Written by Charles Miller,
a director of the Alliance of Residents Concerning O’Hare
Here
some updates to the report, AVIATION INDUSTRY CONFIRMS OUR FORECASTS, from
Aviation Week & Space Technology of June 14th and 21st.
Again the magazine will be identified as "AW."
From
AW, July 12th, is a report of a new service, Ozark Airlines, to fly 32 seat
Fairchild Aerospace 328JETs three times daily from Columbia, MO to Chicago’s
Midway Airport and twice daily to Dallas’s Love Airport. At this time
Fairchild has 400 aircraft on order.
AW,
July 19th, reports on Atlantic Coast Airlines fast growth with firm orders for
55 Fairchild 328JET and 428JET models, with options for 55 more in order to
replace turboprop equipment and to open new markets. It now operates 20 Canadair
RJ models, with orders for 23 more.
The
same issue continues with cheering news for Paris’s Charles de Gaulle Airport
(CDG). Virgin Express, which already has a hub in Brussels will make CDG a new
hub. (An acquaintance of mine, from France, reports that CDG is a big source of
irritation to local people there.) And Virgin Atlantic plans a new service
London - O’Hare and hopes to begin service Shanghai - Los Angeles.
Dieter
Kirchner of Lufthansa is quoted again (see also the report cited above) about
smaller jets [than 747s, etc.]. He suggests that Boeing 767-300s with advanced
design wings could operate on 14 - 15 transpacific routes. This means, of
course, more flights.
All
Nippon Airways (ANA), 6th in size per number of passengers carried has one of
the world’s largest fleets with 144 planes. ANA which now flies to JFK, LAX
and Dulles, will add, thanks to a new bi-lateral U.S. - Japan agreement, service
to O’Hare, Honolulu and San Francisco.
Also
reported: A market analysis by the TEAL Group [I’m not acquainted with it]
forecasts production of 4887 new business jets in the next 10 years. Current
numbers: 7015 business jets and 6004 turboprops, two thirds of which are based
in North America.
As
was our first, and lengthy, digest from AW, this is from AReCO.
To
be continued with information from AW’s August 2nd issue.