Aviation Daily

By Victoria Moores
The Danish government has acknowledged that Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) is in a “very serious situation,” triggering the state to agree to a debt-to-equity conversion and a possible capital injection.
Airlines & Lessors

By Chen Chuanren
Airbus and Japan’s Kansai Airports have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) aimed at exploring the use of hydrogen fuel at Kansai International Airport, Osaka International Airport and Kobe Airport.
Airports & Networks

By Alan Dron
Passengers will be willing to pay higher ticket prices to airlines that can demonstrably prove that they are acting in a sustainable manner, design guru Paul Wylde said June 13.
Sustainability

By Lee Ann Shay
The company's latest additive manufacturing facility in North Carolina will focus on creating parts instead of tooling.
MRO

By Chen Chuanren
On the eve of this year’s Aircraft Interiors Expo in Hamburg, Hong Kong’s HAECO Cabin Solutions and Germany’s Diehl Aviation have jointly introduced three cabin interior products for the narrowbody market.
Interiors & Connectivity

By David Casey
The new Armenian flag-carrier will initially serve three destinations when flights start on July 3.
Airports & Networks

By Thierry Dubois
As the war in Ukraine continues to mean the supply of titanium from Russia is uncertain, the European aerospace industry is pressing on with efforts to find replacement sources.
Manufacturing & Supply Chain

By Graham Warwick
Global aviation can reach near-zero carbon emissions by 2050, but it will require early, aggressive and sustained government intervention that triggers widespread investment in zero-carbon aircraft and fuels, concludes a report by the nonprofit International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT).
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Ben Goldstein
The Biden administration is expected to imminently lift pre-departure COVID-19 testing mandates for international arrivals, ending a pandemic-era policy that many analysts have blamed for slowing the return of international travel.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

By Helen Massy-Beresford
Airlines and airports believe that contactless technologies, in use at all stages of the air travel process from border control to onboard lavatories, are here to stay.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

By Sean Broderick
Spirit AeroSystems is delivering more Airbus A320 content than the manufacturer is currently using, helping build a buffer that will support steadily rising production rates.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Graham Warwick
Building on its involvement in a UK project that set a speed record for electric aircraft, energy storage specialist Electroflight has introduced a battery system designed to be available off the shelf for use in the early development of electric aircraft.
Emerging Technologies

Aviation Week Network Staff
Russian airlines are embarking on a new approach to rebuilding their relationships with foreign lessors after the Kremlin banned leased Western-built aircraft from being returned following the implementation of sanctions.
Airlines & Lessors

By Kurt Hofmann
An accident at an oil refinery near Vienna on June 3 is now affecting the supply of kerosene to Vienna International Airport (VIE).
Safety, Ops & Regulation

By Chen Chuanren
Changi Airport Group (CAG) is expecting a full recovery by the northern winter season beginning Oct. 30 and is planning to reopen two of the airport’s terminals.
Airports & Networks

By Joe Anselmo
A prominent aircraft lessor explains why his company’s order book has swung so far in Airbus’ favor.
Aerospace

By Lee Ann Shay
The MRO industry is reducing its environmental footprint in many ways, but needs to do even more.
Supply Chain

By Thierry Dubois
“Several airframers in commercial aviation are ready to go ahead with single-pilot operations,” says a Toulouse-based professor in an aerospace engineering course. “And they are waiting for one another to go first.”
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Alan Dron
Air travel resumed its strong recovery trend in April, despite the Russia-Ukraine war and continuing travel restrictions in China, IATA said June 9.
Airlines & Lessors

By Alan Dron
European sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) manufacturers could produce 1.83 million tons of e-kerosene in 2030, saving about 5 million tons of CO2, but it must be of the right type, according to European campaign group Transport & Environment (T&E).
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Lori Ranson
Airline industry stakeholders have banded together in objecting to the return of a mandatory baggage allowance in Brazil.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

By Alan Dron
South African regional carrier Comair filed for liquidation June 9, after its administrators failed to find the necessary funding to keep the airline going.
Airlines & Lessors

Aviation Week Network staff
While Russian aviation authorities have stopped publishing any commercial aviation statistics from March, recently released—albeit sketchy—data is showing a serious drop in domestic air service.
Airlines & Lessors

By Kurt Hofmann
Airlines serving destinations in Hungary are decrying the imposition of a new passenger departure tax to be imposed by the Hungarian government beginning July 1.
Safety, Ops & Regulation

By Adrian Schofield
Hawaiian Airlines is partnering with a Hawaii-based energy supply company to investigate the production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) locally.
Airlines & Lessors