Walter Braedt Segรบ Aerodrome in Peru opens with its first airline flight

Walter Braedt Segรบ Aerodrome – Mรกncora, Peru issued this statement:

September 5, 2020 marked the first official commercial flight of the national airlineย Wayraperรบย into theย Walter Braedt Segรบ Aerodromeย located in Mรกncora. This first flight which was into the air strip located just about 1.5 Miles (2 km) fromย Marina Coast Peru, a luxury residential condominium and nautical boating community located on the beach of Mรกncora and is the owner of the private airfield.

 

This marks the first inaugural commercial flight into the Walter Braedt Segรบ Aerodrome done by Wayraperรบ.

This is a grand milestone in the history of Mรกncora, now with the completion of the Walter Braedt Segu airfield, it can now facilitate inbound and outbound private, commercial and for-charter flights with a fully paved airstrip reaching 1,750 meters (5,741 feet). With this new level of travel, commercial flights can begin from the city of Lima, which is a large transportation hub in Peru and can also expand the direct travel access to the northern resort beaches such as Mรกncora, Los ร“rganos and Punta Sal, as well as other resorts just south of Tumbes and north of Piura.

Walter Braedt Segรบ Aerodrome located at Marina Coast Peru.

Marina Coast and the Walter Braedt Segรบ Airstrip caters to both Private and Commercial flights.

The Marina Coast project is overseen and managed by the Bertello Segu Group and Braedt Group, togetherย carrying out the largest marine real estate development project that is unique to Peru and South America. Marinaย Coast which was chosen for its premium weather and location between two great marine currents โ€“ the Humboldt and Equatorial is a true destination for boating and fishing and will now accommodate both air and nautical travel at their 300 slip in-land marina, yacht club, condominium community and retail shopping.

Learn more atย MarinaCoastPeru.com

Wayraperรบ is an airline based at Jorge Chรกvez International Airport in Lima, Perรบ, that operated between March and November 2006, then again since May 2018.

Etihad Airways keeps guests protected with global COVID-19 insurance

Etihad Airways, the national airline of the UAE, is introducing COVID-19 global wellness insurance cover as part of Etihad Wellness, the airlines new health and hygiene programme.

Guests who are diagnosed with COVID-19 during their trip wonโ€™t have to worry about medical expenses or quarantine costs when they fly with Etihad.

Duncan Bureau, Senior Vice President Sales and Distribution, Etihad Airways, said: โ€œThe safety, health, and wellbeing of our guests and employees is our top priority, during and beyond the flight. The introduction of global COVID-19 insurance, in partnership with AXA, builds on stringent measures already in place as part of our Etihad Wellness programme, championed by our Wellness Ambassadors.

โ€œThis additional cover will not only instil confidence to travel but also reassure our guests that we are doing all we can to keep them safe and protected. As more countries start opening their borders, we are making it as easy as possible for our guests to plan their next trip, hassle free.โ€

All Etihad tickets regardless of date of booking, traveling between now and 31 December 2020 will include COVID-19 insurance. Guests with existing bookings donโ€™t need to do anything โ€“ they are automatically enrolled into the programme. The insurance is valid worldwide for 31 days from the first day of travel.

Adelane Mecellem, Chief Executive Officer Asia, Middle-East, Turkey and Africa, AXA Partners, said: โ€œAt AXA, we are focused on improving the customer experience and wellness of individuals during these times. As such, we are proud to partner with one of the worldโ€™s leading airlines, Etihad Airways, and provide their extensive loyal travellers with new protection solutions when needed most.โ€

For new bookings, simply book your next flight on www.etihad.com, the mobile app, by calling the Etihad Airways Contact Centre in Abu Dhabi on +971 600 555 666 (UAE), or through your preferred travel agency – there are no forms to complete

If you are diagnosed with COVID-19 while youโ€™re away from home, COVID-19 global wellness insurance will cover up to EUR150K of medical costs and up to EUR100 a day of quarantine costs in case of a positive diagnosis for 14 days.

Porter Airlines updates restart date to November 12

Porter Airlines has made this announcement:

Porter Airlines is updating its return-to-service date to November 12, from the previously-announced target of October 7.

The quarantine period for travellers entering or returning to Canada was recently extended. This, along with the continued closure of the Canada-U.S. border and Atlantic Canada travel bubble, are key factors in the decision to extend the restart date.

โ€œEvery one of our markets is affected by the Canadian governmentโ€™s non-essential travel advisory and border closures,โ€ said Michael Deluce, president and CEO, Porter Airlines. โ€œWe understand the impact this has on our passengers and our team members, and continue to make decisions based on how the situation evolves.โ€

Porter is waiving change and cancellation fees on all fares booked through November 12, including Porter Escapes vacation packages.

Porter temporarily suspended operations as of March 21, 2020 due to COVID-19.

Finnair’s traffic was down 85.8% in August

Finnair has reported its traffic in August:

The COVID-19 pandemic impact remained clearly visible in the August traffic figures, cargo demand still strong

In August, Finnair carried 193,000 passengers, which is 85.8% less than in the corresponding period of 2019 but 32.9% more than in July 2020.

The overall capacity measured in Available Seat Kilometres (ASK) decreased in August by 84.1% year-on-year. Finnair operated 116 daily flights (cargo-only included) on average which was 31.8% compared to August 2019. The differences between capacity figures are explained by the shorter operated flights on average and by smaller operated aircraft compared to August 2019. Finnair’s traffic measured in Revenue Passenger Kilometres (RPKs) decreased by 92.4%. The Passenger Load Factor (PLF) decreased by 45.1% points to 41.7%. The COVID-19 impact, including the strict travel restrictions imposed by Finland, still affected all passenger traffic figures and was visible especially in the North Atlantic figures as there were no related scheduled flights in August.

The ASK decline in Asian traffic was 86.6%. The North Atlantic capacity decreased by 100.0%. In European traffic, the ASKs were down by 78.7%. The ASKs in domestic traffic decreased by 62.5%.

RPKs decreased in Asian traffic by 96.4%, in North Atlantic traffic by 100.0%, in European traffic by 86.4% and in domestic traffic by 64.6%.

The PLF was 24.3% in Asian traffic but it was supported by the cargo operations and very high cargo load factor. The PLF was 52.8% in European traffic and 62.8% in domestic traffic, whereas there was no PLF figure in North Atlantic traffic due to zero passenger flights in August.

Passenger numbers decreased in Asian traffic by 96.4%, in North Atlantic traffic by 100.0%, in European traffic by 84.9% and in domestic traffic by 69.5%.

Available scheduled cargo tonne kilometres decreased byย 86.8% year-on-year and revenue scheduled cargo tonne kilometres decreased byย 81.4%, both due to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on scheduled flights. However, cargo related available tonne kilometres decreased by 78.4% and revenue tonne kilometres decreased by 70.5% and they included also the cargo-only flights mainly operated between Europe and Asia as well as Europe and North America. The total cargo tonnes were up by 13.7% from July 2020 mostly due to strong demand related to the scheduled cargo capacity. As a result, the cargo load factor was still clearly higher than in the corresponding period of 2019.

In August, 96.0% of all Finnair flights arrived on schedule (76.9%).

SAS’ total number of passengers was down 74% in August

Scandinavian Airlines-SAS issued this report:

Total number of passengers and capacity in August decreased by 74% and 73% respectively, versus the same period last year. However, August also recorded a small increase of 12ย 000 passengers compared to July this year.

SASโ€™ traffic continues to be negatively impacted by COVID-19. In August, total capacity was down by 73.4% compared to the same period last year and number of passengers decreased by 2.1 million. Demand has recovered somewhat better within Scandinavia than in other parts of our network and SAS has deployed its capacity accordingly.

โ€œDuring fall we aim to increase the number of flights and re-open more routes, in line with the re-bounce in demand. Primarily weโ€™ll resume domestic traffic in Denmark, Norway and Sweden, but also re-open 18 routes to key European destinations. Furthermore, we aim to resume flights to Asia and once again offer flights across all three continents where we normally operate,โ€ says Rickardย Gustafson, CEO SAS.

airBaltic resumes flights to nine destinations from Riga

airBaltic has made this announcement:

airBalticย has announced that as of today (September 7) it has resumed flights between Riga and nine additional destinations. In total, airBaltic now connects Riga with 35 destinations across Europe.

As of today, airBaltic has resumed flights from Riga to Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, Gothenburg, Lisbon, Prague, Reykjavik, Vienna and Zurich.

 

Emirates brings back Amman, Lagos and Abuja to its route network

Emirates has announced it will resume passenger services to Amman, Jordan from September 8, 2020. The resumption of flights to the Jordanian capital takes the number of destinations Emirates serves in the Gulf and Middle East to eight cities, as the airline gradually resumes operations with the safety of its customers, crew and communities as its top priority.

Flights from Dubai to Amman will operate as a daily service on the Emirates Boeing 777-300ER

Emirates has also announced it will resume passenger services to Lagos (September 7, 2020) and Abuja (September 9, 2020) in Nigeria. The resumption of flights to both Nigerian cities takes Emiratesโ€™ African network to 13 destinations, as the airline works hard to help its customers travel safely and confidently, implementing industry-leading health and safety measures at all points of the travel journey.

Flights to Lagos will operate four times a week on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Flights to/from Abuja will operate as a daily service.

Virgin Atlantic completes solvent recapitalisation

Virgin Atlantic Airways has made this announcement:

Airline calls for robust passenger testing regime to open the skies

Virgin Atlantic has announced the completion of the ยฃ1.2bn private-only solvent recapitalisation of the airline and holiday business. Its Restructuring Plan has now been sanctioned by the English High Court under Part 26A of the UK Companies Act 2006, and formally recognised in the US court. This final step in the legal process paves the way for the Company to continue its efforts to emerge from the Covid-19 crisis a sustainably profitable airline.

Achieving this significant milestone puts Virgin Atlantic in a position to rebuild its balance sheet, restore customer confidence and welcome passengers back to the skies, safely, as soon as they are ready to travel. However, the devastating impact of Covid-19 on global aviation continues unabated and the airline must take further steps to ensure survival.

The solvent recapitalisation is a major step forward in securing the future of Virgin Atlantic

Now the Restructuring Plan has been formally sanctioned by the UK court and given full force and effect in the US, the airline will implement its Restructuring Plan with the support of Virgin Group and Delta, existing creditors and new private investors, keeping Virgin Atlantic flying and providing essential competition and connectivity to customers.

  • The Plan delivers a refinancing package worth c.ยฃ1.2bn over the next 18 months in addition to the self-help measures already taken: ยฃ280m in cost savings per year, ยฃ880m reduction in fleet capex in the next five years.
  • Shareholders Virgin Group and Delta are providing c.ยฃ600m in support over the life of the plan, including a ยฃ200m investment from Virgin Group and the deferral of c.ยฃ400m of shareholder payments such as brand fees and Joint Venture related costs.
  • The airline continues to have the support of credit card acquirers (Merchant Service Providers) Lloydโ€™s Cardnet, First Data and American Express.
  • Davidson Kempner Capital Management, a global institutional investment management firm, is providing ยฃ170m of secured financing and the airlineโ€™s largest creditors and suppliers are contributing an additional ยฃ450m by way of deferrals

Testing to relax travel restrictions and remove quarantine is vital

The outlook for transatlantic flying, which is core to Virgin Atlanticโ€™s business, remains uncertain with US-UK travel curtailed. Until travel returns in greater numbers, survival is predicated on reducing costs further and continuing to preserve cash. On the back of the continued success of Virgin Atlantic Cargo operations, the restart of skeleton passenger operations – with flights to New York JFK, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Barbados, Shanghai, Miami and Delhi so far and Tel Aviv restarting on Sunday – has been an important achievement.ย  While performance has been encouraging, it is imperative that every sector the airline operates is cash positive.

Transatlantic flying represents 70% of Virgin Atlanticโ€™s network. Since 16 March it has not been possible for many British nationals to enter the US upon arrival from the UK, Ireland and the Schengen Area. Since June, travellers arriving in the U.K. from the US have been subject to 14 days quarantine. The US border closure and UK quarantine measures have been in place for far longer than originally anticipated. As the airline increases passenger operations, the opening of US borders and removal of quarantine is imperative to recovery. These travel restrictions impact on Virgin Atlantic disproportionally given its long-haul operations focussed on the transatlantic. The airline is calling for both UK and US governments to introduce robust passenger testing regimes to lift travel restrictions whilst protecting public health.

Based on current outlook, the airline is planning to a scenario in which transatlantic flying from the UK does not extend beyond current skeleton operations until the beginning of 2021. In this scenario, capacity operated across its network in Q4 2020 would be c.25% of 2019, and revenues in 2021 could be only 50% of 2019 levels.

The devastating impact of Covid-19 on global aviation continues unabated and further steps must be taken to ensure survival

The last six months have been the most challenging in Virgin Atlanticโ€™s history. Even in the toughest times, the people of Virgin Atlantic are what sets it apart and they have made tremendous sacrifices. Unfortunately, despite actions already taken to reshape and resize the business, regrettably the airline must go further one last time with changes at scale, to ensure it emerges from this crisis.

  • Today it is announcing further downsizing across the business, with a planned reduction of 1,150 jobs across all functions. Working closely with unions Unite and BALPA, a company-wide consultation period of 45 days begins today.
  • To mitigate as many cabin crew redundancies as possible, additionally, the airline is introducing a voluntary, Company-led and financed furlough scheme for an additional 600 crew when HM Governmentโ€™s Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme ends at the end of October. Should HM Government extend its Scheme, the airline intends to continue to benefit from it.

 

Shai Weiss, CEO, Virgin Atlantic commented:

โ€œTogether, we have achieved what many thought impossible and that is down to the efforts and sacrifices of so many across the Company. The completion of the private-only, solvent recapitalisation of Virgin Atlantic removes much of the uncertainty we faced and represents a major step forward in our fight for survival. We greatly appreciate the support of our shareholders, creditors and new private investors and together, we will ensure that the airline continues to provide vital connectivity and competition.

โ€œNow we must focus our efforts on securing our long-term future, by ensuring that Virgin Atlantic not only survives but thrives as passenger demand returns. Itโ€™s clear that the introduction of passenger testing is the only way to enable the removal of travel restrictions and open up flying to key markets, while protecting public health. We will continue to work with our industry partners to press for urgent government action.

โ€œAfter the sacrifices so many of our people have made, further reducing the number of people we employ is heart-breaking but essential for survival. I truly hope that as demand returns, we will see many members of our team returning to us. The unique spirit of our people, the passion we have for our customers and each other, and the drive to do things better has been tested but not broken. There will be a recovery, the timing and speed of which is uncertain. When our customers return to the skies we will be there to welcome them onboard with belief in our future. It is then that we will appreciate that everything we have done, painful to so many, was worth it.โ€

United strategically adds limited capacity to October cchedule

United Airlines made this announcement:

United Airlines today announced it plans to fly 40% of its full schedule in October 2020 compared to October of last year. In September, United expects to fly 34% of its full schedule.

Domestically, United plans to fly 46% of its full schedule in October 2020 compared to October of last year, compared to the 38% schedule it plans to fly domestically in September 2020. The airline also plans to resume eight routes to Hawaii, pending approval of the state’s pre-arrival COVID testing program.

Internationally, United expects to fly 33% of its schedule compared to October of 2019, which is up compared to the 29% schedule it plans to fly in September. United continues to respond to the growth in leisure travel demand by adding flights to cities in Mexico, Central America and South America.

“We continue to be data-driven and realistic in our approach to rebuilding our network,” said Ankit Gupta, United’s vice president of Domestic Network Planning. “Because October is typically a slower month for leisure travel, we’re adjusting our schedules to reflect these seasonal changes in customer demand while resuming service or adding capacity on routes where we’re seeing increased customer demand for travel.”

United is even realigning its schedule patterns with the customer in mind to match the current demand for leisure travel. In October, the airline plans to add more flights on days popular with leisure travelers looking to get a head start on long weekend getaways and will schedule fewer flights on days where demand is traditionally lower.

Domestic

  • Resuming or starting new service on nearly 50 routes, including 37 routes from United’s Chicago, Denver and Houston hubs.
  • Resuming additional service to Florida including Washington-Dulles to Sarasota and Miami, and Denver to Fort Myers.
  • Resuming service between Los Angeles and Eugene, Medford and Redmond/Bend in Oregon.

International

  • Resuming service to 14 international destinations including Bogota, Colombia; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Lima, Peru and Panama City, Panama.
  • Increasing to twice daily service between New York/Newark and Tel Aviv and resuming three-times weekly service between Washington, D.C. and Tel Aviv on October 25.
  • Resuming or increasing service to Cancun, Mexico City and Puerto Vallarta in Mexico from its hubs in Chicago, Denver, Houston, New York/Newark and Washington, D.C.

Finnair re-opens operations to Nanjing for September and October with a weekly frequency

Finnair has made this announcement:

Finnair has received permission from Chinese authorities to operate one weekly flight between Helsinki and Nanjing as of September 11, 2020. The route will be operated with Airbus A350-900 aircraft until October 18, 2020, and it supports cargo and passenger travel demand between Europe and China. The flight schedule isย  published in all Finnair sales channels.

Finnair currently offers smooth connections to 30 destinations in Europe and Finland from its Helsinki hub.

Finnair currently serves some 40 destinations in Europe and Asia, operating altogether 80-90 flights per day. Finnair constantly reviews its traffic plan and has the capability to add flights and re-open destinations at a rapid pace, as travel restrictions are removed and travel demand recovers. Long-haul flights to Asia are also supported by cargo demand.