BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 36 definitions for Oz.  Also try: AAR.

Asiana Airlines

Print-Friendly
About 5 pages (1,455 words)

Bookmark and Share Know this topic well? Help others and get FREE products!
Asiana Airlines
아시아나 항공
아시아나 航空
Asiana Hanggong
IATA
OZ
ICAO
AAR
Callsign
ASIANA
Founded 1988
Hubs Incheon International Airport
Gimpo International Airport
Focus cities Gimhae International Airport
Jeju International Airport
Frequent flyer program Asiana Club
Member lounge Asiana Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance
Fleet size 72 (+1 orders)
Destinations 77 incl. cargo
Parent company Kumho Asiana Group
Headquarters Seoul, South Korea
Key people Kang, Chu-Ahn (CEO)
Website: http://www.flyasiana.com

Contents

Asiana Airlines (아시아나 항공 Asiana Hanggong KRXQ: 020560) (Formerly Seoul Airlines) is an airline based in Seoul, South Korea and is one of South Korea's two major airlines, along with Korean Air.

Asiana is a member of the Star Alliance and operates services to 12 domestic destinations and 73 international destinations in 17 countries worldwide.[1] Asiana's headquarters and overseas hub is located at Incheon International Airport (near Seoul) and its domestic hub is at Gimpo International Airport.

History

Asiana was established on 17 February 1988 and started operations in December 1988 with flights to Busan. It was formed by the Kumho Asiana Group (formerly Kumho Group) as part of the South Korean government's policy to create a second flag carrier and was originally known as Seoul Air International. The South Korean government has given its approval for foreign ownership of the airline to increase from 20% to 50%. The airline is owned by private investors (30.53%), Kumho Industrial (29.51%), Kumho Petrochemical (15.05%), foreign investors (11.9%), Korea Development Bank (7.18%), others (5.83%) and employs 7,799 staff (at March 2007).[1]

New Image

In February 2006, Asiana Airlines modernised its corporate identity to harmonise with those of other divisions of its parent company the Kumho Asiana Group. The names of the travel classes have changed from First Class, Business Class, and Economy Class to First, Business, and Travel classes respectively, and the colors of the travel classes have changed to yellow, blue and red for First, Business, and Travel Class, respectively. New uniforms are also planned for the crew.[2] On 18 April 2007 Asiana was awarded a 5-star rating by Skytrax, an accolade shared only with Cathay Pacific, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines and Kingfisher Airlines.[3]

Destinations

Boeing 777-200 of Asiana Airlines in former livery
Boeing 777-200 of Asiana Airlines in former livery
Further information: Asiana Airlines destinations

Cargo

Asiana Cargo is the airline's freight division, operating 747F and 767F freighter aircraft to points in Asia, Europe and North America.

Asiana Airlines Cargo Fleet
Aircraft Total Capacity
(max.weight)
Routes Notes
Boeing 747-400F 5 International medium-long haul
Asia, Europe and North America
General Electric CF6 engines
Boeing 747-400BCF 3 International medium-long haul
Asia, Europe and North America
1 more to be added
Boeing 767-300F 1 Regional short-medium haul
China, Japan and Southeast Asia

Codeshare agreements

Asiana Airlines HL7414 in former livery in Frankfurt, Germany
Asiana Airlines HL7414 in former livery in Frankfurt, Germany

The airline has code-share agreements with the following airlines (as of October 2007): [4]

Fleet

The Asiana Airlines fleet includes the following aircraft (as of October 2007):[1]

Asiana Airlines Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers
(First*/Business*/Travel)
Routes Notes
Airbus A320-200 6 143 (8/135) International short-medium haul

China, Japan, Southeast Asia

Airbus A321-100 2 200 (200) Domestic/International short-medium haul

China, Japan, Southeast Asia

Airbus A321-200 11 177 (12/165) Domestic/International short-medium haul

China and Japan

Airbus A330-300 6 290 (30/260) International short-medium haul

Japan, China, Southeast Asia and Middle East

Boeing 737-400 7 150 (150) Domestic routes
Boeing 737-500 3 127 (127) Domestic routes
Boeing 747-400 2 378 (12/60/306) Seoul (Incheon) to New York (JFK)
General Electric CF6 engines
Boeing 747-400 Combi 3 280 (12/32/236) International long haul
High-capacity short haul

China and North America

1 being converted to Cargo
Boeing 767-300 7 260 (18/242) Domestic/International short-medium haul

Australia, Japan, China, Southeast Asia and Middle East

Boeing 777-200ER 9
(1 order)
303 (32/271) International long haul
High-capacity short haul

North America, Australia, Japan, and Europe

*First Class is offered on Boeing 747. Business Class is offered on international flights.

  • The average Asiana Airlines fleet age was 7 years old in April 2006.[5]
  • The first of four Boeing 747-400 combi to full freighter conversions has been delivered from Bedek Aviation Group, part of Israel Aerospace Industries. The second delivery will be later in 2007, with the other two conversions due for delivery in early 2009[6]
  • Asiana Airlines will return all of its leased Boeing 747-400 passenger aircraft, while it has a plan to convert three B747-400M to freighters. In order to compensate for the loss of these passenger jets, Asiana will introduce two Boeing 777-200ER aircraft and one Boeing 777-300ER aircraft. Asiana plans discussions with Boeing in September for further aircraft procurement.
  • Asiana assigns Hong Kong, Saipan and Taipei to its Southeast Asia grouping. [7][8]

Incidents and accidents

Asiana Airlines logo, 1988-2005
Asiana Airlines logo, 1988-2005

References

  1. ^ a b c "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-03-27, p. 78. 
  2. ^ Asiana Airlines new colours
  3. ^ Asiana Airlines awarded 5 Star Airline ranking 18 April 2007
  4. ^ Asiana Airlines code-share partners page 5 July 2007
  5. ^ Asiana Airlines Fleet Age
  6. ^ Flight International 20-26 March 2007
  7. ^ In-flight publications about its mileage programme.
  8. ^ 운항시간표 [1]

External links


View More Summaries on Asiana Airlines
 
Ask any question on Asiana Airlines and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Asiana Airlines from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy