Friday, 11 May 2012

Air India, Boeing S.C.'s 1st customer, faces pilot strike



 
As Boeing South Carolina prepares its first Dreamliner for delivery to Air India next month, the South Asian airline has more pressing concerns -- striking pilots.

More than 100 of the flag carrier's pilots stayed away from work Tuesday, prompting the cancellation of at least four international flights.

According to several published reports, the pilots called in sick to protest their wages, working conditions and a plan to train their colleagues from the former Indian Airlines in how to fly the long-anticipated Dreamliners.


The rancor between the pilots, their unions and the state-owned airline has been simmering for months, but seemed to escalate over the weekend.

In response, Air India has fired 10 of the striking pilots; derecognized their union, the Indian Pilots Guild, and sealed their offices and sent doctors to the pilots' homes, according to the reports.

The government blasted the work stoppage, and all sides hinted at further action in the days to come.

Representatives for Boeing South Carolina and Air India did not return calls and emails seeking comment Tuesday. The flap, which may have involved as many as 200 of Air India's roughly 1,500 pilots, is just the latest turbulence for the national airline.

Air India ordered dozens of Dreamliners and other Boeing planes in 2005 before merging with Indian Airlines in 2007. The combined carrier has been losing money and making gloomy headlines ever since.

Last month the Indian government approved an eight-year, $5.8 billion bailout package for the airline, which also has sought financing through the U.S. Export-Import Bank and other lenders to pay for its Boeing planes.

In February, Air India was said to be seeking $1 billion in compensation payments from Boeing for the more than three-year delay in getting its Dreamliners. In March, Boeing Commercial Airplanes CEO Jim Albaugh denied reports that Boeing had agreed to pay half that demand.

Meanwhile, the pilot unions have been battling in court over who gets training to fly the much-hyped jets, which feature the newest technologies in commercial aviation.

Last week Air India announced that it would fly its first Dreamliners on domestic and short-haul international routes instead of the long-haul international routes the plane was designed to fly. The rationale was to give crews more training opportunities.

Also last week, the airline was the first to be fined by the U.S. Department of Transportation for "failing to post customer service and tarmac delay contingency plans on its website as well as failing to adequately inform passengers about its optional fees." The civil penalty was $80,000.

Boeing officials have previously expressed confidence in the airline, which will take the first four S.C.-assembled 787s this year. The first was rolled out to great fanfare on April 27.

Air India was not there for that milestone but is expected in North Charleston in June to test, then fly away the first plane put together at the non-union facility.


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Fatal aircrash 'could have been avoided'

The manufacturer of the type of aircraft that crashed at Fox Glacier said an accident report released today supported its belief that the tragedy could have been avoided if its concerns over modifications to the aircraft had been acted on.

An investigation into the plane crash that killed nine people at Fox Glacier 20 months ago has found modifications to the aircraft were poorly managed.

The crash claimed the lives of Mapua man Christopher McDonald, 62, Skydive New Zealand director Rod Miller, 55, of Greymouth, pilot Chaminda Senadhira, 33, of Queenstown, dive masters Adam Bennett, 47, from Australia who was living in Motueka, and Michael Suter, 32, from New Plymouth.

The four tourists, who had been touring the West Coast on a Kiwi Experience bus trip, were Patrick Byrne, 26, of Ireland, Glenn Bourke, 18, of Australia, Annita Kirsten, 23, of Germany, and Brad Coker, 24, of England.

A Transport Accident Investigations Commission (TAIC) report released today found the Fletcher FU24 aircraft had been modified from an agriculture plane into a parachute-drop plane three months before the accident.

Its owner had not completed any weight and balance calculations before it entered service in its new role.

As a result, it was being flown outside its loading limits every time it carried a full load of eight parachutists.

No two aircraft of the same model are exactly the same, even if they look that way, so pilots must do weight and balance calculations for every individual aircraft, the report said.

TAIC said the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), which approved the aircraft's change of category, failed to detect discrepancies in documentation.

In February last year the manufacturer of the aircraft went public with fears that the widespread practice of putting more powerful engines in the planes could have been a factor in that and other fatal crashes.

Hamilton-based Pacific Aerospace Limited (PAL) suggested that the September 2010 crash, New Zealand's worst aviation disaster in 17 years, could have been avoided if its concerns had been acted on by aviation authorities.

PAL spoke publicly after an approach by the Nelson Mail, but the claims were disputed in aviation circles.

The CAA said last year it had extensively assessed the Fletcher FU-24 aircraft and believed it had responded appropriately to the concerns.

PAL chief executive Damian Camp said today the findings of the report backed the company's concerns. Fragmentation of responsibility for modifications to the aircraft had in the end left no-one responsible, Mr Camp said.


He said PAL was still the type certificate holder for the unmodified aircraft.

"What we have here is an aircraft made 30 years ago for a role in agriculture and 18 years later it's significantly modified and re-powered without our involvement.

"Then it's significantly modified again in 2010 to a skydive plane. Our concern is that without the involvement of the original type certificate holder there are divisions in responsibility," Mr Camp said.

The company had been particularly concerned at the practice of operators putting more powerful engines in the planes.

He said CAA still had oversight, but when multiple parties were introduced gaps opened up in the chain of responsibility, which Mr Camp believed was what had happened with the Fox Glacier accident.

"Without one person being responsible, no-one was responsible. That's what's happened here," Mr Camp said.

CAA director of Civil Aviation Graeme Harris said the report provided lessons for all pilots, and for the CAA.

The commission has found that the pilot had wrongly used weight and balance calculations for another Fletcher aircraft, he said.

The Skydive New Zealand plane crashed soon after takeoff from Fox Glacier airstrip. TAIC said the aircraft was off balance, becoming airborne at too low a speed to be controllable.

The cause of the accident was blamed on the plane being out of balance, with the centre of gravity 12cm rear of the maximum permissible limit, making the nose "pitch up".

The pilot got the plane airborne too early and at too low an airspeed.

Key recommendations focused on weight and balance (the plane had been too heavy and out of balance), plane modification (the plane had been modified for skydiving), introduction into service, regulator oversight and alcohol and drug testing.

The pilot was unable to regain control and the plane continued to pitch up, then rolled left before striking the ground nearly vertically.

TAIC made six recommendations to the CAA director – three relating to the operation of parachute-drop aircraft, two relating to the process for converting aircraft for another purpose and one relating to seat restraints.

Witnesses said the plane became airborne in a normal way but began "pitching" upwards before plummeting down.

The report found the pilot had not been drinking but the need for a deterrence and testing regime was highlighted, and safety restraints were needed to prevent parachutists from going too far to the plane's rear.

Modifying aircraft was a safety-critical process that must be done in strict accordance with rules and guidelines and with appropriate regulatory oversight, the report said.

Two of the dive masters had THC – an active ingredient in cannabis – in their blood, the report said. THC has mild to moderate analgesic effects.

The CAA now has much better tools with which to regulate the commercial skydiving sector.

A new adventure aviation rule was introduced in November 2011, which sets higher standards and allows the CAA to maintain significantly closer oversight of these activities.


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Miles from Blighty - BA announced next phase of bmi intergration




These BA flights will continue to operate to and from the  same airports and terminals, and will depart and arrive at the  same times.

Customers who are booked to travel on a bmi service will be communicated with when their flights move over to British Airways.

It could take until Thursday 17 May to completely process all affected bookings.
Fast Track

Passengers travelling in business class will be able to take advantage of Fast Track through security at Terminal 1.
Will my flight be operated by bmi or British Airways?

From 23 May 2012, these BA flights will be operated by bmi (British Midland) aircraft and crew.

However, in the coming months the exterior and interior design of bmi’s aircraft, as well as the onboard experience will gradually transform into British Airways’ style.

You can check which airline will be operating your flight up to 14 days prior to departure. Please check ba.com Flight Status for the most up to date information.
Business Class Handbaggage reduced

If you bought a ticket for a bmi (BD) flight on one of the nine routes  before 10 May 2012, certain BA policies now apply, including – If you are travelling in business class on a British Airways flight you are entitled to carry  one piece of hand baggage plus a laptop or hand bag. There are size and weight limits that apply.


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Thursday, 10 May 2012

Cathay Pacific, Singapore Air Slump as Fuel Hits Earnings




Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. (293) fell the most in more than seven months and Singapore Airlines Ltd. (SIA) tumbled after the carriers said that higher fuel prices and waning demand had hit earnings.

Cathay plunged as much as 5.4 percent as of 10:25 a.m. in Hong Kong, the biggest intraday decline since Sept. 26, after cutting growth plans and predicting “disappointing” first-half earnings. Singapore Air dropped as much as 2.6 percent, the most in two months, after reporting a surprise quarterly loss.


Cathay said that yields, a measure of average fares, were “softening” in premium cabins as economic concerns damps travel demand. The slowdown has also hit freight shipments and prevented the carriers from passing all of their higher fuel costs onto passengers.

“Passenger demand remains weak, fuel prices keep rising and there is no sign of a pick-up in cargo,” said Jim Wong, an analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc.

Singapore Air slumped to a loss of S$38.2 million ($31 million) in the quarter ended March 31. It had been expected to make a profit of S$119 million, based on the average of six analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Cathay pared its forecast of passenger-capacity growth to 3.2 percent this year from 7 percent. It also said it will stop hiring ground staff, offer cabin crew unpaid leave and pare cargo expansion to lower costs.

The airline has no plans to defer any on-order aircraft or to cut any routes, it said. Cathay is due to receive 15 new planes this year, including six already in service.

“It is a situation facing the aviation industry as a whole,” Cathay Chief Executive Officer John Slosar said in Hong Kong yesterday. “Fuel prices have increased and remained consistently high, cargo business remains generally weak, and passenger yields are soft.”
Slower Growth

Singapore Air’s main unit plans to increase capacity about 3 percent in the year that started April 1, down from a 5 percent expansion in the previous fiscal year. The carrier also said fuel prices may remain at high levels, which will affect its operating performance.

“Promotional activities necessitated by intense competition amongst airlines are expected to place downward pressure on passenger yields,” Singapore Air said in its statement. “Especially in Europe and the United States where demand continues to be impacted by the anemic economic outlook.”

At Singapore Air’s mainline unit, yields fell 3.3 percent in the quarter ended March. The unit filled 77.6 percent of seats, a 2.1 percentage point increase from a year earlier. The carrier also made a loss from retiring the last of its Boeing Co. (BA) 747-400 planes.
Air China

The airline industry’s profit will drop 62 percent this year as fuel costs rise, The International Air Transport Association forecast on March 20. Air China Ltd. (601111), the world’s largest carrier by market value, and China Southern Airlines Co. both posted lower profits for the three months ended March.

“We expect revenue pressure to dominate airlines’ woes in 2012,” Rigan Wong, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Citigroup Inc., wrote in a note to clients yesterday.

Deutsche Lufthansa AG this month announced plans to scrap 3,500 administrative positions as part of a 1.5 billion-euro ($1.9 billion) cost-reduction program after it posted a wider first-quarter operating loss.

Air France-KLM Group, which also reported a wider first- quarter loss, is in talks with unions as it seeks to push through a 2 billion-euro cost-cutting plan. In the U.S., American Airlines is trying to cut labor costs by $1.25 billion a year as it restructures in bankruptcy.

Jet fuel averaged 9 percent higher in Singapore trading than a year earlier in the three months ended March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Fuel accounted for 41 percent of Singapore Air’s costs in the year ended in March, compared with an average of 27 percent since 2004.


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Historic landing a success Last flight of Boeing 720 lands at CFB Trenton




CFB TRENTON - It might not have been the best known aircraft in Canada, but the last operational Boeing 720 in the world made history here Wednesday.

The red and white aircraft C-FETB — the 154th and last 720 built by Pratt & Whitney Canada — marked the end of the fleet's legacy by travelling from Saint-Hubert, QC to Canada's largest air base.

Around 3 p.m. dozens of people like Bancroft resident Barney Moorhouse and Trenton resident Celeste Odono standing along RCAF Road in Trenton watched closely as the now-retired C-FETB piloted by Capt. Stephen Krochenski flew over the base twice.

"I didn't know anything about the aircraft before I read something in the newspaper that said that it would be landing here (Trenton) for a last time," said Odono.

"My husband is military and we live just up the road, so I though I should go out and get some photos of this historic moment."

Eager to preserve this historically significant test bed aircraft, Pratt & Whitney (the most important manufacturer of turboprop and small turbofan engines in the world) and the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa came to an agreement that will see the 720 go on loan to the National Air Force Museum of Canada (NAFMC) in Trenton “for an indefinite period of time,” said Barb Neri, public relations manager at the NAFMC.

The aircraft was officially passed over to the museum and its executive director Chris Colton and will be displayed in the museum's airpark, beginning in July. It will be the 26th aircraft on display at NAFMC — the 21st in the outdoor airpark.

"By being displayed in our airpark (at NAFMC), the aircraft will keep telling its rich story for generations to come," said Colton.

Introduced by Boeing in 1959, the 720 is a smaller capacity, lighter and medium-range version of the 707 — one of the most successful airliners of the 20th century. The aircraft — built in 1988 — was the 720 flying test bed operated by the Quebec-based manufacturer until 2010 and had never flown or landed in Trenton before (154 aircraft were produced from 1958 to 1967).

Krochenski, a pilot with the Quebec-based manufacturer for six years (five years on the 720), described the historic one-hour flight as "bumpy,” but fun.

"I was a bit sad for us (the crew) to think that this was our last flight with the aircraft," said the pilot, while taking a good last look at "his" 720.

"It's a bit sad to see it retiring, but we are happy that this two-year project in the making to donate the aircraft to the the museum (NAFMC) came through."


CFB TRENTON - It might not have been the best known aircraft in Canada, but the last operational Boeing 720 in the world made history here Wednesday.

The red and white aircraft C-FETB — the 154th and last 720 built by Pratt & Whitney Canada — marked the end of the fleet's legacy by travelling from Saint-Hubert, QC to Canada's largest air base.

Around 3 p.m. dozens of people like Bancroft resident Barney Moorhouse and Trenton resident Celeste Odono standing along RCAF Road in Trenton watched closely as the now-retired C-FETB piloted by Capt. Stephen Krochenski flew over the base twice.

"I didn't know anything about the aircraft before I read something in the newspaper that said that it would be landing here (Trenton) for a last time," said Odono.

"My husband is military and we live just up the road, so I though I should go out and get some photos of this historic moment."

Eager to preserve this historically significant test bed aircraft, Pratt & Whitney (the most important manufacturer of turboprop and small turbofan engines in the world) and the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa came to an agreement that will see the 720 go on loan to the National Air Force Museum of Canada (NAFMC) in Trenton “for an indefinite period of time,” said Barb Neri, public relations manager at the NAFMC.

The aircraft was officially passed over to the museum and its executive director Chris Colton and will be displayed in the museum's airpark, beginning in July. It will be the 26th aircraft on display at NAFMC — the 21st in the outdoor airpark.

"By being displayed in our airpark (at NAFMC), the aircraft will keep telling its rich story for generations to come," said Colton.

Introduced by Boeing in 1959, the 720 is a smaller capacity, lighter and medium-range version of the 707 — one of the most successful airliners of the 20th century. The aircraft — built in 1988 — was the 720 flying test bed operated by the Quebec-based manufacturer until 2010 and had never flown or landed in Trenton before (154 aircraft were produced from 1958 to 1967).

Krochenski, a pilot with the Quebec-based manufacturer for six years (five years on the 720), described the historic one-hour flight as "bumpy,” but fun.

"I was a bit sad for us (the crew) to think that this was our last flight with the aircraft," said the pilot, while taking a good last look at "his" 720.

"It's a bit sad to see it retiring, but we are happy that this two-year project in the making to donate the aircraft to the the museum (NAFMC) came through."


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Tour Operators' Initiative for Sustainable Tourism Development Supports Efforts Towards a Globally Agreed Framework for the Reduction of GHG Emissions From Aviation

Tourism industry supports 255 million jobs worldwide and is a major, reliable pillar of world economy

The Tour Operators' Initiative for Sustainable Tourism Development (TOI), whose members represent more than 50 million leisure travellers a year, is supportive of efforts in favor of a global, multilaterally-agreed framework for the reduction of greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions from aviation that would mirror the global nature of travel and tourism, with all jurisdictions working hand-in-hand.

"The travel industry at large, as well as the aviation industry, have already taken actions to reduce GHG emissions and we would welcome globally-accepted market-based measures, provided the approach dovetails with other strategies, including research and development, technological and operational innovation, and use of sustainable biofuels, as well as initiatives or projects that actually benefit the environment," said TOI Chairman Michel Lemay. "Planet Earth has only one atmosphere, molecules can't be held in check at the border, making this the quintessential multi-lateral file."

Mr. Lemay added: "Travel and tourism is one of the biggest economic engines on the planet, representing 255 million jobs in virtually all countries on all continents. Travel and tourism together, in which air transport plays a crucial role, may not only be sustainable but actually a primary driver of green growth. It is also often a primary driver behind environmental, landscape and heritage protection, and it helps foster dialogue and exchanges between cultures. Surely there is a way to combine the benefits of travel and reductions in GHG emissions."

Founded in 2000, the TOI is a non-profit organization of tour operators and travel companies of all sizes based in all parts of the world. Together they represent more than 50 million international travellers. With the support of the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), hosting the TOI Secretariat, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), TOI member companies work together to promote best practices in sustainability and corporate responsibility.


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6 questions about Russian aviation safety


 Rescue specialists work at the site of a plane crash near the Russian city of Yaroslavl where a plane crashed Sept. 7, 2011, killing 43 people. Aging aircraft operated by small cost-cutting carriers are being blamed for many of Russia's aviation safety problems.


Much has been made of Russia's dismal aviation safety record in the wake of the crash of a charter plane that killed 43 people, including 36 players and staff from a Kontinental Hockey League team. But crash data from several agencies shows the problem is not necessarily plaguing the entire Russian aviation industry but is more nuanced.

 What is Russia's safety record?
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) measures accidents according to something it calls the rate of "hull losses" per million "sectors," with a hull loss defined as a crash that renders the plane irreparable and a sector meaning a flight that includes a takeoff and a landing. According to the latest IATA figures, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries had an accident rate of 7.15 hull losses per million sectors in 2010, which is almost three times the world rate. In 2009, however, the rate was lower than the world average: Russia and CIS had a hull loss rate of 1.76 versus 2.54 for the rest of the world.

The Aviation Safety Network (ASN), which compiles statistics on crashes and other incidents involving passenger, military, transport and corporate aircraft based on official accident reports, safety authorities and industry sources, has documented 13 what it calls "occurrences" so far this year in Russia, eight of them fatal, with a total 119 people killed.

In 2010, ASN recorded 15 occurrences, four of them fatal, and a death toll of 122. The worst crash that year killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski and 87 other people and involved a Tupolev 154M passenger jet operated by the Polish air force.

By comparison, in 2011, Canada had six occurrences, four of them fatal, with a death toll of 15, and the U.S. had nine, three of them fatal, with a death toll of seven. In 2010, Canada had four occurrences, with only one fatal crash and two deaths; the U.S. had 24 occurrences, six of which were fatal, and a total 20 deaths.

The ASN data of aircraft occurrences includes accidents as well as other incidents that affect the operation of an aircraft, such as hijackings.

What is the international view of Russia's safety record?
In June 2011, then IATA director general and CEO Giovanni Bisignani praised Russia for the progress it has made in recent years to improve flight safety. The 13 largest Russian carriers have all passed IATA's operational safety audit, and none of them has "recorded an accident with loss of life over the last three years," Bisignani said at the time.

But he also warned that "safety concerns remain with the continued operation of some Russian-built equipment that does not comply with ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) standards."



The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in the U.S. does not keep data on accidents or individual carriers in other countries per se, but it does occasionally do international aviation safety assessments. In the most recent assessment it did for Russia, last updated in April 2011, the country received a Category 1 rating, meaning FAA inspectors found that the country's civil aviation authority licenses and oversees air carriers "in accordance with ICAO aviation safety standards."

'We don't look at individual airlines," said FAA spokesperson Les Dorr. "What we look at is the ability of the Russian civil aviation authority to, basically, do its job, to administer its aviation infrastructure in accordance with international regulations. At that time … they fully satisfied all international regulations.

"I certainly couldn't speculate on whether we would do a reassessment any time in the near future."

Canada's Transportation Safety Board said it only investigates incidents in Canada or involving Canadian carriers and has not done any assessments of Russia's aviation safety record.


How many airlines does Russia have?

In Soviet times, the state-owned Aeroflot operated all flights and was at one point the largest airline in the world. But following the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, hundreds of smaller carriers sprang up. Today, about 130 carriers operate in Russia, according to Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin, although only 10 of them handle about 85 per cent of air passengers.

Following the Sept. 7, 2011, crash, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev blamed this proliferation of small airlines for some of the safety problems the country's aviation industry has faced.

"The number of air companies should be radically reduced, and it's necessary to do this within the shortest time," he said at a news conference.

But while the number of carriers has grown, the number of passengers travelling by air has dropped since the breakup of the Soviet Union. According to a statement made in June 2011 by then IATA director general and CEO Bisignani: "Russian aviation handles about 57 million passengers. That's 10 per cent more than in 2008 but still less than half the 120 million people who flew annually on Aeroflot in Soviet times."

IATA said that is likely the result of a combination of the economic changes that have occurred since the fall of the Communist regime, meaning fewer people can afford to fly, and the fact that the now independent republics of the former Soviet Union are not included in the passenger figures.

What is the root of the problem?

Experts agree that the safety problem in Russia and the CIS countries is not with the large carriers like Aeroflot and Transaero that transport the majority of passengers but with the dozens of smaller regional and charter carriers that operate throughout the vast country, which has a surface area of 17 million square kilometres, many of them not reasonably accessible other than by air.

The smaller carriers use predominantly older Soviet-era aircraft or secondhand Western models, many of which do not meet current international safety standards. When non-Western built aircraft are taken out of the equation of the IATA accident statistics, for example, the rate of hull losses per million flights for both 2010 and 2009 falls to zero.

Critic also say many of the small Russian and CIS carriers are owned by newly minted post-Soviet entrepreneurs who have little knowledge of the industry and little interest in anything but profit. That, some experts say, means they neglect safety, flight training for their pilots and crew and maintenance of their aircraft — all in a bid to save costs. Some even fine their pilots for using too much fuel, failing to land on the first try or choosing to abort a flight.

Slack enforcement of safety regulations and failure to punish airlines that violate them; low pilot pay; and too few flight training hours at flight schools have also been cited as reasons for the small carriers' shoddy safety record.


When was the last major plane crash?

The last big crash in Russia occurred on June 20, 2011, when a Tupolev 134A-3 operated by RusAir crash-landed while approaching a runway at Petrozavodsk Airport, killing 47 of 52 occupants, according to the Aviation Safety Network.


What's Russia doing to improve safety?

In April 2011, the Russian government announced plans to improve air safety standards. According to the state news agency RIA Novosti, these plans include the "technical overhaul of about 300 air traffic control facilities," the creation of at least five new centres for analysis of air crashes, new monitoring equipment on runways and new flight safety management technology to help air traffic officials with decision-making.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has also vowed to begin taking aging Soviet-built aircraft out of service in 2012 and in the wake of the Sept. 7, 2011, crash said he would expedite the industry overhaul and work quickly to reduce the number of small carriers operating in the country.


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