AirAsia cancels Indonesia flights
- BTN News
- Tuesday, 23 April 2024
Malaysia's AirAsia says it cancelled flights across nine airports due to the volcanic eruption of Mount Ruang in the Indonesian Sulawesi Islands.
Malaysia's AirAsia says it cancelled flights across nine airports due to the volcanic eruption of Mount Ruang in the Indonesian Sulawesi Islands.
As it makes a transition to Embraer jets, Australia's Alliance Airlines has appointed Fokker Aircraft Services to market a VIP-configured Fokker 70 that's stored at Rockhampton in Queensland.
A Which? study has confirmed what many in the travel industry already know: Legacy carrier fares that include baggage allowances, meals and some drinks can be cheaper than their budget competitors' base fares plus add-ons.
Saudi Arabia and China have signed an aviation memorandum of understanding (MoU) that includes promoting/expanding air traffic and developing and regulating frameworks for cooperation in passenger and airfreight transport.
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) of Ireland says there was a significant increase in air travel through its five main airports Dublin, Cork, Shannon, Knock and Kerry last year, recording the highest number of passengers since the CSO began tracking in 2013.
Aberdeen Airport in Scotland has introduced new scanners that mean passengers can carry more than 100ml bottles of liquid in the cabins, joining London City and Teesside airports that have had the new scanners for some time.
Cathay Pacific's budget airline HK Express will, from June 6, fly between Hong Kong and Clark International Airport, Pampanga, the Philippines four times per week.
The UK government is holding talks with the European Union about how to register UK travellers on Eurostar rail services from London to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam from later this year.
Newer planes with lower fuel consumption mean lower emissions per passenger, but those gains are being absorbed by increases in the number of flights and overall, aviation pollution figures are growing, European campaign group Transport & Environment (T&E) says.
In Australia, Qantas's decision to ask about 100 senior office staff to volunteer as airport baggage handlers has drawn a sharp response from the Transport Workers' Union (TWU), which warns of safety incidents and says the move is "likely to make airport chaos worse".
Malaysia's AirAsia says it cancelled flights across nine airports due to the volcanic eruption of Mount Ruang in the Indonesian Sulawesi Islands.
As it makes a transition to Embraer jets, Australia's Alliance Airlines has appointed Fokker Aircraft Services to market a VIP-configured Fokker 70 that's stored at Rockhampton in Queensland.
A Which? study has confirmed what many in the travel industry already know: Legacy carrier fares that include baggage allowances, meals and some drinks can be cheaper than their budget competitors' base fares plus add-ons.
Saudi Arabia and China have signed an aviation memorandum of understanding (MoU) that includes promoting/expanding air traffic and developing and regulating frameworks for cooperation in passenger and airfreight transport.
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) of Ireland says there was a significant increase in air travel through its five main airports Dublin, Cork, Shannon, Knock and Kerry last year, recording the highest number of passengers since the CSO began tracking in 2013.
Aberdeen Airport in Scotland has introduced new scanners that mean passengers can carry more than 100ml bottles of liquid in the cabins, joining London City and Teesside airports that have had the new scanners for some time.
Cathay Pacific's budget airline HK Express will, from June 6, fly between Hong Kong and Clark International Airport, Pampanga, the Philippines four times per week.
The UK government is holding talks with the European Union about how to register UK travellers on Eurostar rail services from London to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam from later this year.
Newer planes with lower fuel consumption mean lower emissions per passenger, but those gains are being absorbed by increases in the number of flights and overall, aviation pollution figures are growing, European campaign group Transport & Environment (T&E) says.
In Australia, Qantas's decision to ask about 100 senior office staff to volunteer as airport baggage handlers has drawn a sharp response from the Transport Workers' Union (TWU), which warns of safety incidents and says the move is "likely to make airport chaos worse".