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EgyptAir

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EgyptAir
IATA
MS
ICAO
MSR
Callsign
EGYPTAIR
Founded1932 (as Misr Airwork)
HubsCairo International Airport
Focus citiesEl Nouzha Airport
Hurghada International Airport
Sharm el-Sheikh International Airport
Luxor International Airport
Frequent flyer programEgyptAir Plus
AllianceArabesk (Arab Air Carriers Organization)
Star Alliance (Joining 2008)
Fleet size49 (+19 on order +9 on option)
Destinations70
Parent companyEgyptAir Holding Company
HeadquartersCairo, Egypt
Key peopleCaptain Sherif Saad Eldin Galal (Chairman)
Website: http://www.egyptair.com.eg

EgyptAir Airlines Company (IATA Code: MS[1]), operating as EgyptAir (Arabic: مصر للطيران, Misr Lel-Tayaran) is the Cairo-based national airline of Egypt. Wholly owned by the Egyptian government, it operates scheduled services to 70 destinations in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the Far East, the USA, and Canada, as well as running a domestic operation. Its main base is Cairo International Airport. EgyptAir is a member of the Arab Air Carriers Organization. EgyptAir is Africa's second-largest airline and is a future member of the Star Alliance. The airline celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2007.

Contents

History

Egyptair was established on 7 June 1932 and started operations in July 1933 using a Spartan Cruiser on the Cairo-Alexandria route. The plane could only seat 4 (including a pilot and co-pilot). It was founded in association with the Airwork Company under the name of Misr Airwork. In 1935 12 De Havilland aircraft were added to the fleet. During the Second World War the Egyptian government took charge of the airline and its name was changed to Misr Air in 1949. In January 1961 Misr Air joined Syrian Airways to form United Arab Airlines (UAA) as a result of new political links between Egypt and Syria, but this accord was shortlived, lasting only 10 years. It retained the name for a time until it changed to EgyptAir in October 1971[2]. EgyptAir was the first airline in the Middle East to operate jetliners[3]. In 2002, EgyptAir became a Holding Company with nine subsidiaries to date.

Egyptair Airbus A330-200 taking off. The main and nose undercarriage doors are closing.
Egyptair Airbus A330-200 taking off. The main and nose undercarriage doors are closing.

Operations

EgyptAir is a state owned company with special legislation permitting the management to operate as if the company were privately owned without any interference from the government. The company is self-financing without any financial backing by the Egyptian government. The airline reported a profit of £EGP303 million in 2003/2004, £EGP443 million in 2004/2005 and £EGP485million in 2005/2006. The airline's financial year is from July to June. [4] EgyptAir wholly owns EgyptAir Express and Air Sinai. The airline also has stakes in Air Cairo (40%) and Smart Aviation Company (20%). It has 20,734 employees (at March 2007)[2]. In 2006/2007, Egyptair's passenger traffic increased by 12% to 6.5 million passengers. [1] In 2006 Skytrax rated EgyptAir a 3 Star Quality Certified Airline. In June 2007 the airline launched its new regional subsidiary called EgyptAir Express with a fleet of new Embraer E-170s. The new subsidiary connects Cairo to the domestic airports of Sharm El-Sheikh, Hurghada, Luxor, Aswan, Marsa Alam, Abu Simbel and Alexandria in addition to regional international services to complement the parent company's operations. A further six Embraers are also held on option and are expected to be converted to firm orders in early 2008 (either Embraer E-190 or Embraer E-195). On the 16th of October 2007 the Chief Executive Board of Star Alliance voted to accept EgyptAir as a future member. The airline has forged commercial and cooperative agreements with several members of Star Alliance includng Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Thai Airways International, Swiss International Airlines, South African Airways, TAP Portugal, Turkish Airlines and bmi. Assimilation into the alliance is expected in 2008. The carrier is also a founding member of Arabesk. In 2008 the airline's operations at its hub airport, Cairo International, will get a major overhaul as the new Terminal 3 is inaugurated. The airline will transfer all its operations (international and domestic) to the terminal which will more than double the airport's capacity. In order to implement the Star Alliance “Move under one Roof” concept at Cairo Airport, all Star Alliance member carriers flying to Cairo will move to the new Terminal 3. Talks to this effect are already underway with the airport authorities in order to ensure the creation of another hub with an optimal customer experience.

EgyptAir Holding Company

Egypt Air Airbus A300-600R
Egypt Air Airbus A300-600R

The EgyptAir Holding Company was created in 2002 with 7 companies (2 were added at later dates):

  • EgyptAir Airlines
  • EgyptAir Maintenance & Engineering (EASA Part 145 Certified)
  • EgyptAir Ground Services
  • EgyptAir Cargo
  • EgyptAir Inflight Services
  • EgyptAir Tourism & Duty Free Shops
  • EgyptAir Medical Services
  • EgyptAir Supplementary Industries Company (formed in 2006)
  • EgyptAir Express (launched in June 2007)

Subsidiaries

The airline also has stakes in:

Destinations

See full article: EgyptAir destinations (last update: January 2008)

Airbus A330-200 landing.

Fleet

EgyptAir logo on engine of Airbus A330 aircraft.
EgyptAir logo on engine of Airbus A330 aircraft.

The EgyptAir fleet consists of the following aircraft as of January 2008[5]:

EgyptAir Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers Notes
Airbus A300B4-203F 2 Operating for Egyptair Cargo
Airbus A300-600RF 2 Operating for Egyptair Cargo
Airbus A320-200 12 139 (16/123)
145 (10/135)
Airbus A321-200 4 185 (10/175)
Airbus A330-200 7
(5 orders)
(3 options)
268 (24/244) Entry into service: 2011/2012
Airbus A340-200 3 260 (12/24/224)
Boeing 737-500 4 104 (8/96) Including 1 operating 'Air Sinai' flights
Boeing 737-800 4
(8 orders)
154 (16/138) All business class seats equipped with AVOD
Boeing 777-200ER 5 319 (12/21/286)
Boeing 777-300ER (6 orders) Entry into service: 2010. On lease from GECAS
Embraer 170 6
(6 options)
76 (76) Operating for EgyptAir Express

EgyptAir operates one of the industry's youngest airplane fleets, [6] with an average age of 7.6 years.

Codeshare agreements

EgyptAir has codeshare agreements with the following airlines[7]:

Incidents and accidents

Fatal events include:

References

  1. ^ EgyptAir (MS) Airline Information.
  2. ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-04-03, p. 76. 
  3. ^ Amirah Ibrahim (2007-10-24). Egypt in the sky with diamonds. Al-Ahram. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  4. ^ NTSB Group Chairman's Factual Report, January 18, 2000
  5. ^ EgyptAir - Details and Fleet History. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  6. ^ Boeing
  7. ^ EgyptAir Code Share Partners (2007-1). Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  8. ^ Egyptair disasters. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  9. ^ Accident Photo: EgyptAir 864. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  10. ^ 1985: Commandos storm hijacked plane. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  11. ^ EgyptAir Flight 990 Accident Information (2007-09-07). Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
  12. ^ Flight Safety Australia July/August 2002 - Globewatch. Civil Aviation Safety Authority. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.

External links


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Copyrights
EgyptAir from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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