An
airline provides
air
transport services for
passengers or
freight, generally with a recognized
operating certificate or license. Airlines
lease or own their
aircraft
with which to supply these services and may form
partnerships or
alliances with other airlines for mutual
benefit.
Airlines vary from those with a single airplane carrying mail or
cargo, through full-service international airlines operating
hundreds of airplanes. Airline services can be categorized as being
intercontinental, intra continental, domestic, or international and
may be operated as scheduled services or charters.
History
The first airlines
Failed attempt at an airline before DELAG
DELAG,
Deutsche
Luftschiffahrts-Aktiengesellschaft was the
world's first airline. It was
founded on November 16, 1909 with government assistance, and
operated airships manufactured by The
Zeppelin
Corporation.
Its headquarters were in Frankfurt
. (Note: Americans, such as
Rufus Porter and
Frederick Marriott, attempted to start
airlines in the mid-19th century, focusing on the New
York–California route. Those attempts foundered due to such mishaps
as the aircraft catching fire and the aircraft being ripped apart
by spectators.) The five
oldest non-dirigible airlines
that still exist are Australia's
Qantas,
Netherlands'
KLM, Colombia's
Avianca, Czech Republic's
Czech Airlines and Mexico's
Mexicana. KLM first flew in May 1920 while Qantas
(for the Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Limited)
was founded in Queensland, Australia in late 1920.
U.S. airline industry
Early development
Tony Jannus conducted the United States'
scheduled commercial airline flight on 1 January 1914 for the Saint
Petersburg-routes,
Braniff Airways,
American Airlines,
Delta Air Lines,
United Airlines (originally a division of
Boeing),
Trans World Airlines,
Northwest Airlines, and
Eastern Air Lines, to name a few. Service
during the early 1920s was sporadic: most airlines at the time were
focused on
carrying bags of mail. In
1925, however, the
Ford Motor
Company bought out the
Stout
Aircraft Company and began construction of the all-metal
Ford Trimotor, which became the first
successful American airliner. With a 12-passenger capacity, the
Trimotor made passenger service potentially profitable. Air service
was seen as a supplement to
rail
service in the American transportation network.
At the
same time, Juan Trippe began a crusade
to create an air network that would link America to the world, and
he achieved this goal through his airline, Pan American World Airways, with
a fleet of flying boats that linked Los
Angeles
to Shanghai and Boston
to London
. Pan
Am and Northwest Airways (which began flights to Canada in the
1920s) were the only U.S. airlines to go international before the
1940s.
With the introduction of the
Boeing 247
and
Douglas DC-3 in the 1930s, the U.S.
airline industry was generally profitable, even during the
Great Depression. This trend continued
until the beginning of
World War
II.
Development since 1945
As governments met to set the standards and scope for an emergent
civil air industry toward the end of the war, the U.S. took a
position of maximum operating freedom; U.S. airline companies were
not as hard-hit as European and the few Asian ones had been. This
preference for "open skies" operating regimes continues, within
limitations, to this day.
World War II, like World War I, brought new life to the airline
industry. Many airlines in the Allied countries were flush from
lease contracts to the military, and foresaw a future explosive
demand for civil air transport, for both passengers and cargo. They
were eager to invest in the newly emerging flagships of air travel
such as the
Boeing
Stratocruiser,
Lockheed
Constellation, and
Douglas DC-6.
Most of these new aircraft were based on American bombers such as
the
B-29, which had spearheaded research into
new technologies such as
pressurization. Most offered increased
efficiency from both added speed and greater payload.
In the
1950s, the De Havilland Comet,
Boeing 707, Douglas DC-8, and Sud Aviation Caravelle became the
first flagships of the Jet Age in the West, while the Soviet Union
bloc had Tupolev
Tu-104 and Tupolev Tu-124 in the
fleets of state-owned carriers such as Czechoslovak ČSA, Soviet Aeroflot and
East-German Interflug. The
Vickers Viscount and
Lockheed L-188 Electra inaugurated
turboprop transport.
The next big boost for the airlines would come in the 1970s, when
the
Boeing 747,
McDonnell Douglas DC-10, and
Lockheed L-1011 inaugurated
widebody ("jumbo jet") service, which is still the
standard in international travel. The
Tupolev Tu-144 and its Western counterpart,
Concorde, made supersonic travel a reality.
Concorde first flew in 1969 and operated through 2003. In 1972,
Airbus began producing Europe's most
commercially successful line of airliners to date. The added
efficiencies for these aircraft were often not in speed, but in
passenger capacity, payload, and range. Airbus also features modern
electronic cockpits that were common across their aircraft to
enable pilots to fly multiple models with minimal
cross-training.
1978's U.S.
airline industry
deregulation lowered barriers for new airlines just as a
downturn occurred. New start-ups entered during the downturn,
during which time they found aircraft and funding, contracted
hangar and maintenance services, trained new employees, and
recruited laid off staff from other airlines.
As the business cycle returned to normalcy, major airlines
dominated their routes through aggressive pricing and additional
capacity offerings, often swamping new startups. Only
America West Airlines (which has since
merged with US Airways) remained a significant survivor from this
new entrant era, as dozens, even hundreds, have gone under.
In many ways, the biggest winner in the deregulated environment was
the air passenger. Indeed, the U.S. witnessed an explosive growth
in demand for air travel, as many millions who had never or rarely
flown before became regular fliers, even joining
frequent flyer loyalty programs and receiving
free flights and other benefits from their flying. New services and
higher frequencies meant that business fliers could fly to another
city, do business, and return the same day, for almost any point in
the country. Air travel's advantages put intercity bus lines under
pressure, and most have withered away.
By the 1980s, almost half of the total flying in the world took
place in the U.S., and today the domestic industry operates over
10,000 daily departures nationwide.
Toward the end of the century, a new style of
low cost airline emerged, offering a
no-frills product at a lower price.
Southwest Airlines
, JetBlue, AirTran Airways, Skybus Airlines and other low-cost carriers
began to represent a serious challenge to the so-called "legacy
airlines", as did their low-cost counterparts in many other
countries. Their commercial viability represented a serious
competitive threat to the legacy carriers. However, of these,
ATA and Skybus have since ceased
operations.
Thus the last 50 years of the airline industry have varied from
reasonably profitable, to devastatingly depressed. As the first
major market to deregulate the industry in 1978, U.S. airlines have
experienced more turbulence than almost any other country or
region. Today,
American Airlines
is the only U.S.
legacy carrier to
survive bankruptcy-free.
The Airline “Bailout”
Congress passed the
Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization
Act (P.L. 107-42) in response to a severe liquidity crisis
facing the industry in the aftermath of the
September 11th terrorist attacks. Congress
sought to compensate carriers for both the cost of the four-day
federal shutdown of the airlines and the incremental losses
incurred through December 31, 2001 as a result of the terrorist
attacks. Congress expressly sought to preserve a viable, safe, and
efficient air transportation system.
In recognition of the essential national economic role of a healthy
aviation system, Congress authorized partial compensation of up to
$5 billion in cash subject to review by the
Department of Transportation
and up to $10 billion in loan guarantees subject to review by a
newly created
Air
Transportation Stabilization Board (ATSB). The applications to
DOT for reimbursements were subjected to rigorous multi-year
reviews not only by DOT program personnel but also by the
Government Accountability
Office and the DOT Inspector General.
Ultimately, the federal government provided $4.6 billion in
one-time, subject-to-income-tax cash reimbursements to 427 U.S. air
carriers, including numerous charter and cargo carriers. (Passenger
carriers operating scheduled service received approximately $4
billion, subject to tax.) In addition, the ATSB approved loan
guarantees to six airlines totaling approximately $1.6 billion.
Data from
the Treasury
Department
show that taxpayers eventually recouped the $1.6
billion and a profit of $339 million from the fees, interest and
stock associated with loan guarantees.
European airline industry
The first
countries in Europe to embrace air transport were Finland
, France,
Germany, the Netherlands
and the United Kingdom.KLM, the oldest carrier still operating under its
original name, was founded in 1919.
The first flight (operated on behalf of
KLM by Aircraft Transport
and Travel) transported two English passengers to Schiphol
, Amsterdam
from London
in
1920. Like other major European airlines of the
time (see France and the UK below), KLM's early growth depended
heavily on the needs to service links with far-flung colonial
possessions (Dutch
Indies
). It is only after the loss of the
Dutch Empire that
KLM found
itself based at a small country with few potential passengers,
depending heavily on transfer traffic, and was one of the first to
introduce the hub-system to facilitate easy connections.
France
began an air mail service to Morocco
in 1919 that
was bought out in 1927, renamed Aéropostale, and injected with
capital to become a major international carrier. In 1933,
Aéropostale went
bankrupt, was
nationalized and merged with several other airlines into what
became
Air France.
In
Finland, the charter establishing Aero O/Y (now Finnair, one of the oldest still-operating airlines
in the world) was signed in the city of Helsinki
on September 12, 1923. Junkers F 13 D-335 became the first aircraft of
the company, when Aero took delivery of it on March 14, 1924.
The first
flight was between Helsinki and Tallinn
, capital of Estonia
, and it took place on March 20, 1924, one week
later.
Germany's
Lufthansa
began in 1926. Lufthansa, unlike most other
airlines at the time, became a major investor in airlines outside
of Europe, providing capital to
Varig and
Avianca. German airliners built by
Junkers,
Dornier, and
Fokker were
the most advanced in the world at the time.
The peak of German
air travel came in the mid-1930s, when Nazi
propaganda ministers approved the start of commercial zeppelin service: the big airships were a symbol of industrial might, but the
fact that they used flammable hydrogen gas raised safety concerns
that culminated with the Hindenburg disaster
of 1937. The reason they used
hydrogen instead of the not-flammable
helium gas was because the United States was the only
source of helium and at the time the Americans refused to deliver
helium to Germany.
The
British
company Aircraft Transport and Travel
commenced a London to Paris service on August 25, 1919, this was
the world's first regular international flight. The United
Kingdom's
flag carrier during this
period was
Imperial Airways, which
became
BOAC (British Overseas Airways Co.) in
1939.
Imperial Airways used huge Handley-Page biplanes
for routes between London
, the
Middle East, and India: images of
Imperial aircraft in the middle of the Rub'al Khali
, being maintained by Bedouins, are among the most famous pictures from
the heyday of the British
Empire.
In
Soviet
Union
the Chief Administration of the Civil Air Fleet was
established in 1921. One of its first acts was to help found
Deutsch-Russische Luftverkehrs A.G. (Deruluft), a German-Russian
joint venture to provide air transport from Russia to the West.
Domestic air service began around the same time, when Dobrolyot
started operations on 15 July 1923 between Moscow and Nizhni
Novgorod. Since 1932 all operations had been carried under the name
Aeroflot. By the end of the 1930s Aeroflot
had become the world's largest airline, employing more than 4,000
pilots and 60,000 other service personnel and operating around
3,000 aircraft (of which 75% were considered obsolete by its own
standards). During the Soviet era Aeroflot was synonymous with
Russian civil aviation, as it was the only air carrier. It became
the first airline in the world to operate sustained regular jet
services on 15 September 1956 with the
Tupolev Tu-104.
Deregulation
Deregulation of the
European Union
airspace in the early 1990s has had substantial effect on structure
of the industry there. The shift towards 'budget' airlines on
shorter routes has been significant. Airlines such as
EasyJet and
Ryanair have
grown at the expense of the traditional national airlines.
There has also been a trend for these national airlines themselves
to be privatised such as has occurred for
Aer
Lingus (Ireland) and
British
Airways. Other national airlines, including Italy's
Alitalia, have suffered - particularly with the
rapid increase of oil prices in early 2008.
Asian airline industry
India
was one of
the first countries to embrace civil aviation. One of the
first Asian airline companies was
Air
India, which had its beginning as
Tata
Airlines in 1932, a division of Tata Sons Ltd. (now
Tata Group). The airline was founded by India's
leading industrialist,
JRD Tata. On October
15, 1932, J. R. D.
Tata himself flew a single engined De Havilland Puss Moth carrying air
mail (postal mail of Imperial
Airways) from Karachi
to Bombay
via Ahmedabad
. The aircraft continued to Madras
via Bellary
piloted by Royal Air Force pilot
Nevill Vincent. Tata Airlines was also one of the world's
first major airlines which began its operations without any support
from the Government.
Philippine Airlines was founded
on February 26, 1941, making it one of Asia's oldest carriers and
also the oldest operating under its current name. The airline was
started by a group of businessmen led by Andres Soriano, hailed as
one of the Philippines' leading industrialists at the time.
The
airline’s first flight was made on March 15, 1941 with a single
Beech Model 18 NPC-54 aircraft, which
started its daily services between Manila
(from
Nielson
Field
) and Baguio
, later to
expand with larger aircraft such as the DC-3 and Vickers
Viscount.
With the outbreak of
World War II, the
airline presence in Asia came to a relative halt, with many new
flag carriers donating their aircraft for military aid and other
uses. Following the end of the war in 1945, regular commercial
service was restored in India and Tata Airlines became a public
limited company on July 29, 1946 under the name Air India. After
the
independence of India, 49%
of the airline was acquired by the
Government of India. In return, the
airline was granted status to operate international services from
India as the designated flag carrier under the name
Air India International.
On July
31, 1946, a chartered Philippine Airlines (PAL) DC-4 ferried 40 American servicemen to Oakland
, California
from Nielson Airport in Makati City
with stops in Guam
, Wake Island
, Johnston
Atoll
and Honolulu
, Hawaii
, making PAL
the first Asian airline to cross the Pacific Ocean
. A regular service between Manila
and San Francisco
was started in December. It was during this
year that the airline was designated as the flag carrier of
Philippines.
During the era of
decolonization,
newly-born Asian countries started to embrace air transport. Among
the first Asian carriers during the era were
Cathay Pacific (founded in September 1946),
Orient Airways (later
Pakistan International
Airlines; founded in October 1946), Malayan Airlines (later
Singapore and
Malaysian Airlines; founded in 1947),
Garuda Indonesia in 1949,
Japan Airlines in 1951, and
Korean Air in 1962.
Latin American airline industry
Along the
first countries to have regular airlines in Latin America were
Colombia with Avianca, Chile
with
LAN Chile (today LAN Airlines), Dominican Republic
with Air Dominicana,
Mexico with Mexicana de
Aviación, Brazil with Varig, and TACA as a brand of several airlines of Central
American countries (Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Guatemala
and Nicaragua). All the previous airlines started regular
operations before World War II.
The air travel market has evolved rapidly over recent years in
Latin America. Some industry
estimations over 2000 new aircraft will begin service over the next
five years in this region.
These airlines serve domestic flights within their countries, as
well as connections within Latin America and also overseas flights
to North America, Europe, Australia, Africa and Asia.
Just one
airline, LAN (Latin American Networks) has international
subsidiaries: Chile
as the
central operation along with Peru, Ecuador, Argentina and some
operations in the Dominican Republic.
The main
hubs in Latin America are Sao Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro
in Brazil, Bogota
in
Colombia, Caracas
in Venezuela, Guayaquil
in Ecuador, Lima
in Peru,
Mexico
City
in Mexico, Buenos Aires
in Argentina, Santiago
in Chile and Santo Domingo
in the Dominican Republic.
Regulatory considerations
National
Many countries have
national
airlines that the government owns and operates. Fully private
airlines are subject to a great deal of government regulation for
economic, political, and safety concerns. For instance, the
government often intervenes to halt airline labor actions in order
to protect the free flow of people, communications, and goods
between different regions without compromising safety.
The United States, Australia, and to a lesser extent Brazil,
Mexico, the United Kingdom and Japan have "deregulated" their
airlines. In the past, these governments dictated airfares, route
networks, and other operational requirements for each airline.
Since deregulation, airlines have been largely free to negotiate
their own operating arrangements with different airports, enter and
exit routes easily, and to levy airfares and supply flights
according to market demand.
The entry barriers for new airlines are lower in a deregulated
market, and so the U.S. has seen hundreds of airlines start up
(sometimes for only a brief operating period). This has produced
far greater competition than before deregulation in most markets,
and average fares tend to drop 20% or more. The added competition,
together with pricing freedom, means that new entrants often take
market share with highly reduced rates that, to a limited degree,
full service airlines must match. This is a major constraint on
profitability for established carriers, which tend to have a higher
cost base.
As a result, profitability in a deregulated market is uneven for
most airlines. These forces have caused some major airlines to go
out of business, in addition to most of the poorly established new
entrants.
International
Groups
such as the International Civil Aviation
Organization
establish worldwide standards for safety and other
vital concerns. Most international air traffic is regulated
by bilateral agreements between countries, which designate specific
carriers to operate on specific routes. The model of such an
agreement was the
Bermuda
Agreement between the US and UK following World War II, which
designated airports to be used for transatlantic flights and gave
each government the authority to nominate carriers to operate
routes.
Bilateral agreements are based on the "
freedoms of the air," a group of
generalized traffic rights ranging from the freedom to overfly a
country to the freedom to provide domestic flights within a country
(a very rarely granted right known as
cabotage). Most agreements permit airlines to fly
from their home country to designated airports in the other
country: some also extend the freedom to provide continuing service
to a third country, or to another destination in the other country
while carrying passengers from overseas.
In the 1990s, "
open skies" agreements
became more common. These agreements take many of these regulatory
powers from state governments and open up international routes to
further competition. Open skies agreements have met some criticism,
particularly within the
European
Union, whose airlines would be at a comparative disadvantage
with the United States' because of
cabotage
restrictions.
Economic considerations
Historically, air travel has survived largely through state
support, whether in the form of equity or subsidies. The airline
industry as a whole has made a cumulative loss during its 120-year
history, once the costs include subsidies for aircraft development
and airport construction.
One argument is that
positive
externalities, such as higher growth due to global mobility,
outweigh the microeconomic losses and justify continuing government
intervention. A historically high level of government intervention
in the airline industry can be seen as part of a wider political
consensus on strategic forms of transport, such as
highways and
railways, both
of which receive public funding in most parts of the world.
Profitability is likely to improve in the future as privatization
continues and more competitive low-cost carriers proliferate.
Although many countries continue to operate state-owned or
parastatal airlines, many large airlines today are privately owned
and are therefore governed by microeconomic principles in order to
maximize shareholder profit.
Ticket revenue
Airlines assign prices to their services in an attempt to maximize
profitability. The pricing of airline tickets has become
increasingly complicated over the years and is now largely
determined by computerized
yield
management systems.
Because of the complications in scheduling flights and maintaining
profitability, airlines have many loopholes that can be used by the
knowledgeable traveler. Many of these airfare secrets are becoming
more and more known to the general public, so airlines are forced
to make constant adjustments.
Most airlines use differentiated pricing, a form of
price discrimination, in order to sell
air services at varying prices simultaneously to different
segments. Factors influencing the price include the days remaining
until departure, the booked load factor, the forecast of total
demand by price point, competitive pricing in force, and variations
by day of week of departure and by time of day. Carriers often
accomplish this by dividing each cabin of the aircraft (first,
business and economy) into a number of
travel classes for pricing purposes.
A complicating factor is that of origin-destination control
("O&D control"). Someone purchasing a ticket from Melbourne to
Sydney (as an example) for AU$200 is competing with someone else
who wants to fly Melbourne to Los Angeles through Sydney on the
same flight, and who is willing to pay AU$1400. Should the airline
prefer the $1400 passenger, or the $200 passenger plus a possible
Sydney-Los Angeles passenger willing to pay $1300? Airlines have to
make hundreds of thousands of similar pricing decisions daily.
The advent of advanced computerized reservations systems in the
late 1970s, most notably
Sabre, allowed airlines to easily
perform
cost-benefit analyses
on different pricing structures, leading to almost perfect price
discrimination in some cases (that is, filling each seat on an
aircraft at the highest price that can be charged without driving
the consumer elsewhere).
The intense nature of airfare pricing has led to the term "
fare war" to describe efforts by airlines to
undercut other airlines on competitive routes. Through computers,
new airfares can be published quickly and efficiently to the
airlines' sales channels. For this purpose the airlines use the
Airline Tariff
Publishing Company (ATPCO), who distribute latest fares for
more than 500 airlines to
Computer Reservation Systems
across the world.
The extent of these pricing phenomena is strongest in "legacy"
carriers. In contrast, low fare carriers usually offer preannounced
and simplified price structure, and sometimes quote prices for each
leg of a trip separately.
Computers also allow airlines to predict, with some accuracy, how
many passengers will actually fly after making a reservation to
fly. This allows airlines to overbook their flights enough to fill
the aircraft while accounting for "no-shows," but not enough (in
most cases) to force paying passengers off the aircraft for lack of
seats. Since an average of ⅓ of all seats are flown empty ,
stimulative pricing for low demand flights coupled with
overbooking on high demand flights can help
reduce this figure. This is especially crucial during tough
economic times as airlines undertake massive cuts to ticket prices
in order to retain demand.
Operating costs
Full-service airlines have a high level of fixed and operating
costs in order to establish and maintain air services: labor, fuel,
airplanes, engines, spares and parts, IT services and networks,
airport equipment, airport handling services, sales distribution,
catering, training,
aviation
insurance and other costs. Thus all but a small percentage of
the income from ticket sales is paid out to a wide variety of
external providers or internal cost centers.
Moreover, the industry is structured so that airlines often act as
tax collectors. Airline fuel is untaxed because of a series of
treaties existing between countries. Ticket prices include a number
of fees, taxes and surcharges beyond the control of airlines.
Airlines are also responsible for enforcing government regulations.
If airlines carry passengers without proper documentation on an
international flight, they are responsible for returning them back
to the original country.
Analysis of the 1992–1996 period shows that every player in the air
transport chain is far more profitable than the airlines, who
collect and pass through fees and revenues to them from ticket
sales. While airlines as a whole earned 6% return on capital
employed (2-3.5% less than the cost of capital), airports earned
10%, catering companies 10-13%, handling companies 11-14%, aircraft
lessors 15%, aircraft manufacturers 16%, and global distribution
companies more than 30%. (Source: Spinetta, 2000, quoted in
Doganis, 2002)
In
contrast, Southwest
Airlines
has been the most profitable of airline companies since
1973.
The widespread entrance of a new breed of low cost airlines
beginning at the turn of the century has accelerated the demand
that full service carriers control costs.
Many of these low
cost companies emulate Southwest Airlines
in various respects, and like Southwest, they are
able to eke out a consistent profit throughout all phases of the
business cycle.
As a result, a
shakeout of airlines is
occurring in the U.S. and elsewhere.
United Airlines,
Continental Airlines (twice),
US Airways (twice),
Delta Air Lines, and
Northwest Airlines have all declared
Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Some argue that it
would be far better for the industry as a whole if a wave of actual
closures were to reduce the number of "undead" airlines competing
with healthy airlines while being artificially protected from
creditors via
bankruptcy law. On the
other hand, some have pointed out that the reduction in capacity
would be short lived given that there would be large quantities of
relatively new aircraft that bankruptcies would want to get rid of
and would re-enter the market either as increased fleets for the
survivors or the basis of cheap planes for new startups.
Where an airline has established an engineering base at an airport
then there may be considerable economic advantages in using that
same airport as a preferred focus (or "hub") for its scheduled
flights.
Assets and financing
Airline financing is quite complex, since airlines are highly
leveraged operations. Not only must they purchase (or lease) new
airliner bodies and engines regularly, they must make major
long-term fleet decisions with the goal of meeting the demands of
their markets while producing a fleet that is relatively economical
to operate and maintain.
Compare Southwest Airlines
and their reliance on a single airplane type (the
Boeing 737 and derivatives), with the now
defunct Eastern Air Lines which
operated 17 different aircraft types, each with varying pilot,
engine, maintenance, and support needs.
A second financial issue is that of
hedging oil and
fuel purchases, which are usually second only
to
labor in its relative cost to
the company. However, with the current high fuel prices it has
become the largest cost to an airline. While hedging instruments
can be expensive, they can easily pay for themselves many times
over in periods of increasing fuel costs, such as in the 2000–2005
period.
In view of the congestion apparent at many international
airports, the ownership of slots at certain airports
(the right to take-off or land an aircraft at a particular time of
day or night) has become a significant tradable asset for many
airlines. Clearly take-off slots at popular times of the day can be
critical in attracting the more profitable business traveler to a
given airline's flight and in establishing a competitive advantage
against a competing airline. If a particular city has two or more
airports, market forces will tend to attract the less profitable
routes, or those on which competition is weakest, to the less
congested airport, where slots are likely to be more available and
therefore cheaper. Other factors, such as surface transport
facilities and onward connections, will also affect the relative
appeal of different airports and some long distance flights may
need to operate from the one with the longest runway.
Airline partnerships
Code sharing is the most common type of
airline partnership; it involves one airline selling tickets for
another airline's flights under its own airline code.
An early example of
this was Japan Airlines' code sharing
partnership with Aeroflot in the 1960s on
flights from Tokyo
to
Moscow
: Aeroflot
operated the flights using Aeroflot aircraft, but JAL sold tickets
for the flights as if they were JAL flights. This practice
allows airlines to expand their operations, at least on paper, into
parts of the world where they cannot afford to establish bases or
purchase aircraft.
Another example was the Austrian- Sabena
partnership on the Vienna
-Brussels
-New
York
JFK route during the late '60s, using a Sabena
Boeing 707 with Austrian colors.
Since airline reservation requests are often made by city-pair
(such as "show me flights from Chicago to Düsseldorf"), an airline
who is able to code share with another airline for a variety of
routes might be able to be listed as indeed offering a
Chicago-Düsseldorf flight. The passenger is advised however, that
Airline 1 operates the flight from say Chicago to Amsterdam, and
Airline 2 operates the continuing flight (on a different airplane,
sometimes from another terminal) to Düsseldorf. Thus the primary
rationale for code sharing is to expand one's service offerings in
city-pair terms so as to increase sales.
A more recent development is the
airline alliance, which became prevalent in
the 1990s. These alliances can act as virtual mergers to get around
government restrictions. Groups of airlines such as the
Star Alliance,
Oneworld, and
SkyTeam
coordinate their passenger service programs (such as lounges and
frequent flyer programs), offer special interline tickets, and
often engage in extensive codesharing (sometimes systemwide). These
are increasingly integrated business combinations—sometimes
including cross-equity arrangements—in which products, service
standards, schedules, and airport facilities are standardized and
combined for higher efficiency. One of the first airlines to start
an alliance with another airline was
KLM, who
partnered with
Northwest
Airlines. Both airlines later entered the
SkyTeam alliance after the fusion of KLM and
Air France in 2004.
Often the companies combine IT operations, buy fuel, or purchase
airplanes as a bloc in order to achieve higher bargaining power.
However, the alliances have been most successful at purchasing
invisible supplies and services, such as fuel. Airlines usually
prefer to purchase items visible to their passengers to
differentiate themselves from local competitors. If an airline's
main domestic competitor flies Boeing airliners, then the airline
may prefer to use Airbus aircraft regardless of what the rest of
the alliance chooses.
Environmental impacts
Aircraft engines emit
noise pollution, gases and particulate
emissions, and contribute to
global
warming and
global dimming, even
though it is one of the least-polluting forms of travel in the
world.
Modern
turbofan and
turboprop engines are considerably more
fuel-efficient and less polluting than earlier models. However,
despite this, the rapid growth of
air
travel in recent years contributes to an increase in total
pollution attributable to
aviation,
offsetting some of the reductions achieved by automobiles. In the
EU greenhouse gas emissions from aviation
increased by 87% between 1990 and 2006.
CO2 emissions from the jet fuel burned per passenger on an average
3200 kilometers (1992 miles) airline flight is about 353 kilograms
(776 pounds). Loss of natural habitat potential associated with the
jet fuel burned per passenger on a 3200 kilometers (1992 miles)
airline flight is estimated to be 250 square meters (2700 square
feet).
In the context of climate change and
peak
oil, there is a debate about possible
taxation of air travel and the inclusion of
aviation in an
emissions trading
scheme, with a view to ensuring that the total
external costs of aviation are taken into
account.
The airline industry is responsible for about 11 percent of
greenhouse gases emitted by the U.S.
transportation sector.
Boeing estimates that
biofuels could reduce flight-related greenhouse-gas emissions by 60
to 80 percent. The solution would be blending algae fuels with
existing jet fuel:
Call signs
Each operator of a scheduled or charter flight uses an
airline call sign when
communicating with airports or air traffic control centers. Most of
these call-signs are derived from the airline's trade name, but for
reasons of history, marketing, or the need to reduce ambiguity in
spoken English (so that pilots do not mistakenly make navigational
decisions based on instructions issued to a different aircraft),
some airlines and air forces use call-signs less obviously
connected with their trading name. For example, British Airways
uses a
Speedbird call-sign, named after the logo of its
predecessor,
BOAC, while
SkyEurope used
Relax.
Airline personnel
The various types of airline personnel include:Flight operations
personnel including flight safety personnel.
- Flight crews, responsible for the
operation of the aircraft. Flight crew members include:
- Groundcrew, responsible for
operations at airports. Ground crew members include:
- Reservation agents, usually
(but not always) at facilities outside the airport.
Airlines follow a
corporate structure
where each broad area of operations (such as maintenance, flight
operations(including flight safety),and passenger service) is
supervised by a vice president. Larger airlines often appoint vice
presidents to oversee each of theairline's hubs as well. Airlines
employ
lawyers to deal with regulatory
procedures and other administrative tasks.
Industry trends

Map of scheduled airline traffic in
2009
The pattern of ownership has gone from government owned or
supported to independent, for-profit public companies. This occurs
as regulators permit greater freedom and non-government ownership,
in steps that are usually decades apart. This pattern is not seen
for all airlines in all regions.The overall trend of demand has
been consistently increasing. In the 1950s and 1960s, annual growth
rates of 15% or more were common. Annual growth of 5-6% persisted
through the 1980s and 1990s . Growth rates are not consistent in
all regions, but countries with a de-regulated airline industry
have more competition and greater pricing freedom. This results in
lower fares and sometimes dramatic spurts in traffic growth.
The U.S.,
Australia, Canada, Japan, Brazil
, Mexico
,India and
other markets exhibit this trend. The industry has been
observed to be cyclical in its financial performance. Four or five
years of poor earnings precede five or six years of improvement.
But profitability even in the good years is generally low, in the
range of 2-3% net profit after interest and tax. In times of
profit, airlines lease new generations of airplanes and upgrade
services in response to higher demand. Since 1980, the industry has
not earned back the cost of capital during the best of times.
Conversely, in bad times losses can be dramatically worse.
Warren Buffett once said that despite all the
money that has been invested in all airlines, the net profit is
less than zero. He believes it is one of the hardest businesses to
manage.
As in many mature industries, consolidation is a trend. Airline
groupings may consist of limited bilateral partnerships, long-term,
multi-faceted alliances between carriers, equity arrangements,
mergers, or
takeovers. Since governments often restrict
ownership and merger between companies in different countries, most
consolidation takes place within a country. In the U.S., over 200
airlines have merged, been taken over, or gone out of business
since deregulation in 1978. Many international airline managers are
lobbying their governments to permit greater consolidation to
achieve higher economy and efficiency.
See also
Airline related lists
External links
Notes
- Scheduled Freight Tonne - Kilometres
- Scheduled Passengers Carried
- The DC-3 Genesis of The Legend
-
http://www.centennialofflight.gov/essay/Commercial_Aviation/atlantic_route/Tran4.htm
-
http://www.centennialofflight.gov/essay/Commercial_Aviation/Bankruptcy/Tran9.htm
-
http://ostpxweb.ost.dot.gov/aviation/Data/stabilizationact.pdf
- http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d04725r.pdf
-
http://www.oig.dot.gov/StreamFile?file=/data/pdfdocs/aa20011024.pdf
-
http://www.oig.dot.gov/StreamFile?file=/data/pdfdocs/cr2003092.pdf
- http://www.dot.gov/affairs/carrierpayments.htm
- http://www.treas.gov/offices/domestic-finance/atsb/
- AN INTORDUCTION TO TRAVEL AND TOURISM By PRAN NATH
SETH, SUSHMA SETH BHAT
- International Environmental Law By Bhatt
- Top 10 Airlines in Latin America By Arlene
Fleming
-
http://www.singaporeair.com/mediacentre/pacontent/news/NE_1608.jsp
- Wings of Desire, Guardian, Thursday February
23, 2006
- Airlines and the canine features of unprofitable
industries Financial Times, September 27, 2005
-
http://news.cheapflights.co.uk/flights/2009/05/recession-prompts-surge-in-cheap-flights.html
-
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/transport/article5037731.ece
- Including Aviation into the EU ETS: Impact on EU
allowance prices ICF Consulting for DEFRA February 2006
- A Promising Oil Alternative: Algae Energy -
washingtonpost.com
- Boeing/aerospace | To go green in jet fuel, Boeing
looks at algae | Seattle Times Newspaper
References
- "A history of the world's airlines", R.E.G. Davies, Oxford U.P, 1964
- "The airline encyclopedia, 1909–2000.” Myron J. Smith,
Scarecrow Press, 2002
- "Flying Off Course: The Economics of International Airlines,"
3rd edition. Rigas Doganis, Routledge, New York, 2002.
- "The Airline Business in the 21st Century." Rigas Doganis,
Routledge, New York, 2001.