from the national carrierโ€™s fleet.

The airline will operate three one-hour โ€œfarewell jumbo joy flightsโ€ departing from Sydney, Canberra and Brisbane, in response to requests from employees and customers for one final chance to fly on the aircraft.

QANTAS 747 Fleet Captain Owen Weaver said the 747 has a special place in the hearts of many Australians.

โ€œThe 747 has been a magnificent aircraft and itโ€™s fitting that we celebrate the end of five decades of history-making moments for the national carrier and aviation in Australia,โ€ Captain Weaver said.

โ€œSince the first 747 joined the Qantas fleet in 1971, these aircraft have operated numerous rescue flights to bring Australians home during times of crisis and provided a safe passage for many travellers taking their first international flight to or from Australia.

โ€œThese three flights will offer the final opportunity to fly on the Qantas 747 before it leaves, with some of our frequent flyers and aviation enthusiasts as fond of the aircraft as we are, having spent thousands of hours onboard over the years.

โ€œThere is an enormous amount of nostalgia and affection associated with our 747 and for those who miss out on a seat on the flight, they will at least be able to catch a glimpse of the aircraft as it takes to Australian skies for the last time.โ€

The flights will go on sale at midday on Wednesday 8 July on Qantas.com and will operate on Monday, July 13 (Sydney), Wednesday, July 15 (Brisbane) and Friday, July 17 (Canberra). Economy fares cost $400 and a small number of Business Class tickets will be available for $747 with additional extras included.

Seats will be limited to maximise passenger comfort (in line with other previously operated joy flights).

Theย flights will be operated on a cost-recovery basis andย profits will be donated toย theย HARSย Aviation Museumย at Albion Park (Wollongong) and the Qantas Founders Museumย in Longreachย to support their efforts to preserve and promote the 747 legacy for future generations. Both museums have a QANTAS 747 on public display.

The final 747-400 in the fleet will depart Sydney at approximately 2 pm on July 22, 2020 as flight QF7474.

Prior to its final departure on July 22, QANTAS will host a hangar farewell event for employees.

Top Copyright Photo: QANTAS Airways Boeing 747-438 ER VH-OEJ (msn 32914) BNE (Peter Gates). Image: 908305.

QANTAS Airways aircraft slide show:

Lufthansa announces “ReNew” restructuring program, Germanwings will not return

Lufthansa has made this announcement:

The Executive Board of Deutsche Lufthansa AG has approved a second set of measures as part of its overall restructuring program in the wake of the coronavirus crisis. With the first set of measures launched in early April it had been decided, among other things, to reduce the fleet by 100 aircraft and not to resume the flight operations of Germanwings.

Following the approval by Lufthansa shareholders of the stabilization measures of the German federal government and the commitments made by the governments of Austria and Switzerland, the Groupโ€™s financing is currently secure.

However, the complete repayment of government loans and investments, including interest payments, will place an additional burden on the company in the coming years, making sustainable cost reductions inevitable for this reason as well.

The comprehensive restructuring program entitled โ€œReNewโ€ is scheduled to runย 
until December 2023 and is headed by Dr. Detlef Kayser, Member of the Lufthansa Group Executive Board and responsible for Airline Resources & Operations
Standards. It also includes restructuring programs that are already underway at the Groupโ€™s airlines and service companies. These will continue unchanged.

In detail, the following resolutions were adopted by the Group Executive Board and communicated internally:

  • Following the downsizing of the Executive Board of Deutsche Lufthansa AG, the executive board and management bodies of the subsidiaries will be reduced in size compared with 2019. In a first step, the number of board members was reduced by one position each at Lufthansa Cargo AG, LSG Group, and Lufthansa Aviation Training.
  • Government loans and equity participations are to be reduced as quickly as possible to avoid a further increase in interest charges (restructuring program element โ€œRePayโ€).
  • The number of leadership positions throughout the Group will be reduced by 20 percent.
  • The administration of Deutsche Lufthansa AG will be reduced by 1,000 positions.
  • The process of transforming Lufthansa Airline into a separate corporate entity is being accelerated.
  • The already planned reduction of sub-fleets and the bundling of flight operations will be implemented. This measure includes the long- and short-haul leisure business at the Frankfurt and Munich hubs. At Lufthansa alone, 22 aircraft have already been phased out ahead of schedule, including six Airbus A380, eleven Airbus A320 and five Boeing 747-400 aircraft.

Copyright Photo: Marcel F. De Biasi.

  • The financial planning up to 2023 provides for the acceptance of a maximum of 80 new aircraft into the Lufthansa Group carriersโ€™ fleets. This will reduce the investment volume for new aircraft by half.

Due to the long-term effects of the coronavirus pandemic, which are particularly serious for air travel, there is a calculated personnel surplus of at least 22,000ย full-time positions in the companies of Lufthansa Group even in the period following the crisis. Nearly all airlines worldwide are currently affected by personnel surplus. In contrast to many of its competitors, Lufthansa will continue to avoid layoffsย wherever possible. This requires agreements on crisis-related measures withย unions and social partners representing the Lufthansa employees. So far, negotiations have only been successful with the UFO cabin union.

Germanwings

From Wikipedia:

Since 2016, Germanwings has been a wet lease operator for its sister company Eurowings. The Germanwings brand has not been used since then, although the IATA code “4U” continued to operate under the Eurowings brand until March 2018, when Germanwings’ own IATA-Code 4U was abandoned and replaced with the Eurowings designator EW. Germanwings was closed in April 2020.

On April 7, 2020, Lufthansa previously announced that it would be shutting down Germanwings, partly due to the large travel ban during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Germanwings aircraft photo gallery:

Germanwings aircraft slide show:

https://airlinersgallery.smugmug.com/frame/slideshow?key=6m9CF6&speed=3&transition=fade&autoStart=1&captions=0&navigation=0&playButton=0&randomize=0&transitionSpeed=2

United Airlines has a huge warning for airlines

From The Motley Fool:

United Airlines has a huge warning for airlines