Runway-loving birds are risk to planes in Antarctica

19 01 2009

The world’s most southerly bird has become a threat to planes in Antarctica after developing a love for sitting on warm, snow-free airstrips.

Air traffic experts are seeking ways to scare off the south polar skuas, a large and aggressive brown seabird, but without harming them. The birds are protected by the 47-nation Antarctic Treaty, which declares the frozen continent a nature reserve.

At the British Rothera research station on the Antarctic Peninsula, about 100 skuas often sit on the 900 meter (3,000 ft) gravel runway. The odd penguin or seals can also be hazards.

As part of the skua scaring ritual, large bangs are set off and then a runway worker drives a six-wheeled vehicle up and down the runway, swerving toward any remaining birds. Sirens wail to alert both skuas and people.

“It seems to be working — about 15 minutes prior (to takeoff or landing) we’ve driving up and down with bells and whistles to get them out of the way,” Steve King, a pilot and flying safety officer at Rothera, told Reuters.

At Davis, an Australian Antarctic base, staff take a different tack by feeding the birds to try to lure them away from the airstrip.

Skuas are a hazard because bird strikes can down aircraft. The U.S. jetliner that made an emergency landing on the Hudson River on Thursday — in which all 155 abroad survived — had apparently struck a flock of birds.

No birds have been hit this season at Rothera but there were minor strikes last year. The skuas are apparently attracted by the dark gravel surface — warmer than sitting on snow.

Antarctic airstrips can get a license to kill the birds in extreme cases.

The south polar skua is a marauder that often eats other birds’ eggs or steal other birds’ food, behavior scientists call “klepto-parasitism.”

Anyone who goes too close to a skua nest risks attack. They sometimes strike but usually veer off at the last moment. “It’s like someone dropping a chicken on your head,” said John Loines, a skua expert at Rothera.

Not everyone dislikes the skuas, however.

A photograph of Bubba hangs in a corridor below the Rothera control tower as the official “base skua.” “Bubba is 29 years old,” said Loines. He succeeded “George” and “Mildred” as official base skua.





All 155 survive as pilot ditches US Airways plane in Hudson

16 01 2009

 

APTOPIX Plane in RiverA cool-headed pilot maneuvered his crippled jetliner overNew York City and ditched it in the frigid Hudson River on Thursday, and all 155 on board were pulled to safety as the plane slowly sank. It was, the governor said, “a miracle on the Hudson.”

One victim suffered two broken legs, a paramedic said, but there were no other reports of serious injuries.

US Airways Flight 1549, an Airbus A320 bound for Charlotte, N.C., struck a flock of birds just after takeoff minutes earlier at LaGuardia Airport, apparently disabling the engines.

The pilot, identified as Chesley B. “Sully” Sullenberger III of Danville, Calif., “was phenomenal,” passenger Joe Hart said. “He landed it — I tell you what, the impact wasn’t a whole lot more than a rear-end (collision). It threw you into the seat ahead of you.

“Both engines cut out and he actually floated it into the river,” he said.

In a city still wounded from the aerial attack on the World Trade Center, authorities were quick to assure the public that terrorism wasn’t involved.

The plane was submerged up to its windows in the river by the time rescuers arrived, including Coast Guard vessels and commuter ferries that happened to be nearby. Some passengers waded in water up to their knees, standing on the wing of the plane and waiting for help.

Helen Rodriguez, a paramedic who was among the first to arrive at the scene, said she saw one woman with two broken legs. Fire officials said others were evaluated for hypothermia, bruises and other minor injuries. An infant was on board and appeared to be fine, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

“We had a miracle on 34th Street. I believe now we have had a miracle on the Hudson,” Gov. David Patersonsaid.

The crash took place on a 20-degree day, one of the coldest of the season in New YorkThe Coast Guardsaid the water temperature was 36 degrees.

Dave Sanderson, who was flying home to Charlotte after a business trip, said the sound of an explosion was followed by passengers running up the aisle and people being shoved out of the way.

As the plane descended, passenger Vallie Collins tapped out a text message to her husband, Steve: “My plane is crashing.” He was desperately trying to figure out whether she had been on the downed plane when the message arrived.

Another passenger, Jeff Kolodjay, said people put their heads in their laps and prayed. He said the captain instructed them to “brace for impact because we’re going down.”

“It was intense. It was intense. You’ve got to give it to the pilot. He made a hell of a landing,” Kolodjay said.

Witnesses said the pilot appeared to guide the plane down. Barbara Sambriski, a researcher at The Associated Press, watched the water landing from the news organization’s high-rise office. “I just thought, ‘Why is it so low?’ And, splash, it hit the water,” she said.

As water slowly filled the cabin, Sanderson said he and another passenger helped people out onto the wing. One woman had a 3-year-old child, he said, and safely tossed the toddler onto a raft before climbing on herself.

One commuter ferry, the Thomas Jefferson of the company NY Waterway, arrived within minutes of the crash, and some of its own riders grabbed life vests and lines of rope and tossed them to plane passengers in the water.

“They were cheering when we pulled up,” ferry captain Vincent Lombardi. “We had to pull an elderly woman out of a raft in a sling. She was crying. … People were panicking. They said, ‘Hurry up, hurry up.’”

Paramedics treated at least 78 patients, fire officials said. Coast Guard boats rescued 35 people who were immersed in the frigid water and ferried them to shore. Some of the rescued were shivering and wrapped in white blankets, their feet and legs soaked.

Two police scuba divers said they pulled another woman from a lifeboat “frightened out of her mind” and lethargic from hypothermia. Another woman fell off a rescue raft, and the divers said they swam over and put her on a Coast Guard boat.

The plane took off at 3:26 p.m. for a flight that would last only five minutes. It was less than a minute after takeoff when the pilot reported a “double bird strike” and said he needed to return to LaGuardia, said Doug Church, a spokesman for the National Air Traffic Controllers Association. He said the pilot apparently meant that birds had hit both of the plane’s jet engines.

The controller told the pilot to divert to an airport in nearby Teterboro, N.J., but it was not clear why the pilot did not land there.

Church said there was no mayday call from the plane’s transponder. The plane splashed into the water off roughly 48th Street in midtown Manhattan — one of the busiest and most closely watched stretches of the river.

US Airways CEO Doug Parker said 150 passengers, three flight attendants and two pilots were on board the jetliner.

An official speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation was still ongoing identified the pilot as Sullenberger. A woman answered and hung up when the AP asked to speak with Sullenberger’s family in Danville.

Sullenberger, 57, described himself in an online professional profile as a 29-year employee of US Airways. He started his own consulting business, Safety Reliability Methods Inc., two years ago.

Bank of America and Wells Fargo said they had employees on the plane. Charlotte is a major banking center.

Eric Doten, a Florida aviation safety consultant, said he could not recall another example of a modern jetliner water crash in which everyone survived. He said many things had to go right to avert catastrophe: The plane didn’t cartwheel when it hit, the fuselage remained intact, and the fuel did not ignite — in fact its buoyancy probably helped the plane stay afloat.

The plane sank slowly as it drifted downriver. Gradually, the fuselage went under until about half of the tail fin and rudder was above water. A Fire Department boat tugged the plane to the southern tip of Manhattan and docked it there.

The Federal Aviation Administration says there were about 65,000 bird strikes to civil aircraft in the United States from 1990 to 2005, or about one for every 10,000 flights.

“They literally just choke out the engine and it quits,” said Joe Mazzone, a retired Delta Air Lines pilot. He said air traffic control towers routinely alert pilots if there are birds in the area.

The Hudson crash took place almost exactly 27 years after an Air Florida plane bound for Tampa crashed into the Potomac River just after takeoff from Washington National Airport, killing 78 people. Five people on that flight survived.

On Dec. 20, a Continental Airlines plane veered off a runway and slid into a snowy field at the Denver airport, injuring 38 people. That was the first major crash of a commercial airliner in the United States since Aug. 27, 2006, when 49 people were killed after a Comair jetliner took off from a Lexington, Ky., runway that was too short.





Air Tahiti Nui cancels Sydney for 6 months

7 01 2009

Air Tahiti Nui will cancel Papeete – Sydney nonstop service from 28MAR09 till 23OCT09. It will offer service via Auckland through codeshare partner QANTAS.





RAK Airways Suspends operation

7 01 2009

According to Flight Global’s Chinese News blog on 05JAN09, it reported that Ras al Khaimah-based RAK Airways has apparently suspended operation.

RAK Airways began operation in 2007, but suffered several management changes. Quoting to the person who is close to the airline, “the carrier has suspended operation, but only temporarily (the airline plans to resume operation”. No further information was given, but hints that there would be a major development within a month.

Flight Global appears to be the only airline news outlet to report this item, while other websites has no related information. As per Amadeus availability display and inventory, the airline’s flight reservation has been removed.





Turkish Airlines increase capacity to BOM, DEL

7 01 2009

Turkish Airlines have confirmed to us that it will fly daily to BOM and DEL effective summer 09 schedules. It will be operated by a daily A332 both to BOM and DEL.





Alitalia- Air France/KLM accord near

7 01 2009

Italy’s now private carrier Alitalia and Air France-KLM are expected to decide on a partnership agreement on Friday, well-informed sources said on Tuesday. 

Both Alitalia, which was acquired last month by the private Italian investor group Compagnia Aerea Italiana (CAI), and Air France-KLM are reported to have scheduled special board meetings for January 9, three days before the Italian national carrier will undergo its transformation from a state to a private airline. 

The Italian press has reported that Air France-KLM is ready to pay 310 million euros for a 25% stake in the ‘new’ Alitalia, which will retain its old name. 

Germany’s Lufthansa, which was also in the running to be Alitalia’s strategic partner, issued a statement on Tuesday to say that its position had not changed and that it still considered itself to be a candidate to join forces with Alitalia. 

However, Lufthansa has apparently never made a formal offer to buy into Alitalia. 

In a related development, government coalition partner the Northern League said on Monday that if Alitalia did not choose Lufthansa then slots at Milan’s Malpensa airport had to be liberalised. 

The regionalist party has always backed the German airline on the grounds that it would insist that Malpensa be Alitalia’s main hub while Air France has been seen as preferring Rome. 

Air France-KLM has always been considered to be Alitalia’s natural partner and the two airlines were already allied in the international SkyTeam group. 

Earlier this year Air France-KLM made an offer to buy all of Alitalia but the plan was torpedoed by the airline’s unions and opposition from center-right parties, including the Northern League, which later went on to win general elections in the spring. 

In August the new center-right government changed Italy’s bankruptcy laws to allow Alitalia’s flight operations to be spun off and sold and encouraged the creation of CAI, which was specifically set up to buy Alitalia and keep it ”Italian”. 

The ‘old’ Alitalia’s remaining assets will be sold or liquidated, including its debts of over two billion euros. Should the partnership take place, Air France-KLM will be the majority stockholder in Alitalia but will not be able to buy the rest of the Airline for a five-year period due to a lock-up clause in the CAI statue. 

However, it can increase its stake in the event of a rights issue to recapitalize the airline. 

Alitalia will start dumping upto 54 aircraft in its fleet as well.





Kingfisher cancels Hong Kong and Singapore launch

7 01 2009

 Kingfisher is cancelling planned launch on the Mumbai – Hong Kong and Mumbai – Singapore route for this month. These flights are closed for sale and not showing in Kingfisher’s inventories from GDS direct access. Sources have confirmed that the launch has been pushed back by 4 weeks according to initial estimates. 

More updates to follow.





Kingfisher Red to soon touch S-E Asian skies

7 01 2009

Vijay Mallya’s Kingfisher Airlines will face-off with Asia’s budget airline pioneer Tony Fernandes-led AirAsia in South-East Asian skies. 
India’s beer-to-airline billionaire is mulling introduction of his value offering, Kingfisher Red, on S-E Asian routes, even as AirAsia kicked off operations to India—flying into Trichy from its base in Kuala Lumpur. 

Sources said Kingfisher Red, formerly Air Deccan, was planning to fly on Chennai-Kuala Lumpur route, but is yet to apply to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation. It is believed that Kingfisher Red is charting a distinct strategy on international flights, and is seen evaluating several sectors connecting India to S-E Asia and M-E. 

Meanwhile, Tony Fernandes, who is also a personal friend of Mr Mallya, is eyeing aggressive expansion in the Indian market. The Malaysian airline tycoon also plans to fly to Chennai, along with other destinations like Madurai, Cochin and Coimbatore in the next one-and-a-half years. AirAsia-X, the long haul subsidiary of AirAsia, plans to connect New Delhi, Bombay, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Kolkata subsequently. Speculation has also been gaining ground that Mr Fernandes could be interested in buying equity stake in Indian carriers once the government permission falls in place. 

According to the industry sources, AirAsia’s flights for the Trichy-Kuala Lumpur route have been completely booked till May. The airline started its daily direct flights for this route from December 1 2008. “Tamil Nadu is historically linked with Malaysia and people here are finding the discounted fare offered by AirAsia as a good opportunity to travel to the port city,” said Travel Tours marketing vice-president Ashwin Narayanan.





Kingfisher To Start Flights India – Barcelona soon

7 01 2009

The Indian company Kingfisher, owned by billionaire Vijay Mallya, the Spanish government has announced its intention to launch “an immediate”  direct route, nonstop between India and Barcelona, the first to unite the country with Spain.

The information was gathered after a close door meeting at the Taj Mahal hotel in Bombay between Indian entrepreneurs and senior representatives of the Spanish government. 

Kingfisher is a leading private airline in the country, along with Jet Airways. According to government sources, the company has not decided from which of Indian airports operate the route from, Bombay or New Delhi, but have confirmed that the destination in Spain will be the Catalan capital. 

The existence of a direct connection between Spain and India would facilitate trade relations between the two countries, one of the objectives of the trip by the Spanish group led by Vice President Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega.





Kingfisher launches Dubai flights from Bangalore (Bengaluru) BLR-DXB

6 01 2009

Kingfisher Airlines will launch its Bengaluru(Bangalore)- Dubai flights starting March 1.

IT 45 BLR D 1940 DXB A 2215 A320 
IT 46 DXB D 2330 BLR A 0445 A320 

Tickets can be booked through their website. The fare for March is INR 20319 including taxes.





Dusselldorf airport Closed Due To Heavy Snowfall

5 01 2009

Dusseldorf airport is currently closed due to heavy snowfall. According to the airport, the airport can’t keep up with the snowfall in order to keep taxiways and runways free of snow. They expect to re-open later this day, but cancellations and heavy delays are already underway.





Kingfisher launches Mumbai-London daily flight

5 01 2009

kingfisher_airlinesExpanding its overseas operations, Vijay Mallya-run private air-carrier Kingfisher Airlines launched its daily non-stop Mumbai-London flight today at Mumbai Airport. Mumbai-London is the airline’s second overseas route after its Bangalore-London flight was launched in September last year. 

The airline has deployed a brand new Airbus 330-200 aircraft, configured in two classes, Kingfisher First and Kingfisher Class. 

The Mumbai-London flight will take off from Mumbai at 1.50 pm (IST) and arrive at Heathrow’s Terminal 4 at 5.55 pm (GMT), the spokesperson said. 

The return flight from London will leave at 8.30 pm (GMT) and arrive at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Terminal the next day at 11 am (IST), he said. 

Kingfisher has also plans to launch Mumbai-Hong Kong operations from January 12 and the Mumbai-Singapore flight from January 16. 

Kingfisher flights from Bangalore and Chennai for Sri Lanka capital Colombo will start from January 19.