AirlinesTail-strike damage found after Corendon 737 diversionTurkish investigators are looking into a serious incident involving a Boeing 737-800 which suffered a tail-strike on departure from Billund. The Corendon Airlines aircraft had been bound for Antalya on 5 March. Although it sustained the tail-strike on take-off, in darkness, the aircraft did not return to the airport but proceeded to follow its course to Turkey.
LinkDelta: Qatar Airways’ Doha-Atlanta flights won’t be successfulDelta Air Lines executives predicted Qatar Airways’ daily Doha-Atlanta Boeing 777-200 flights, scheduled to start on June 1, will fail financially and reiterated that waging a campaign against Gulf airlines’ alleged subsidies remains a top priority. Outgoing Delta CEO Richard Anderson, who has been vocal in the campaign waged by Delta, American Airlines and United Airlines against Middle East airlines Qatar, Emirates Airline and Etihad Airways, did not participate in Delta’s April 14 first-quarter earnings conference call.
LinkDelta First Quarter Profit Up 27 PercentDelta Air Lines reported first-quarter net income up 27 percent and indicated it may cut capacity after the summer if necessary to stop a decline in unit revenue. Delta earned USD$946 million in the first quarter, up 27 percent from USD$746 million in the same period last year.
LinkGermanwings Crash Victim Families Sue In USFamilies of those killed on a Germanwings flight last year have sued a training unit of the airline's parent, Lufthansa, in US district court in Arizona for wrongful death. Kreindler & Kreindler said it had filed a lawsuit on behalf of 80 families against Airline Training Center Arizona, which instructed the Germanwings pilot who barricaded himself in the cockpit and flew his aircraft into the French Alps on March 24, 2015, killing 150 passengers and crew.n US
LinkLufthansa Talking To SAS, Brussels AirlinesLufthansa is in talks with the owners of Scandinavian carrier SAS and Brussels Airlines to expand the number of destinations it flies to and grow its low-cost Eurowings business, people close to the German airline said. Two people said Lufthansa had been in talks with the owners of SAS since the autumn, which could lead to Lufthansa taking a stake in SAS - half owned by Denmark, Norway and Sweden - or some other kind of partnership, they said.
LinkRed Wings to cease SSJ100 operationsRussia’s Red Wings Airlines will cease Sukhoi Superjet 100 (SSJ100) operations in May. The Moscow-based carrier will return two aircraft to Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Co. (SCAC) and three to the State Transport Leasing Co. (STLC). Neither Red Wings nor SCAC would comment on the decision, which ATW understands could be the result of lease payment debts.
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