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- Airlines buckle up for busy holiday
- WASHINGTON -- Airlines are predicting a record number of passengers during the Thanksgiving holiday, and federal officials are enacting new flight routes in an attempt to fend off major delays. The major airlines, coming off the worst summer for delays on record, said Monday that the...
- Research articles 2007-11-13
- IATA calls for regulation of airport monopolies.(International Air Transport Association)(Brief article)
- In an effort to put the brakes on what it sees as ever-spiralling costs accrued by airlines at airports, IATA has appealed to EU Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot to help bring new regulation to what was described as Europe's 'monopolist' airport industry. IATA Director...
- Research articles 2006-05-01
- IATA African plan.(AFRICA & MIDDLE EAST)(International Air Transport Association)(Brief Article)
- IATA has set out a four point agenda to revitalise aviation across Africa based on (1) enhanced safety efforts, (2) infrastructure development, (3) liberalisation and (4) SPT--simplified passenger travel. Specifically on infrastructure, IATA says that many African airports, runway pavements, airfield lighting, weather...
- Research articles 2005-12-01
- CHINA AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION FOUNDED ON SEP. 26
- AsiaInfo Services 09-28-2005 China Air Transport Association Founded on Sep. 26 BEIJING, Sep 28, 2005 SinoCast via COMTEX -- China Air Transport Association, the first non-governmental organization in the country, has been founded on September 26. Insiders believed...
- Research articles 2005-09-28
- AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION FOUNDED IN CHINA
- AsiaInfo Services 09-28-2005 Air Transport Association Founded in China BEIJING, Sep 28, 2005 SinoCast via COMTEX -- The air transport association of China, the first non-governmental organization after the reform on the civil aviation system, was established in Beijing. ...
- Research articles 2005-09-28
- Copa Airlines Achieves IOSA Registration Granted by International Air Transport Association; Airline is Recognized for Meeting International Standards of Quality and Operational Excellence
- PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Copa Airlines has earned IOSA Registration from the International Air Transport Association IATA. The IATA Operational Safety Audit Program IOSA is a standardized audit of airline operational safety management and control systems in such areas as corporate organization and management, flight operations, operational control/flight dispatch, aircraft...
- Research articles 2005-08-05
- Lots of lost bags, late flights in '04
- WASHINGTON -- Congested skies and bad weather last year resulted in more flight delays, more mishandled baggage and more complaints about airline service than in 2003, the government announced Thursday. Arriving at least 15 minutes late last year were 21.9 percent of flights for the biggest airlines, which...
- Research articles 2005-02-04
- Industry expects more holiday fliers than ever.
- By Bill Hensel Jr., Houston Chronicle Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Nov. 23--A record number of Thanksgiving travelers are taking to the skies during this American holiday travel season -- the highest since before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, according to the Air...
- Research articles 2004-11-23
- Norfolk, Va.-area residents will be on the go this Thanksgiving.
- By Michael Davis, The Virginian-Pilot, Norfolk, Va. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Nov. 22--Ladies and gentlemen, start your holiday engines. This should be the busiest Thanksgiving for travel since before the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, according to analysts who say consumers...
- Research articles 2004-11-22
- New passenger-screening plan coming
- WASHINGTON -- The government is revising a plan to check all airline passengers' backgrounds before they board a plane, furthering delaying a program once described by the Bush administration as urgent. Acting Transportation Security Administration chief David Stone said the agency is "reshaping and repackaging" the project. He...
- Research articles 2004-07-14
- Jump in Airfares Unlikely, Experts Say, despite Prices Being at 15-Year Low.
- By D.R. Stewart, Tulsa World, Okla. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Oct. 30--The price to fly generally remains at a 15-year low. In the troubled airline industry, increased passenger traffic, fewer airlines or higher fares would be seeds for a revival. ...
- Research articles 2003-10-30
- Outlook Dims for Struggling U.S. Airlines.
- By Chip Jones, Richmond Times-Dispatch, Va. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 27--U.S. airline passenger traffic dropped 10 percent last week, fueled by travelers' fears of war and terrorism, the head of the airlines' trade group said yesterday. "On some...
- Research articles 2003-03-27
- Air Traffic Declines 10 Percent Overall.
- By Ina Paiva, The Miami Herald Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 27--Air travel has plummeted since just before the start of the war with Iraq, with demand dropping at a pace not seen since the aftermath of the September 2001 terrorist attacks, the...
- Research articles 2003-03-27
- Biggest US Airlines Ask Government for Multi-Billion Dollar Aid Package.
- Sunday Business, London Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 24--Leading US airlines, most of them fighting off bankruptcy, are furiously lobbying the American federal government for multi-billion dollar aid packages which European rivals say will give them a major competitive advantage on...
- Research articles 2003-03-24
- Outlook for Airlines Bleak as War Approaches, Fuel Costs Soar
- WASHINGTON -- The state of the airline industry is about to get even bleaker in the event of war, to the tune of $10.7 billion in losses in 2003, as the airlines struggle to keep afloat with bookings plummeting, high jet fuel costs, and decreased revenue. All of...
- Research articles 2003-03-12
- No plane sailing as the economic winds shift.
- Feb 27, 2003 (The Australian - ABIX via COMTEX) The International Air Transport Association reports airlines lost $US13bn during 2002, and may lose $US18bn in 2003. Though terrorism has contributed to the loss, a loss of $US3bn had been predicted for 2002 prior to...
- Research articles 2003-02-27
- US Airlines Struggling to Survive; Fuel Demand Outlook Grim
- US Airlines Struggling to Survive; Fuel Demand Outlook Grim One year after Sep. 11, the global airline industry is traveling at three different speeds. The US sector is still operating in survival mode with restructuring underway and the possibility of further bankruptcies looming large. The worst is already...
- Research articles 2002-09-11
- Airlines Face Turbulent Skies as Jet Fuel Demand Still Taking Hit
- Airlines Face Turbulent Skies as Jet Fuel Demand Still Taking Hit Although air traffic volumes in the US have recovered gradually from the post-Sep. 11 lows, latest statistics from the Air Transport Association ATA confirm that airlines still face a long road to recovery, which is not good...
- Research articles 2002-06-26
- Court Upholds Government Clarification of Crew Rest Regulation
- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has rejected an airline industry lawsuit challenging the Federal Aviation Administration's FAA interpretation of crew rest regulations. The court's May 31 decision virtually sweeps aside industry objections to the FAA's stated intention to enforce the regulation requiring that pilots...
- Research articles 2002-06-10
- The Air Transport Association
- * The Air Transport Association, a Washington, D.C., trade organization of U.S. airlines, is creating a captive insurance company called Equitime to provide terrorism insurance to airlines.
- Research articles 2002-05-01
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