Airline Finance News - Africa / Middle East.Nov 27, 2006 Arab Air Arab Air is a fictional airline in The Adventures of Tintin comic series created by Herge'. It is mentioned in the comic series title: The Red sea Sharks Carriers Organization Secretary General Abdul Wahab Teffaha refuted the mounting calls to curb the expansion of some Arab carriers in the EU because they are subsidized by their governments. "We find these calls unbalanced, as they overlook the forms of indirect support awarded to some airlines in the EU, and in other regions, especially in the area of slots, priority terminals in airports, and sometimes limiting ground services providers in those terminals," he said in his state of the industry speech at the organization's AGM AGM annual general meeting AGM n abbr (= annual general meeting) → AG f AGM n abbr (= annual general meeting) → JHV f in Kuwait. "We deem it necessary that in the event the issue of government support is brought to the table, then it must include all forms of direct or indirect support, and that it would be balanced and at the same level for all airlines in the world, including those protected under the bankruptcy laws, in order to look into all the issues that lead to unbalanced competitive opportunities." Nov 23, 2006 Arab Air Carriers Organization Secretary General Abdul Wahab Teffaha said members will transport 75 million passengers in 2006, an increase of 7.1% over 2005. RPKs on Arab airlines are expected to grow 12% year-over-year compared to overall industry growth of 7.2%. He called that rise "a pressing element on the economies of operations, slightly lowering load factors on Arab airlines." Cargo traffic, expressed in RTKs, on AACO AACO Arab Air Carriers Organization AACO Asian Americans for Community Outreach (San Francisco, California) AACO Assault Airlift Control Officer member carriers is expected to increase 13.5% this year against 5.3% worldwide. "This growth ascertains the ability of the industry in the Arab world “Arab States” redirects here. For the political alliance, see Arab League. The Arab World (Arabic: العالم العربي; Transliteration: al-`alam al-`arabi) stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the to adapt to adjust to the unstable environment," he noted. Nov 23, 2006 Growth does not necessarily mean success in Middle East. IATA IATA International Air Transport Association, which sets the rules for air transport, including those concerning air transport of animals. DG Giovanni Bisignani Giovanni Bisignani is the Director General of the International Air Transport Association, appointed in 2002. Bisignani is the former chairman of Italy's flagship airline Alitalia. warned airlines and governments in the Middle East not to "lose the plot on cost-efficiency" and to "differentiate growth and profitability" in an address to the Arab Air Carriers Organization AGM in Kuwait. Nov 23, 2006 IATA's Bisignani called on the Middle East and North Africa to up their participation in three of IATA's main initiatives: Safety, Simplifying the Business and liberalization lib·er·al·ize v. lib·er·al·ized, lib·er·al·iz·ing, lib·er·al·iz·es v.tr. To make liberal or more liberal: "Our standards of private conduct have been greatly liberalized . . . . There still are 10 IATA carriers in the region who have not started the IOSA IOSA Iata Operational Safety Audit IOSA Islands' Oil Spill Association (San Juan County, WA) IOSA Internet and Open Source in Archaeology IOSA International Oil Scouts Association IOSA International Organizational Studies Association certification process, including four AACO members. Kuwait Airways Kuwait Airways (Arabic: الخطوط الجوية الكويتية) is the national airline of Kuwait, based in Kuwait City and wholly owned by the Kuwaiti Government. earned its certificate yesterday. The AGM adopted a resolution making IOSA certification conditional to membership from 2008. Nov 23, 2006 IATA's Bisignani recognized the "emerging and impressive success story" of Arab carriers with their double-digit growth in the past four years and year-to-date increases of 17% in cargo traffic and 15% in passenger traffic. "Both are about three times the global average," he said, while noting that the $38 billion list of major airport projects is "leading the industry" and that airlines are investing significantly to keep pace with $60 billion in orders for 350 aircraft. Nov 23, 2006 IATA's Bisignani said "Growth is not a guarantee for profitability," he warned. "Running four enormous hubs in a small geographic area such as the Gulf will be a challenge. Look at Southeast Asia Southeast Asia, region of Asia (1990 est. pop. 442,500,000), c.1,740,000 sq mi (4,506,600 sq km), bounded roughly by the Indian subcontinent on the west, China on the north, and the Pacific Ocean on the east. : Singapore, Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur (kwä`lə l m`p r), city (1990 est. pop. have world-class hubs. Two are working to meet growing demand and one is struggling to attract traffic. This is with a regional market of 3.5 billion people. The whole MENA MENA Middle East & North AfricaMENA Middle East News Agency (Arabic Wikalat Al-Anbaa' Al-Sharq Al-'awsat) MENA Medium-Energy Neutral Atom MENA Mammalian Enabled MENA Mission Element Need Analysis population is only 380 million. The critical question is, how do we make sure your emerging success story has a happy ending?" Nov 23, 2006 IATA's effort to achieve 100% e-ticketing by the end of 2007, Bisignani said: "We will surpass our 70% global target for this year. The Middle East/North Africa, however, is dead last at 13%." Some carriers have yet to issue a single e-ticket while Emirates and Oman Air have 59% and 46% penetration respectively. "I am ringing the alarm bell, not raising the white flag. Look at what happened in China. ET went from 11% in 2005 to 80% in a year. They went from nearly last to first, so there is no reason why Arab carriers can't achieve the same. But the clock is ticking and only 405 days remain until the deadline. ET penetration must increase by over 6% per month." Nov 23, 2006 Z Editor: Aram Gesar, eMail: edit@AirGuideOnline.com For more global news, reviews, features and analysis, please go to: http://www.airguideonline.com/onlinenews.htm To Subscribe to our Newsletters: http://www.airguideonline.com/order_formsubs.htm#news To Advertise: advert@AirGuideOnline.com Nov 13, 2006 |
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