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South West Select Committee
Response to the Assembly for Wales Enterprise and Business Committee Inquiry into the Future of Welsh Ports and Airports 1. About Flybe 1.1 Flybe welcomes the opportunity to submit a response to the Assembly’s inquiry into the future of Welsh ports and airports. Headquartered in Exeter, Flybe is proudly and determinedly a regional airline and is both Europe’s largest regional airline and the UK’s number one domestic airline. Employing around 3,300 staff, we currently operate 84 aircraft on 211 routes from 36 UK and 62 European airports (all routes on sale Jan ’12-Oct’12) in 18 countries and carried more than 7 million passengers in 2011. CAA statistics show that, during 2011, Flybe was responsible for 120,383 air movements, nearly 13% of the total for the UK. This made us the third largest airline in terms of departures from UK airports, behind only British Airways and Easyjet. 1.2 Flybe has established a comprehensive regional route network and our spread of airports is intended to offer customers a convenient point-to-point network operating from regional airports which are a preferable alternative to having to travel to more distant major hub airports. In addition, the domestic route network does not attempt to compete with surface transport where alternative road or rail options give journey times of three hours or less. As such, and because we offer three times more domestic routes than our nearest competitor, Flybe can legitimately claim to understand the needs of the UK’s regions better than any other airline. -
IATA CLEARING HOUSE PAGE 1 of 21 2021-09-08 14:22 EST Member List Report
IATA CLEARING HOUSE PAGE 1 OF 21 2021-09-08 14:22 EST Member List Report AGREEMENT : Standard PERIOD: P01 September 2021 MEMBER CODE MEMBER NAME ZONE STATUS CATEGORY XB-B72 "INTERAVIA" LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY B Live Associate Member FV-195 "ROSSIYA AIRLINES" JSC D Live IATA Airline 2I-681 21 AIR LLC C Live ACH XD-A39 617436 BC LTD DBA FREIGHTLINK EXPRESS C Live ACH 4O-837 ABC AEROLINEAS S.A. DE C.V. B Suspended Non-IATA Airline M3-549 ABSA - AEROLINHAS BRASILEIRAS S.A. C Live ACH XB-B11 ACCELYA AMERICA B Live Associate Member XB-B81 ACCELYA FRANCE S.A.S D Live Associate Member XB-B05 ACCELYA MIDDLE EAST FZE B Live Associate Member XB-B40 ACCELYA SOLUTIONS AMERICAS INC B Live Associate Member XB-B52 ACCELYA SOLUTIONS INDIA LTD. D Live Associate Member XB-B28 ACCELYA SOLUTIONS UK LIMITED A Live Associate Member XB-B70 ACCELYA UK LIMITED A Live Associate Member XB-B86 ACCELYA WORLD, S.L.U D Live Associate Member 9B-450 ACCESRAIL AND PARTNER RAILWAYS D Live Associate Member XB-280 ACCOUNTING CENTRE OF CHINA AVIATION B Live Associate Member XB-M30 ACNA D Live Associate Member XB-B31 ADB SAFEGATE AIRPORT SYSTEMS UK LTD. A Live Associate Member JP-165 ADRIA AIRWAYS D.O.O. D Suspended Non-IATA Airline A3-390 AEGEAN AIRLINES S.A. D Live IATA Airline KH-687 AEKO KULA LLC C Live ACH EI-053 AER LINGUS LIMITED B Live IATA Airline XB-B74 AERCAP HOLDINGS NV B Live Associate Member 7T-144 AERO EXPRESS DEL ECUADOR - TRANS AM B Live Non-IATA Airline XB-B13 AERO INDUSTRIAL SALES COMPANY B Live Associate Member P5-845 AERO REPUBLICA S.A. -
Liste-Exploitants-Aeronefs.Pdf
EN EN EN COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Brussels, XXX C(2009) XXX final COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No xxx/2009 of on the list of aircraft operators which performed an aviation activity listed in Annex I to Directive 2003/87/EC on or after 1 January 2006 specifying the administering Member State for each aircraft operator (Text with EEA relevance) EN EN COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No xxx/2009 of on the list of aircraft operators which performed an aviation activity listed in Annex I to Directive 2003/87/EC on or after 1 January 2006 specifying the administering Member State for each aircraft operator (Text with EEA relevance) THE COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES, Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, Having regard to Directive 2003/87/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 October 2003 establishing a system for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading within the Community and amending Council Directive 96/61/EC1, and in particular Article 18a(3)(a) thereof, Whereas: (1) Directive 2003/87/EC, as amended by Directive 2008/101/EC2, includes aviation activities within the scheme for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading within the Community (hereinafter the "Community scheme"). (2) In order to reduce the administrative burden on aircraft operators, Directive 2003/87/EC provides for one Member State to be responsible for each aircraft operator. Article 18a(1) and (2) of Directive 2003/87/EC contains the provisions governing the assignment of each aircraft operator to its administering Member State. The list of aircraft operators and their administering Member States (hereinafter "the list") should ensure that each operator knows which Member State it will be regulated by and that Member States are clear on which operators they should regulate. -
My Personal Callsign List This List Was Not Designed for Publication However Due to Several Requests I Have Decided to Make It Downloadable
- www.egxwinfogroup.co.uk - The EGXWinfo Group of Twitter Accounts - @EGXWinfoGroup on Twitter - My Personal Callsign List This list was not designed for publication however due to several requests I have decided to make it downloadable. It is a mixture of listed callsigns and logged callsigns so some have numbers after the callsign as they were heard. Use CTL+F in Adobe Reader to search for your callsign Callsign ICAO/PRI IATA Unit Type Based Country Type ABG AAB W9 Abelag Aviation Belgium Civil ARMYAIR AAC Army Air Corps United Kingdom Civil AgustaWestland Lynx AH.9A/AW159 Wildcat ARMYAIR 200# AAC 2Regt | AAC AH.1 AAC Middle Wallop United Kingdom Military ARMYAIR 300# AAC 3Regt | AAC AgustaWestland AH-64 Apache AH.1 RAF Wattisham United Kingdom Military ARMYAIR 400# AAC 4Regt | AAC AgustaWestland AH-64 Apache AH.1 RAF Wattisham United Kingdom Military ARMYAIR 500# AAC 5Regt AAC/RAF Britten-Norman Islander/Defender JHCFS Aldergrove United Kingdom Military ARMYAIR 600# AAC 657Sqn | JSFAW | AAC Various RAF Odiham United Kingdom Military Ambassador AAD Mann Air Ltd United Kingdom Civil AIGLE AZUR AAF ZI Aigle Azur France Civil ATLANTIC AAG KI Air Atlantique United Kingdom Civil ATLANTIC AAG Atlantic Flight Training United Kingdom Civil ALOHA AAH KH Aloha Air Cargo United States Civil BOREALIS AAI Air Aurora United States Civil ALFA SUDAN AAJ Alfa Airlines Sudan Civil ALASKA ISLAND AAK Alaska Island Air United States Civil AMERICAN AAL AA American Airlines United States Civil AM CORP AAM Aviation Management Corporation United States Civil -
Opening Statement, Lynne Embleton, CEO, Aer Lingus
Supplemental Aer Lingus Opening Statement to Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications Committee – 22nd June 2021 Introduction Thank you for the opportunity to engage - once again - with the Transport and Communications committee. I will assume you have read the Aer Lingus opening statement which was originally due to be delivered on 2nd June. On this basis I won’t read that statement but everything in it still stands. I would however like to briefly supplement it to highlight some specific issues that need to be addressed urgently. Stobart Stobart Air informed Aer Lingus on 11th June that they were ceasing to trade with immediate effect resulting in the cancellation of all Aer Lingus Regional flights operated by Stobart Air. Stobart attributed this decision to the continuing impact of the pandemic which has resulted in almost no flying since March 2020. Aer Lingus stepped in immediately to operate six routes until at least the end of August and arranged for BA City Flyer to operate four of the routes. The provision of this replacement schedule has ensured that all impacted customers due to travel in the immediate term were offered alternative travel arrangements. Aer Lingus also confirmed that we are ready to operate the Dublin / Kerry route, subject to an appropriate PSO arrangement being put in place and that we are actively exploring options that would enable the provision of a Dublin / Donegal service. Aer Lingus and other key stakeholders in the aviation sector have consistently warned that Ireland’s 15-month long implementation of the most restrictive travel policies in Europe without sector specific supports being provided, represented a critical risk to aviation jobs and to connectivity. -
Airline Schedules
Airline Schedules This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on January 08, 2019. English (eng) Describing Archives: A Content Standard Special Collections and Archives Division, History of Aviation Archives. 3020 Waterview Pkwy SP2 Suite 11.206 Richardson, Texas 75080 [email protected]. URL: https://www.utdallas.edu/library/special-collections-and-archives/ Airline Schedules Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 3 Scope and Content ......................................................................................................................................... 3 Series Description .......................................................................................................................................... 4 Administrative Information ............................................................................................................................ 4 Related Materials ........................................................................................................................................... 5 Controlled Access Headings .......................................................................................................................... 5 Collection Inventory ....................................................................................................................................... 6 - Page 2 - Airline Schedules Summary Information Repository: -
Official Journal C 137 of the European Union
Official Journal C 137 of the European Union Volume 57 English edition Information and Notices 7 May 2014 Contents II Information INFORMATION FROM EUROPEAN UNION INSTITUTIONS, BODIES, OFFICES AND AGENCIES European Commission 2014/C 137/01 Non-opposition to a notified concentration (Case M.7200 — Lenovo/IBM x86 Server Business) (1) .... 1 IV Notices NOTICES FROM EUROPEAN UNION INSTITUTIONS, BODIES, OFFICES AND AGENCIES European Commission 2014/C 137/02 Euro exchange rates ..................................................................................... 2 2014/C 137/03 Opinion of the Advisory Committee on mergers given at its meeting of 18 January 2013 regarding a draft decision relating to Case COMP/M. 6570 — UPS/TNT Express — Rapporteur: Austria ........... 3 2014/C 137/04 Final Report of the Hearing Officer — UPS/TNT Express (COMP/M.6570) ............................. 4 2014/C 137/05 Summary of Commission Decision of 30 January 2013 declaring a concentration incompatible with the internal market and the functioning of the EEA Agreement (Case COMP/M.6570 — UPS/TNT Express) (notified under document C(2013) 431 final) (1) .................................................. 8 EN (1) Text with EEA relevance 2014/C 137/06 Communication from the Commission concerning the quantity not applied for to be added to the quantity fixed for the subperiod 1 July to 30 September 2014 under certain quotas opened by the Union for products in the poultrymeat, egg and egg albumin sectors .................................. 18 NOTICES FROM MEMBER STATES 2014/C 137/07 Publication of decisions by Member States to grant, suspend or revoke operating licenses pursuant to Article 10(3) of Regulation (EC) No 1008/2008 on common rules for the operation of air services in the Community (recast) (1) ............................................................................. -
The Undisputed Leader in World Travel CONTENTS
Report & Accounts 1996-97 ...the undisputed leader in world travel CONTENTS Highlights of the year 1 Chairman’s Statement 2 THE NEXT Chief Executive’s Statement 5 Board Members 8 The Board and Board Committees DECADEIN FEBRUARY 1997 and the Report of the Remuneration Committee 10 British Airways celebrated 10 years of privatisation, with a Directors’ Report 14 renewed commitment to stay at the forefront of the industry. Report of the Auditors on Corporate Governance matters 17 Progress during the last decade has been dazzling as the airline Operating and Financial established itself as one of the most profitable in the world. Review of the year 18 Statement of Directors’ responsibilities 25 Report of the Auditors 25 Success has been built on a firm commitment to customer service, cost control and Group profit and loss account 26 the Company’s ability to change with the times and new demands. Balance sheets 27 As the year 2000 approaches, the nature of the industry and Group cash flow statement 28 competition has changed. The aim now is to create a new Statement of total recognised British Airways for the new millennium, to become the undisputed gains and losses 29 leader in world travel. Reconciliation of movements in shareholders’ funds 29 This involves setting a new direction for the Company with a Notes to the accounts 30 new Mission, Values and Goals; introducing new services and Principal investments 54 products; new ways of working; US GAAP information 55 new behaviours; a new approach to The launch of privatisation spelt a Five year summaries 58 service style and a brand new look. -
2.2 Myanmar Aviation Myanmar Aviation
2.2 Myanmar Aviation Myanmar Aviation Page 1 4.5 Myanmar Airport Company Contact List Key airport information may also be found at: World Aero Data information on Myanmar Overview This logistics capacity assessment does not include review of military airports. Myanmar has three international airports: Yangon, Mandalay and Naypyitaw, of which Yangon has most handling capacity for passengers and cargo. Mandalay and Naypyitaw airport normally don’t handle cargo (except luggage) and have few international flights. There is a limited number of helicopter companies available, who mainly operate for the natural gas and oil industry and avoid to fly cargo at high altitudes in the mountains. Obtaining permission, registration and certification for foreign registered aircraft to operate inside Myanmar for emergencies can be a lengthy and complicated process. Airports assessed for this LCA include the following Location Region Type Status Yangon Yangon International Operational Mandalay Mandalay International Operational Naypyitaw Naypyitaw International Operational Mawlamyine Mon state Domestic 1x/Week use Dawei Tanintharyi Domestic Operational KawThaung Tanintharyi Domestic Operational Myeik Tanintharyi Domestic Operational Nyaung-U Mandalay Domestic Operational Pyay Bago Domestic Not in use Magway Magway Domestic Not in use Pakokku Magway Domestic Not in use Mandalay Chanmyathazi Mandalay Domestic 2x/Week use Kale Sagaing Domestic Operational Monywa Sagaing Domestic Operational Loikaw Kayah State Domestic Operational Heho Shan State Domestic Operational -
COVID-19) on Civil Aviation: Economic Impact Analysis
Effects of Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Civil Aviation: Economic Impact Analysis Montréal, Canada 11 March 2020 Contents • Introduction and Background • Scenario Analysis: Mainland China • Scenario Analysis: Hong Kong SAR of China and Macao SAR of China • Summary of Scenario Analysis and Additional Estimates: China • Scenario Analysis: Republic of Korea • Scenario Analysis: Italy • Scenario Analysis: Iran (Islamic Republic of) • Preliminary Analysis: Japan and Singapore 2 Estimated impact on 4 States with the highest number of confirmed cases* Estimated impact of COVID-19 outbreak on scheduled international passenger traffic during 1Q 2020 compared to originally-planned: • China (including Hong Kong/Macao SARs): 42 to 43% seat capacity reduction, 24.8 to 28.1 million passenger reduction, USD 6.0 to 6.9 billion loss of gross operating revenues of airlines • Republic of Korea: 27% seat capacity reduction, 6.1 to 6.6 million passenger reduction, USD 1.3 to 1.4 billion loss of gross operating revenues of airlines • Italy: 19% seat capacity reduction, 4.8 to 5.4 million passenger reduction, USD 0.6 to 0.7 billion loss of gross operating revenues of airlines • Iran (Islamic Republic of): 25% seat capacity reduction, 580,000 to 630,000 passenger reduction, USD 92 to 100 million loss of gross operating revenues of airlines * Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Situation Report by WHO 3 Global capacity share of 4 States dropped from 23% in January to 9% in March 2020 • Number of seats offer by airlines for scheduled international passenger traffic; -
Economic Impact of the Development of Dublin Airport As a Hub
Economic Impact of the development of Dublin Airport as a Hub Reliance Restricted 07 September 2018 | Final Ernst & Young Tel: + 353 1 475 0555 Business Advisory Services Fax: + 353 1 475 0599 Harcourt Centre ey.com Harcourt Street Dublin 2 Ireland Reliance Restricted 07 September 2018 Donal Moriarty Chief Corporate Affairs Officer Aer Lingus Hangar 6 Dublin Airport Dublin Economic impact of the development of Dublin Airport as a Hub Dear Donal In accordance with the terms of the engagement letter with you, we have assisted you in the assessment of the economic impact of the development of Dublin Airport as a Hub (“The Purpose”). This report sets out our assessment of these risks. Limitations of Scope We have not, except to such extent as you requested and we agreed in writing, sought to verify the accuracy of the data, information and explanations provided by yourselves, and you are solely responsible for this data, information and explanations. We have therefore relied on the information provided by you to be accurate and complete in all material respects. Use and distribution of this report Ernst & Young only accepts responsibility to the addressees of this letter on the basis of the engagement agreement and assumes no responsibility whatsoever in respect of or arising out of or in connection with the contents of this letter to parties other than yourselves. If other parties choose to rely in any way on the contents of this letter they do so entirely at their own risk. To the fullest extent permitted by law, Ernst & Young and its members, employees and agents do not accept or assume any responsibility or liability in respect of this report, or decisions based on it, to any reader of the report. -
Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA (A Public Limited Liability Company Incorporated Under the Laws of Norway)
REGISTRATION DOCUMENT Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA (a public limited liability company incorporated under the laws of Norway) For the definitions of capitalised terms used throughout this Registration Document, see Section 13 “Definitions and Glossary”. Investing in the Shares involves risks; see Section 1 “Risk Factors” beginning on page 5. Investing in the Shares, including the Offer Shares, and other securities issued by the Issuer involves a particularly high degree of risk. Prospective investors should read the entire Prospectus, comprising of this Registration Document, the Securities Note dated 6 May 2021 and the Summary dated 6 May 2021, and, in particular, consider the risk factors set out in this Registration Document and the Securities Note when considering an investment in the Company. The Company has been severely impacted by the current outbreak of COVID-19. In a very short time period, the Company has lost most of its revenues and is in adverse financial distress. This has adversely and materially affected the Group’s contracts, rights and obligations, including financing arrangements, and the Group is not capable of complying with its ongoing obligations and is currently subject to event of default. On 18 November 2020, the Company and certain of its subsidiaries applied for Examinership in Ireland (and were accepted into Examinership on 7 December 2020), and on 8 December 2020 the Company applied for and was accepted into Reconstruction in Norway. These processes were sanctioned by the Irish and Norwegian courts on 26 March 2021 and 12 April 2021 respectively, however remain subject to potential appeals in Norway (until 12 May 2021) and certain other conditions precedent, including but not limited to the successful completion of a capital raise in the amount of at least NOK 4,500 million (including the Rights Issue, the Private Placement and issuance of certain convertible hybrid instruments as described further herein).