Tag Archives: A319112

Eritrean Airlines to end Frankfurt service on October 1

Eritrean Airlines (Asmara) is ending Asmara-Rome-Frankfurt service on October 1. However the Asmara-Rome (Fiumicino) portion will retained per Airline Route.

Copyright Photo: Pedro Baptista/Flyingphotos. Airbus A319-112 LZ-AOA (msn 3139) prepares to touch down at Frankfurt.

Eritrean Airlines:ย 

Frameable Color Prints and Posters:ย 

Germania establishes Gambia Bird in Africa

Gambia Bird (Banjul) is a new airline in Gambia in western Africa. According to Airliners.de, in cooperation with AJW Aviation, the new airline will lease two Airbus A319s from Germania. Gambia Bird is planning to serveย Dakar, Conakry, Freetown and Lagos. Later the company, hopes to expand to Europe. Germania will retain a 90% ownership in Gambia Bird. The first Airbus A319 has been painted at Norwich.

According to a report by ATW, Gambia Bird is now planning to launch operations on October 15, 2012ย from Banjul with weekly flights to London (Gatwick) and Barcelona and also from Freetown to London (Gatwick). The new airline is also planning four-times-weekly serviceย from Banjul to Dakar, twice-weekly to Freetown, Monrovia and Lagos as well as once a week service to Conakry and Accra.

The airline has the following statement on their website:

“Flights will commence later in summer and the airline will connect Banjul to other West African Airports but also link Banjul to Europe. The schedule will be published soon.”

Copyright Photo: Matt Varley. The pictured Airbus A319-112 D-ASTA (msn 4663), formerly painted in Germania livery, has emerged from the paint shop at Norwich, pending delivery.

Hot New Photos:ย 

Gulf Air to resume flights to Iran and Iraq

Gulf Air (Bahrain) will resume its services to Iran and Iraq from September 20, 2012 following the Bahrain Governmentโ€™s approval.

Flights to Baghdad, Erbil, Najaf and Basra in Iraq and Tehran, Mashhad, Shiraz and Isfahan in Iran will begin progressively between September 20 and October 28, 2012 subject to final approvals by the civil aviation authorities of the respective countries.

Flight schedule for Iraq

Najaf โ€“ from September 20 with four weekly flights increasing to daily from December 1

Baghdad – from September 21 with five weekly flights

Erbil – from September 23 with four weekly flights increasing to daily from October 28

Basra – from October 29 with three weekly flights increasing to four from December 1

Flight schedule for Iran

Mashhad – from September 22 with four weekly flights increasing to daily from December 2

Shiraz – from September 23 with five weekly flights increasing to daily from December 1

Tehran – from September 25 with six weekly flights increasing to daily from December 1

Isfahan – from October 30 with three weekly flights

The above flights will be operated by a combination of Embraer and Airbus aircraft.ย 

Copyright Photo: TMK Photography. Former Skybus Airlines Airbus A319-112 C-GTDS (msn 1901, ex N551GX) became A9C-EV with Gulf Air.

Gulf Air:ย 

Frontier continues its expansion from Orlando to smaller cities

Frontier Airlines (2nd) (Denver)ย today announced two new nonstop destinations from Orlando, Florida (MCO), bringing the carrierโ€™s nonstop destinations served from Orlando to 13. Nonstop flights to both Columbia, Missouri (COU) and Shenandoah Valley, Virginia (SHD) will begin on November 20, 2012.

Is Frontier taking a page out of Allegiant’s book of serving vacation markets (like Orlando) from smaller underserved markets like Columbia and Shenandoah Valley? It is a departure from the past of serving mainly the biggest markets from its Denver hub.

With Allegiant now adding Airbus A319s in the future, is Frontier making itself into a potential future acquisition for Allegiant?

Orlando-Columbiaย (beginning Nov. 20, 2012)

Route Departs Arrives Frequency Aircraft
MCO-COU 1:50 p.m. 3:35 p.m. Tues A319
COU-MCO 4:15 p.m. 7:35 p.m. Tues A319
MCO-COU 8:00 a.m. 9:45 a.m. Sat A319
COU-MCO 10:25 a.m. 1:45 p.m. Sat A319

Orlando-Shenandoahย (beginning Nov. 20, 2012)

Route Departs Arrives Frequency Aircraft
MCO-SHD 7:30 a.m. 9:25 a.m. Tues/Thurs A319
SHD-MCO 10:05 a.m. 12:10 p.m. Tues/Thurs A319
MCO-SHD 7:00 a.m. 8:55 a.m. Sun A319
SHD-MCO 9:35 a.m. 11:40 a.m. Sun A319

The new service will operate on 138-seat Airbus A319 aircraft.

Copyright Photo: Michael B. Ing. Approaching Los Angeles is Frontier’s Airbus A319-112 N948FR (msn 2836). N948FR displays the image of Pete, the Pelican on the tail.

Frontier Airlines:ย 

Frontier Airlines to return to Fargo, North Dakota

Frontier Airlines (2nd) (Denver)ย today announced new nonstop service between its Denver, Colorado (DEN), hub and Fargo, North Dakota (FAR), with three weekly nonstop flights beginning on November 16, 2012.

Following is the schedule for Frontierโ€™s Fargo service:

Denver-Fargoย (beginning Nov. 16, 2012)

Route Departs Arrives Frequency Aircraft
DEN-FAR 7:10 p.m. 9:55 p.m. Mon/Wed/Fri A319
FAR-DEN 10:00 a.m. 10:55 a.m. Tues/Thurs/Sat A319

Frontier last served Fargo in 2010 using Lynx Aviation’s 74-seat Bombardier DHC-8-402 (Q400) turboprop aircraft. This new service will instead operate using 138-seat Airbus A319 aircraft, which reduce the flight time between the two cities.

Copyright Photo: Brian McDonough. Airbus A319-112 N949FR with Emma, the Ermine, lands at downtown Washington (Reagan National).

Frontier Airlines:ย 

US Airways Group reports its highest quarterly profit in its history

US Airways Group, Inc. (US Airways) (Phoenix) today reported its second quarter 2012 results:

  • The Company reported a record second quarter net profit excluding net special charges of $321 million, or $1.61 per diluted share. This is a 203 percent increase versus the Company’s second quarter 2011 net profit excluding net special charges of $106 million, or $0.56 per diluted share.
  • On a GAAP basis, the Company reported record net profit for the second quarter 2012 of $306 million, or $1.54 per diluted share. This is 233 percent above the second quarter 2011 net profit of $92 million, or $0.49 per diluted share. It is also the highest quarterly profit in company history.
  • The Company accrued $33 million during the quarter for its annual employee profit sharing program. In addition, through May US Airways’ employees earned approximately $10 million in operational incentive payouts related to the Company’s outstanding operational performance.

Revenue and Cost Comparisons

Strong passenger demand and record passenger yields led to improved revenue performance. Total revenues in the second quarter were a record $3.8 billion, up 7.2 percent versus the second quarter 2011 on a 1.0 percent increase in total available seat miles (ASMs). Total revenue per ASM was a record 16.30 cents, up 6.1 percent versus the same period last year, driven by a 7.4 percent increase in passenger yields.

Total operating expenses in the second quarter were $3.4 billion, up 0.7 percent over the same period last year. Mainline cost per available seat mile (CASM) was 13.14 cents, down 0.1 percent on a 1.4 percent increase in mainline ASMs. Total average fuel price per gallon fell 3.5 percent versus last year, to $3.18 per gallon. Excluding special charges, fuel, and profit sharing mainline CASM was 8.25 cents, up 1.1 percent versus the same period last year. Express CASM excluding special charges and fuel was 14.19 cents, down 0.1 percent on a 1.1 percent decrease in Express ASMs.

Liquidity

As of June 30, 2012, the Company had $2.9 billion in total cash and investments, of which $393 million was restricted. That is up from $2.6 billion, of which $388 million was restricted, on June 30, 2011.

During the second quarter, the Company completed an enhanced equipment trust certificate offering in the aggregate face amount of approximately $623 million. The proceeds were used to refinance two Airbus aircraft owned by US Airways and to finance the Company’s purchase of twelve Airbus aircraft scheduled to be delivered from Sept. 2012 to March 2013 with the remaining balance used for general corporate purposes.

Special Charges

The Company recognized $15 million of net special charges in the second quarter of 2012. This included $9 million of net operating expense primarily related to corporate transaction and auction rate securities arbitration costs and a gain on a vendor settlement and a $3 million charge associated with the ratification of a new fleet and passenger services contract at Piedmont, a wholly-owned Express subsidiary.ย In addition, the Company recorded $3 million in nonoperating expense related to debt pre-payment penalties and non-cash write-offs of certain debt issuance costs.

Copyright Photo: Jay Selman.

US Airways:ย 

US Airways’ CEO Doug Parker makes his case for a merger with American Airlines before the National Press Club

US Airways Group, Inc. (Phoenix) announced its Chairman and CEO Doug Parker presented at yesterday’s (July 18) National Press Club Luncheon in Washington, D.C.ย  Mr. Parker discussed the current state of the airline industry, the positive impact of mergers for the industry and the benefits of a merger between US Airways and American Airlines.ย  Mr. Parker was joined at the head table at the National Press Club by the leadership of American Airlines’ three unions, representing 55,000 American Airlines employees: Captain David Bates, President of the Allied Pilots Association; Laura Glading, President of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants; and John Conley, International Vice President and Assistant to the International President, Jim C. Little, of the Transport Workers Union.

Mr. Parker discussed the benefits of mergers in the industry.ย  He noted how mergers have benefited United and Continental, Delta and Northwest, Southwest and AirTran, and America West and US Airways. ย In addition, Mr. Parker pointed out that there are real advantages to combining airlines for employees, customers and communities:

“All four combined airlines provide better networks and are now profitable. By combining complementary networks to provide more attractive and efficient service, mergers have led to increased traffic, cost reductions, and vigorous competition …ย The benefits of this trend extend way past the bottom line: there are real advantages to combining airlines for employees, customers and communities. Employees will benefit from greater job security and more long-term opportunities if they’re working for a successful airline. Customers will gain more flight options at better times to more places. And whenever two airlines combine, they open the communities that they serve to many more new travelers.”

Mr. Parker outlined the fundamental network challenges that stem from American Airlines’ “cornerstone” strategy, which focuses on five large cities instead of a comprehensive network.ย  Mr. Parker described how American Airlines has lost market share across the United States and why the cornerstone strategy does not address the network deficiencies of American Airlines versus United and Delta:

“Simply put, American has hubs in Dallas, Chicago and Los Angeles to connect people around the United States, and strong international gateways in both JFK and Miami. But that leaves a large hole in the network up and down the East Coast. This means American cannot easily serve the popular and highly lucrative East Coast region, which causes it to miss out on an enormous source of corporate business, as well as all the consumers who travel up and down the Eastern seaboard.”

Mr. Parker explained how a merger with US Airways solves American Airlines’ network challenges and creates a more comprehensive network. In particular, he noted that the networks are complementary and combining them would result in significant benefits to all stakeholders, including customers, communities, US Airways shareholders, American Airlines creditors and employees:

“A combination with US Airways would create such a network. We’ve taken a long, hard look at American, and we know that together we can build the greatest airline in the worldโ€”an airline that can compete more effectively with the networks of United, Delta and others. Together, American and US Airways can connect more communities and provide greater benefits for American’s creditors and US Airways’ shareholders than either airline could on a standalone basis. Furthermore, we would also save thousands of jobs and offer better compensation and long-term opportunities for employees of both airlines.”

Mr. Parker highlighted American Airlines’ merger protocol, which American Airlines recently announced it was ready to move forward with, and reiterated his desire to present US Airways’ plan to American Airlines:

“All that we want is a fair chance to present our plan, and to compare it to all others in a process that doesn’t disadvantage any of the options, and that determines the best plan based on what is best for the owners of AMRโ€”its creditors. We understand there may be as many as four other airlines included in this merger analysis project, and we welcome the competition. We are certain that any objective analysis will conclude that the best plan for the creditors, employees and customers of American is a merger with US Airways during the bankruptcy process.”

Mr. Parker praised the efforts of American Airlines’ three unions โ€“ the Allied Pilots Association, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants and the Transport Workers Union โ€“ to support the merger:

“The decision by those labor leaders to come out in support of a merger was an unprecedented move on their part, and I think is one of the great untold stories of this process so far. Some people improperly characterize their support as being driven by US Airways’ willingness to pay their members more. But as they will tell you, the gap between our proposals and American’s is not very large. Their support is not driven by short-term gains, but rather by the fact they have taken the time to study the long term strategic underpinnings of each plan. They have hired advisors to help them and they have listened and led. In the end, they have supported this merger because they understand the best thing for their members is a strong, competitive merged airline with a long-term strategic advantage.

The employees of American Airlines are lucky to have these forward-thinking leaders representing them and I’m proud to be working with them.”

A replay of the webcast is available atย http://www.press.org/events/npc-luncheon-doug-parker-ceo-us-airways. ย A copy of Mr. Parker’s speech, as prepared, is available athttp://www.usairways.com/en-US/aboutus/investorrelations/webcast.html.

Copyright Photo: Jay Selman. US Airways has become what it is today through mergers of several local service airlines including Piedmont Airlines. The company honors its colorful past with its legacy logojets. Airbus A319-112 N744P climbs aways from the Charlotte hub dressed in Piedmont Airlines 1974 color scheme.

US Airways:ย 

Finnair retires its Airbus A319 “Silver Bird” retrojet

Finnair (Helsinki) on June 21 operated this Airbus A319-112 registered as OH-LVE (msn 1791) on its last revenue flight. Since then the 1953 retrojet “Silver Bird” livery has been removed and the airframe has been returned to Hermes Aviation. The special color scheme was rolled out at Helsinki on July 26, 2008 to celebrate the airline’s 85th Anniversary. Goodbye Silver Bird.

Copyright Photo: Arnd Wolf.

Finnair:ย 

US Airways announces a new code share agreement with Croatia Airlines

US Airways (Phoenix)ย and Croatia Airlines (Zagreb) today (June 27) announced a new bilateral codeshare agreement after receiving approval from the Croatian Civil Aviation Agency and the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). US Airways’ customers will enjoy expanded service to destinations in Croatia and the convenience of a single-ticket purchase for a seamless travel experience. Customers traveling on Croatia Airlines will also receive expanded access to the United States.

US Airways customers will be able to connect to Zagreb on Croatia Airlines flights from Amsterdam, Brussels, Frankfurt, London-Heathrow, Munich and Zurich. Equally, Croatia Airlines’ customers traveling from Zagreb will have access to US Airways’ East Coast hubs of Charlotte and Philadelphia when traveling from these European destinations. Croatia Airlines will also add its code on US Airways flights from Philadelphia to Cleveland, Detroit and St. Louis. In the future, US Airways and Croatia Airlines intend to expand their relationship to include flights to and from Dubrovnik and Split.

Top Copyright Photo: Jay Selman.

US Airways:ย 

Croatia Airlines:ย 

Bottom Copyright Photo: Keith Burton.

US Airways’ CEO Doug Parker: American would be a more competitive airline with US Airways

US Airways‘ (Phoenix) Doug Parker continues to plead his case before various audiences for a merger with American Airlines (Dallas/Fort Worth) despite continued resistance by AA’s upper management which wants to come out of Chapter 11 as a stand alone carrier. According to Reuters, Parker has stated American “sat out” the previous merger movement and as a result is weak in certain geographic areas when compared to other strong competitors. Together he feels they could be a superior carrier. Over to you AA.

Read the full report: CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Jay Selman.

US Airways:ย