Air New Zealand Recovery Is Well Underway

Air New Zealand reports that its recovery is well underway, with the airline announcing statutory earnings before taxation of NZ$299 million and revenue of NZ$3.1 billion for the six months ending December 31, 2022.  Following three years of Covid-related losses, Air New Zealand said its interim result reflects sustained demand strength, particularly across the summer …

Emirates Recycles 500,000kgs Of Cabin Waste

Emirates reusable onboard amenity kits Emirates’ Premium Economy and Economy Class range of amenity kits are complimentary for customers on long-haul flights, and feature designs that represent the four essential elements of nature – fire, water, earth, and air. The pouches are reusable and made from washable kraft paper with bespoke art printed in non-toxic …

Norse Atlantic Airways – The Cautious Viking

During Covid, Norwegian had to cease long-haul operations entirely in 2021, as it needed to shrink dramatically in order to save itself during the pandemic. Today Norwegian is a European low-cost carrier again, flying solely Boeing 737s. But Norwegian’s pain was Bjørn Tore Larsen’s gain: “We emerged from the pandemic, as Norwegian and many other …

AirlineRatings.com Expands On Social Media

AirlineRatings.com is delighted to announce that you can reach us on a variety of social media channels for the very latest news and aviation entertainment. As well as our twice-weekly newsletter which you can subscribe to here you can also find us on: Facebook Instagram Twitter TikTok Airlineratings.com was developed to provide everyone in the world …

Air NZ Adds Stretch To Economy

Air NZ is delivering more legroom to economy travel with the airline introducing Economy Stretch, now available to book on the airline’s Los Angeles route for travel from February 27, 2023. Subscribe to the Airlineratings.com newsletter to get the relevant news first Recognising one size doesn’t fit all, customers flying the Auckland – Los Angeles …

GT’s Radar Slams Ethiopian Crash Report

This week GT’s Radar slams the Ethiopian crash report into March 2019 loss of a Boeing 737 MAX, which solely blames Boeing for the tragedy. GT’s Radar also highlights that the report ignores the fact the crew ignored basic procedures that would have recovered the plane both before – and after MCAS kicked in. Subscribe …