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springtime in geneva
DAVID McINTOSH
Warming sunshine, trees in bloom and business jets on display. It has to be Geneva at EBACE time. See us next year, May 19-21.
The curtain is drawing down, following a banner EBACE 2014
rising tide With signs like these, hopes for a continued recovery burn deep within the hearts of business aviation fans.
by David Donald exhibitors participating–an increase of 8 percent. Booth spaces sold for the show totaled 2,276 sq m (24,500 sq ft), up 4 percent from 2013. The contiguous nature of the revised hall layout has drawn approval from exhibitors and show visitors alike.
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Safety
International
Completions
EBAA Safety Awards
ABACE Show Report
Three companies earned Platinum Awards for safety from the European Business Aviation Association (EBAA). Qualifications include 50 years or 100,000 flight hours without an accident. In addition, gold, silver and bronze awards were handed out.
China represents an enormous market for business aviation, with almost unlimited potential. But limited infrastructure, strict government control of airspace plus high taxes and duties on parts and services need to be addressed.
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MARK WAGNER
EBACE draws to a close this evening at the end of a successful show that has already seen new products launched, partnerships announced and aircraft ordered, with a full day of business still to go. Joint hosts EBAA and NBAA were pleased to see the show grow since the 2013 edition with nearly 500
Finance
Air Traffic Control
Andrew Winch’s Dream Complete
Concern Over Russian Tensions
Saving the SES
London-based Andrew Winch Designs has been announced as the interior completions company for the first VIP version of Boeing’s 787-9 Dreamliner. The aircraft has been sold to an undisclosed customer.
With Russia representing a strong market for business jets over the past few years, new political tension is causing concern among aircraft lenders. Still, finance companies such as CIT intend to stay the course.
The Single European Sky ATM Research is the “pillar” of the Single European Sky initiative. Last month, the European Parliament extended the program. Without Sesar, the future of modernized air traffic management is uncertain.
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FOUNDED IN 1972 James Holahan, Founding Editor Wilson S. Leach, Managing Director R. RANDALL PADFIELD, CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
fellowship on the flightline
DAVID McINTOSH
Walking among the 55 aircraft on the EBACE static display has many benefits. Besides the opportunity to examine the newest and most exciting hardware up close, there is also the opportunity to reacquaint with old friends and colleagues, or even strike up fresh relationships.
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GE’s turboprops set for four more first flights by Thierry Dubois Engine manufacturer GE Aviation (Booth 5551) on Monday gave an update on its class H series turboprops, which are powering four aircraft for their first flights this year. In Zhuhai, China, the Caiga TP150 single is expected to fly in the coming days with a H85, according to Jim Stoker, GE’s president and managing executive, business and general aviation turboprops. Later this year, Nextant is expected to fly its King Air G90XT, a remanufactured King Air with H75 engines. Recent first flights include the Technoavia
Rysachok utility light twin, with two H80s in March, and the Airtec L410 upgrade, with two H85s, in May. A total of 125 H-series engines have been produced and nine certifications received for as many applications. Ramp-up plans call for 90 engines to be manufactured this year and 110 in 2015, said Brad Mottier, v-p and general manager, business and general aviation and integrated systems. The H-series were designed and are manufactured in GE’s factory in Prague, Czech Republic.
Asked about key differences between the H Series and Pratt & Whitney Canada’s PT6 family, Mottier gave an example related to the combustor. The H Series has no fuel nozzle. Rather, it features fuel ports that rotate with the shaft, thus making for a very uniform fuel distribution, he explained. Product improvements are
on the way, such as additive layer-manufactured (3D-printed) parts. Integration tests are under way and the hoped-for outcome is weight reduction. In addition, electronic control should optimize propeller speed and pitch. Mottier also mentioned a reduced-RPM propeller gearbox, for lower noise and better cruise efficiency. o
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GE’s H75 will power Nextant’s G90XT, a remanufactured Beech King Air 90.
EBAA Safety of Flight Award Winners of the annual European Business Aviation Association (EBAA) Safety of Flight Awards were announced here at EBACE 2014. GlobeAir won the Bronze Award for 20 years or 40,000 hours of accident-free operation. London Executive Aviation took the Silver Award for its 30 years or 60,000 accident-free flight hours of operation (see profile, page 18), and the Gold Award went to Flying Service for 40 years, or 80,000 hours without an accident. Three companies took Platinum Awards, representing at least 50 years or 100,000 unblemished hours of flight: PrivatAir, Tyrolean Jet Services and VistaJet. “Simply put, when it comes to flight safety, these companies are the leaders,” said Brian Humphries, EBAA president , who presented the honors at this year’s EBACE show. EBAA president Brian Humphries presents Platinum Award for safety to Julie Biringer, safety analyst for PrivatAir.
2 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
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by R. Randall Padfield Fractional-share provider NetJets (Booth 6656) is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the founding of Executive Jet Airways, a U.S. charter and management company that is NetJets’s corporate ancestor. The first celebration took place at an EBACE 2014 event yesterday, held with Bombardier at the static display. Executive Jet Airways was founded on May 21, 1964, by a group of retired World War II U.S. Air Force generals led by Brigadier General O. F. “Dick” Lassiter. Early board members of Executive Jet Airways included Retired General Curtis LeMay, a four-star general and vice chief of staff of the Air Force and former head of the Strategic Air Command; retired General Paul
Tibbets, who piloted the Enola Gay, the B-29 that dropped the first nuclear weapon used in war on Hiroshima, Japan in 1945; famed movie actor Jimmy Stewart; radio and TV personality Arthur Godfrey; and business leader M.J. Rathbone, retired board chairman of Standard Oil. The Executive Jet Airways name was later changed to Executive Jet Aviation (EJA). Richard Santulli, now chairman and CEO of Milestone Aviation Group, acquired EJA in 1984 and launched the fractional aircraft-ownership business in 1986. Berkshire Hathaway purchased EJA in 1998 and changed its name to NetJets in 2002. David Sokol became chairman and CEO of NetJets in 2009,
DAVID McINTOSH
NetJets is celebrating its golden heritage
followed by current chairman and CEO Jordan Hansell. “NetJets is the iconic brand in private aviation and is responsible for many firsts in private aviation,” Hansell said. “Very few companies in any industry reach the golden anniversary milestone, and through the years NetJets has flourished since it was incorporated in 1964 as a result of the hard work, dedication and commitment of its employees worldwide. We are very proud of our past, but we are focused on our future as we commemorate this special occasion.” Other 50th anniversary celebrations were planned at NetJets’s main headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, yesterday and at the company’s offices in London today and in Lisbon, Portugal, on Friday, according to Marine Eugene-Beveridge, head of sales at NetJets Europe. Ironically, this coming weekend’s calendar is jam-packed with four major events and one holiday that together make the
NetJets Europe CEO Mark Wilson, left, joins Bombardier Business Aircraft v-p of strategic partnerships Frank Ercolanese marking a landmark date in NetJets’ history.
weekend one of the busiest for NetJets Europe, Eugene-Beveridge told AIN. These are the Grand Prix in Monaco starting on Thursday, the UEFA Champions League Finals in Lisbon starting on Saturday, the Cannes Film Festival closing on Sunday,
the French Open in Paris starting on Sunday and a bank holiday in England on Monday. NetJets reports having more than 700 aircraft in its fleet worldwide, some 6,000 employees around the world and operations in the U.S., Europe and China. o
Pro Line 21 upgrades gain EASA nod
The avanti advantage Piaggio’s unique Avanti II pusher turboprop twin is a performance standout, with jet-like speeds and fuel-sipping efficiency. The latest updated model, the EVO, will improve even further on its advantages.
Rockwell Collins (Booth 6129) has announced the EASA certification of its Pro Line 4 to Pro Line 21 avionics retrofit for the Dassault Falcon 2000 and Falcon 2000EX. In addition, an upgrade for FANS 1/A will be available in 2015 for the aforementioned two aircraft and the Falcon 50EX. The Pro Line 21 retrofit features four 10- by 8-inch LCD panels and WAAS/EGNOS capability as well as support for electronic charts and graphical weather. The upgrade is also available for the Falcon 50EX. “The benefits include enhanced situational awareness and required display real estate for operating in rapidly modernizing airspace,” said Craig Olson, Rockwell Collins vice president and general manager for business and regional systems. The retrofit has been offered in the U.S. for years and Rockwell Collins is now expecting European sales to take off. The first installation is due this summer at a Ruag maintenance facility in Germany. One incentive for customers to accomplish the upgrade may be increasing maintenance expenses for older cathode-ray tube displays. “We do repair CRTs but we’ll service them only as long as we can get parts,” said Adam
Evanschwartz, director of marketing for business and regional flightdeck systems. EBACE 2014 is the first aviation tradeshow to see the combined offerings of Rockwell Collins’s commercial systems and information management services (formerly Arinc) businesses in
Attendees view the latest Rockwell Collins avionics.
one exhibit. The acquisition of Arinc provides corporate flight departments with tools that integrate regional and international trip support, fuel sourcing and the company’s Flight Operations Systems scheduling and dispatch software, according to Rockwell Collins. o
DAVID McINTOSH
MARK WAGNER
by Thierry Dubois
www.ainonline.com • May 22, 2014 • EBACE Convention News 3
Gulfstream airs its views during G550 flight over Alps
New Dubai-based Business Jet Leasing Firm Launches Celebrating Veling Tayara’s launch are (l to r) director Nirvan Veerasamy, chairman Ernie Edwards (former Embraer Executive Jets president) and managing director Colin Steven. Veling Tayara, a new business jet leasing firm was launched yesterday at EBACE 2014. The Dubai-based company is a subsidiary of airliner lessor Veling, which counts Emirates and Sri Lankan Airlines among its clients. Veling Tayara (the latter word meaning “aircraft” in Arabic) is focusing on five-year leases for young (three years old or newer) pre-owned and new midsize to large-cabin jets. It is targeting clients in the Middle East, Asia, Africa and former Soviet bloc, though it will also provide leases in other regions. “Our niche is the rich and super-rich that don’t want to go through the intensive financial screening that banks make them go through to obtain aircraft financing,” Edwards told AIN. He added that Veling Tayara has immediate financing available and can also provide structured leasing arrangements–a relatively new concept in the business jet market. –C.T.
Banner EBACE 2014 uContinued from page 1
Outside in the static park 55 aircraft are on display, and the footprint of the static ramp has also been maintained. Exhibitors have once more realized the value that the show can bring in displaying their products directly to potential owners and operators. OEMs Steal The Show
New aircraft often dominate the headlines when it comes to business aviation shows but, with few orders announced, this was even truer this week as manufacturers chose EBACE to launch their new projects. The sales exception was Pilatus, which took the EBACE show by storm. On Tuesday the Swiss company opened the orderbook for its PC-24 business jet, having unveiled the project here in Geneva a year ago, and by the end of the first day’s trading the Swiss manufacturer had notched a staggering 75 sales as the company prepares for the official roll-out ceremony at Stans on August 1. Nine more sales were announced yesterday to raise the total to 84, and production slots are all taken through 2019. Dassault Aviation led the fanfare on the show’s media day by unveiling its top-of-the-range Falcon 8X, a lengthened and longer-ranged derivative of its Falcon 7X, as well as showing off a cabin of the eagerly awaited super-midsize Falcon 5X. On the cabin front, however, the ultra-long-range Global 7000 fuselage mockup that Bombardier unveiled on its stand out-gunned the 8X in terms of sheer length. The company claims it to be the largest business jet mockup ever made, with a length of 111 feet. Bombardier says the Global 7000 will enter service in 2016.
At the same time Gulfstream tried to edge ahead of its Canadian rivals again in the ultra-long-range marketplace, lifting the lid on the G650ER, an extendedrange version of the company’s flagship G650 that will be available from early next year. With a range capability of 7,500 nm the G650ER becomes the longest-legged business aircraft in the world. Another new type revealed this week was the Piaggio Aero Avanti EVO, a major reworking of the distinctive Avanti design with significant performance, comfort and safety advances. Piaggio has already sold three of the new model. Meanwhile, Aerion announced its supersonic bizjet would now be a trijet. In the static park the major debutante is Embraer’s Lineage 1000E, making its first appearance at EBACE. Also in the Brazilian OEM’s lineup was one of the Legacy 500 experimental aircraft, taking a break from its testing duties to show off the type’s cabin interior for the first time ahead of certification due for midyear. Nextant’s 400XTi has also been attracting interest, while the company has also been briefing interested parties on its forthcoming G90XT. Textron is something of a new name in the business aviation world, but it now has the Beechcraft, Cessna and Hawker businesses under one wing. The company used its EBACE display to underline the wide range of products it now has in its stable. Another Textron company is Bell, which is showing off its new 505 JetRanger X at EBACE for the first time in mockup form. The light helicopter is due to make its first flight later this year. o
4 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
Gulfstream Aerospace has already on our plate internally,” he said. “So we signed purchase agreements for two or just wouldn’t be able to do them justice.” three G650ERs, Larry Flynn, president However, he does think there’s a market of the U.S. manufacturer (Booth 5129), for a supersonic business jet, even one told a small group of reporters during priced north of $100 million. “Oh, there’s a market for it,” Flynn a breakfast flight in a Gulfstream G550 over the Alps yesterday morning. The said. “I think it is a larger market, if the company had announced the extended- airplane can be flown over land. We’re range upgrade of the ultra-range, top- convinced that speed is important. Witof-the-line G650 on Monday at EBACE ness the G650, where we’ve been focused on speed and range and 2014 in Geneva. have been very successful. “We’ve just scratched All of our customers are the surface of the G650 flying at nine-oh [Mach customer base,” Flynn 0.90].” He added that the said, explaining that Gulf two recent test flights to stream did not tell its cusprove the G650ER were tomers about the upgrade both flown at Mach 0.86 before the EBACE anand above. “The airplane nouncement. He added wants to fly fast,” he said. that the Savannah, Geor“And when we landed from gia-based OEM also those flights, we had more signed an agreement for a fuel than we needed, so G450 with an Africa-based obviously it has longer legs customer on Tuesday. than what we advertised.” Asked about Aerion’s General Dynamics owns announcement at EBACE Larry Flynn, president of the G550 (N855G) that concerning its redesigned Gulfstream Aerospace flew the breakfast flight supersonic business jet, which now has three engines (see the and uses it for corporate travel. Based Tuesday edition of EBACE Convention at Dulles Airport near Washington, News), Flynn said, “I think everyone D.C., N855G flew nine Gulfstream knows we’ve had an interest in super- people to EBACE and is flying them sonic and we have a small R&D project back to Gulfstream’s headquarters in that’s been underway for several years. Savannah, Georgia, today, and then back The project is mostly focused on sup- to Dulles. The General Dynamics flight crew inpressing the sonic boom. Our intentions would be to fly a supersonic airplane cluded pilots Mark Leahy and Steve Coover land. We want to have that capabil- pley and flight attendant Maura Jority, because we think that airplane will be dan. Scott Neal, Gulfstream senior vice president, worldwide sales and more valuable and flexible.” marketing, and Steve Cass, vice presiFlynn said Gulfstream had met with Aerion, but decided not to participate in dent of communications, were also on o the project because, “We’ve got enough the breakfast flight.
The G550’s large oval windows provided unmatched views of the Alps.
PHOTOS: R. RANDALL PADFIELD
DAVID McINTOSH
by R. Randall Padfield
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Enticing the nearly 8,000 visitors to ABACE 2014, exhibitors lined up 38 aircraft on the static display for inspection and photo ops.
ABACE 2014 Report
PHOTOS: DAVID McINTOSH
China continues to be Asian show’s main focus by Charles Alcock China, as Asia’s largest prospective market for business aviation, has always seemed an obvious choice as the location for the Asian Business Aviation Conference & Exhibition (ABACE). But with demand for business aviation now bubbling up in other parts of Asia, and the industry having to show patience in waiting for China to fulfill its potential, some have questioned whether organizer NBAA might consider freshening up the event in some other venue. NBAA answered that question conclusively by doubling the length of the contract it has with city officials in Shanghai to keep ABACE there at least through 2021. According to NBAA and show co-organizer the Asian Business Aviation Association (AsBAA), ABACE 2014 attracted a record-breaking 187 exhibitors and 38 static-display aircraft, with 78 of the exhibiting firms hailing from Asia (almost double the 38 companies at the 2012 show, the event NBAA established as the baseline). Visitor numbers exceeded the 7,714 people who attended the 2013 show. Highlighting the strong growth of business aviation in China, Wang Zhiqing, deputy administrator of the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), said that as of the end of last year, China had 189 general aviation companies, a 41-percent gain over the previous year’s figure, while the fleet had grown by 23.4 percent, to 1,654 aircraft, with general aviation flight time increasing 10 percent, to 569,000 hours.
However, after the past three years of rapid growth for general aviation, “momentum is slowing,” Wang said, and he vowed the CAAC will work to keep the industry expanding swiftly. “The essence of business aviation is fast and efficient transportation. It is not a luxury,” he said. Japan More Friendly
Masaaki Kai, senior deputy director general of Japan’s Civil Aviation Bureau, pointed to changes his government is
but he emphasized the country sees support for business aviation “as part of a national growth strategy.” The largest deal announced at this year’s ABACE came when China’s Minsheng Financial Leasing confirmed significant new business jet orders placed with both Gulf stream and Bombardier in the fourth quarter of last year. The Gulfstream order for 60
Speakers at the 2014 ABACE show, clockwise from top, Ed Bolen, president of NBAA, co-organizer of the ABACE event; Wang Zhiqing, CAAC deputy administrator; and Masaaki Kai, senior deputy director general of Japan’s Civil Aviation Bureau, addressed the role of business aviation can play in the economic growth of the Asian nations.
taking to make Japan more friendly toward business aviation. These measures include easing rules for Part 135 charter flights, and improvements for business aviation at Narita Haneda, Central Japan and Kansai International Airports, as well as the airports at Kobe and Nagoya. “I have to admit the scale of business aviation in Japan is still small,” Kai said,
business jets (40 firm and 20 options) spans the U.S. manufacturer’s product line from the super-midsize G280 to the ultra-long-range G550 and G650. The deal, which was agreed to during the fourth quarter of 2013 and announced at the show in Shanghai, is new business over and above the aircraft covered by an earlier memorandum of understanding signed back in 2011. The latest order was won through a competitive bidding
process and spans several years, with deliveries expected to begin next year and set to include a mix of G280s, G450s, G550s and G650s. During the show, China’s Mandarin Air took the first G280 to be delivered in China. Minsheng’s order with Bombardier saw it sign for 10 supermidsize Challenger 350s worth approximately $259 million. The first aircraft, an upgrade of the Challenger 300 with greater wingspan and more range, is expected to enter service in the second half of the year. Aerochine Aviation, an independent representative of Bell Helicopter for China, Hong Kong and Macau, signed a purchase agreement for five more Bell 505s. Shortly afterward, Aerochine signed another agreement to buy two more Bell 407s. According to Diana Chou, managing director of Aerochine, one customer has already signed for three of the new 505s, which will be used in sightseeing/tourism operations. Deliveries of these 505s should take place near the end of 2016, she said. The two 407s have been purchased by Yalong General Aviation of Hainan Island. One of these helicopters will be delivered in June and the second early next year. The Japan National Police Agency has ordered another AgustaWestland AW139 medium twin, scheduled to enter service next year for operations in Kagoshima Prefecture. AgustaWestland and Mitsui Bussan Aerospace announced the sale at the ABACE show, noting that the new AW139
Gulfstream’s G280 was on the static display at ABACE 2014, where Mandarin Air took delivery of the first of the type in China.
Rotorcraft, such as this trio–two from AgustaWestland and one from MD Helicopters– also drew keen interest from attendees wanting to put them into service for offshore duty and use in mountainous terrain.
6 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
will replace an aging Bell 412 in the police fleet. New Deals
Meanwhile, AgustaWestland and Sino-U.S. Intercontinental of China celebrated the grand opening of a joint regional business headquarters in Shanghai on April 9. Last September Sino-U.S. Intercontinental was appointed an official nonexclusive distributor for civil AgustaWestland helicopters in China, but not including Hong Kong and Macau. Nextant Aerospace announ ced that it has selected Avic International Aero-Development as its exclusive sales representative for Greater China (China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau). This follows Nextant’s appointment of Nextant Pacific as the Asia-Pacific dealer (not including Greater China) for its remanufactured 400XTi twinjets. The company is currently developing the G90XT, a modified King Air 90 twin turboprop with new GE H75 engines and Garmin G1000 avionics. Nextant Aerospace (Static Display) expects to receive Chinese certification for the 400XTi this year, and the first aircraft in the country will go to Avic International Aero-Development, part of the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (Avic) manufacturing group. Shanghai Hawker Pacific Business Aviation Service Centre received CAAC and FAA approval for maintenance of 800-series Hawkers, the company announced. It also has been designated an authorized
Continued on page 8 u
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747-8 Ceiling panel assembly during fit check in full-scale mockup
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ABACE Report uContinued from page 6
service facility for Cessna Citations by the newly formed Textron Aviation, which owns Hawker and Beechcraft as well. ExecuJet Aviation is set to open a new maintenance, repair and overhaul center just outside Beijing this month through
its local joint venture, ExecuJet Haite Aviation Services. The Switzerland-based group has offices in Beijing and in Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital, and is currently constructing an FBO in Bali. Piaggio Aero announced the appointment of Freesky Aviation as its first authorized service center in Mainland China.
Freesky, which is based at Tianjin International Airport and also offers aircraft charter and management services, introduced the first Avanti II twin turboprop to China in 2012. Honeywell Aerospace announced that Bombardier’s new service center in Singapore will offer retrofits, maintenance and upgrades for Honeywell Airbus introduced its ACJ319 Elegance, which offers a modular cabin that allows customers to choose from an array of interior configurations, including lounge, office, dining and conference area.
products on the Canadian airframer’s business jets. The agreement covers systems such as the Primus Elite 850 cockpit display, flight management system service bulletin upgrades, satellite communications systems and the Ovation Select cabin management system. Modular Interior
With the aim of easing the buying process for its customers, Airbus introduced a new model of its ACJ319 Corporate Jet at ABACE. Called the ACJ319 Elegance, the new derivative relieves customers of some of the nearly endless design decisions by offering a new modular cabin that still allows them to choose from an array of lounge, office, dining and conference configurations. “The ACJ319 Elegance has a fixed front and back: you get a bedroom and a bathroom at the back and at the front you’ve got a galley, two bathrooms and a crew rest,” explained David Velupillai, the company’s marketing director. “Then you, as the customer, choose what you put in the middle.” Comlux has won a contract to conduct major maintenance and refurbishment work on a Boeing Business Jet based in Asia. The aircraft, operated on behalf of its private owner by Hong Kong-based management company Sino Jet, is due to arrive at the Comlux America completions center in Indianapolis in the second quarter and will spend four months there. Jet Aviation Management announced that it is adding two Gulfstream G450s and a new Gulfstream G550 to its managed fleet in Asia, bringing to 30 the number of aircraft it operates in the region. The G550 and one of the G450s will be based in Hong Kong and maintained by the company’s maintenance facility, a Gulfstream authorized warranty service center. Delivery of the aircraft is expected by the end of next month. o
8 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
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NetJets Europe to get Signature Challengers Fractional-share provider NetJets Europe (Booth 6656) expects to receive its first new Bombardier Challenger 350, built to the specifications of NetJets’s Signature Series, in mid-2015. NetJets U.S. will begin taking deliveries of the model this summer. Additional aircraft on order are planned for delivery over the next few years. The Challenger 350 will comfortably seat nine passengers, said Marine Eugene-Beveridge, head of sales at NetJets Europe, here at EBACE 2014. “It is ideal for our European customers with its reach not only across the continent, but with easy access
Marine Eugene-Beveridge is head of sales for NetJets Europe.
from London to even fartherafield destinations, such as Tel Aviv and Lagos.” The 38,850pound mtow super-midsize jet will have a range of 3,065 nm and more than seven hours of flight time. Its maximum speed is Mach 0.82 and maximum operating altitude 45,000 feet. NetJets worked closely with Bombardier to build the Signature Series to its customers’ specifications for the cabin interior and technical and performance characteristics. The aircraft features larger windows, an HD wireless entertainment system, upgraded avionics, a wider wingspan and improved engine and efficiency features. Shares of the Challenger 350 Signature Series have been available for pre-sale in the U.S. market for the last year, and nine whole airplanes have al ready been sold. “We have accelerated our delivery schedule with Bombardier after selling through our initial allotment sooner than expected,” said Eugene-Beveridge. “With this uptake in the U.S., we are enthusiastic with the opening of the Challenger 350 for pre-sale to our European customers.”
MARK WAGNER
by R. Randall Padfield
Bombardier’s Signature Series Challenger 350s, similar to the model 300 shown above here at EBACE, will feature a premium interior configuration seating nine passengers. For NetJets Europe, the 350’s range of better than 3,000 nm is a perfect fit.
The Signature Series Challenger 350 is part of NetJets’ plan to add up to 670 new aircraft with a total value of $17.6 billion over 10 years. In addition to the Challenger 350, Global 6000 and Embraer Phenom, the company will be adding the Bombardier Global 7000 and 8000 and Cessna Citation Latitude. Founded in 1996, NetJets
Europe, the marketing agent of NetJets Transportes Aéreos (an EU air carrier), claims to be the only pan-European business aviation company with its own fleet. NTA was the first
French Riviera airports ‘sister’ with U.S.’s MMU
DAVID McINTOSH
by James Wynbrandt
high style from airbus and hermes Airbus Helicopters is showing the latest iteration of the Hermes design house EC135. It features unique-shape skids and more variety in choices of leather and exterior paint, as well as updated Garmin avionics.
Aeroports de la Côte D’Azur (Booth 5234), which represents Nice, Cannes and Saint-Tropez, announced at EBACE 2014 the establishment of a sister airport relationship with Morristown Airport (KMMU) near New York City, as well as the launch of the French Riviera’s business aviation brand. The sister airport alliance aims to provide unique products and services to business aviation travelers flying between the French Riviera’s airports and Morristown. “One of the biggest business aviation traffic flows is between our airports and the New York area,” said Aeroports director Michel Tohane. “As a starting position the idea is to facilitate the administrative details for customers, and
10 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
we are going to start building our partnership around those ideas. And also to learn from each other about environmental issues and integration into the community.” Maria Sheridan, Morristown Airport’s senior director of government affairs and business development, said that customs service is expedited at the airport and that because of ground traffic, it can be faster to get to New York City from Morristown than the more proximate Teterboro Airport. Branding and logos highlighting the new relationship will begin appearing online and in print marketing materials developed by the airports. Going forward, the sister airports may organize special
business jet operator to be awarded the IATA Operational Safety Audit certificate. NetJets Europe employs more than 1,300 people and operates more than 130 aircraft. o offerings, such as holiday trips to New York City. Tohane said the sisterhood could expand to include other popular business aviation airports around the world. The Aeroports business aviation brand initiative aims to raise the quality of service at its airports. The organization has established a training program for its airports’ employees with five-star hotels in the region, including the Hotel Adagio Monaco Palais Josephine, in an effort to improve the level of service delivered to customers. The airport staffs are likely to be tested on that issue in the next few days, with the Cannes Film Festival and Monaco’s Grand Prix both taking place. “We’re expecting 650 general aviation aircraft for the two events,” Tohane said. “We only have 150 parking places.” o
Prime Jet latest to join AirClub’s jet alliance by David Donald underlined the value of having like-minded companies in many parts of the globe. “The alliance can help bring resolution to problems that might be encountered on worldwide trips.” Joint Procurement
In the meantime, AirClub’s members continue to explore mutually beneficial avenues, such as joint procurement and joint training. The alliance is hoping to add new members and may be able to announce two more later this year. New members are expected from North and South America, Asia and Africa. The ultimate aim is to have about 50 operators around the world, operating a combined fleet of about 1,000 aircraft. As well as welcoming Prime Jet, AirClub has announced new strategic alliances with companies in two complementary sectors: luxury hotel group Kempinski Hotels and superyacht charter management company Ocean Independence. In both cases AirClub has entered into a mutual preferred partner program that provides AirClub members with preferential rates, while Kempinski and Ocean Independence will promote AirClub’s services to their guests and clients. The three entities have identified several areas for joint promotion and activities. o
UniLink On Cusp of FANS Approval For GIV
MARK WAGNER
U.S. charter, sales and management company Prime Jet is the newest member of AirClub, a corporate jet alliance launched in October 2012 to bring together a number of likeminded business aviation companies. Sharing the principles of offering the highest quality services with the highest levels of safety, AirClub members also operate a pooled charter service to maximize utilization across their combined fleet, and they have introduced an innovative and system. Prime Jet (Booth 5134) joins a group that includes ACM Air Charter, Air Alsie, Air Hamburg, Flyinggroup, GlobeAir, London Executive Aviation, Masterjet and PrivatAir, operating more than 170 aircraft. Prime Jet is AirClub’s first U.S. member, which offers new opportunities for other members. “We needed a presence in the U.S., and Prime Jet is a perfect choice,” said PrivatAir’s Christian Hatje, who is also AirClub president. “Now I have friends in the U.S. who can look after my guests.” Founded in 2002, Prime Jet currently has 11 Gulfstreams in its worldwide fleet, with six available for charter, ranging from a GIII to a G550. “Our company seems like a natural fit with AirClub,” noted Prime Jet CEO Cheryl Janke. She also
standing room only The ramp space allowed for display aircraft here at EBACE appears jammed to the limits. This year’s show was characterized by cautious optimism, fueled by hope for a recovering economy. We're still a long way from euphoria, but the signs point to better times ahead for most business segments.
Le Castellet Airport co-brands with Universal by Thierry Dubois Le Castellet Airport (Booth 4242A) and Universal Aviation (Booth 6534) announced at EBACE on Tuesday that the airport’s existing FBO will be cobranded with the two company names. The airport, situated between Marseille and Toulon in France, will remain the owner of the business aviation terminal, which will be operated under Universal standards for aircraft handling, safety management and customer service. Apart from the branding, no physical change is
Universal Avionics (Booth 6555) announced that Clay Lacy Aviation is primed to offer an STC for installation of the UniLink UL-801 Communications Management Unit (CMU) to provide Future Air Navigation System (FANS) 1/A+ capabilities for the Gulfstream GIV and GIV-SP. Installation in the initial certification aircraft began in January, with STC approval expected by the third quarter this year. An amendment to the STC for the GV will immediately follow initial certification, along with application for EASA certification. The FANS installation includes the Universal Avionics UniLink UL-801 CMU, UNS-1Espw FMS and CVR-120R Cockpit Voice Recorder for FANS data link message recording. The installation also includes Controller-Pilot Data Link Communications (CPDLC) and Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Contract (ADS-C) functionality. In addition, the UniLink UL-800/801 CMU is provisioned for Eurocontrol’s Link 2000+ and ADS-B out. “The cost of non-compliance to long range business jets is significant, affecting routing, flight time and fuel burn,” said Robert Clare, Universal Avionics director of sales. “Operators may experience challenges flying within the North Atlantic Track System if the aircraft is not equipped for FANS capabilities, such as being routed to lower altitudes, causing a considerable increase in fuel burn.” STCs for FANS installations on 20 platforms have now been issued or are in progress, according to Universal, including Boeings, Challengers, Falcons and Gulfstreams. –J.W.
12 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
planned at the FBO, as “it is beautiful at the moment,” Jonathan Howells, Universal’s international senior vice president, told AIN. Airport manager François André explained that the airport will keep employing the FBO’s staff, while Universal will train them. The uniform will feature both brands. “We are considering a new logo, which makes it clear we are in the French Riviera,” André added. Le Castellet is not as famous as Nice or Cannes airports but its
promoters claim it is more convenient if the final destination is a sea resort like Saint-Tropez. The connecting helicopter ride lasts 35 minutes from either Nice or Le Castellet, according to André, but the helicopter can park right next to a jet at the latter airport, while passengers need a transfer by car at Nice airport. He also cited lower landing and parking fees, as well as the absence of any noise constraint at any time. Le Castellet Airport is slated to have two approved GPS-aided approaches in the coming weeks. “These will be more direct,” André emphasized. The region’s clement weather does not warrant investing in ILS equipment. Le Castellet is the 12th location in Europe for Universal Aviation’s ground support activity. o
VistaJet tries out rotary wings Charter operator VistaJet, known for large-cabin Bombardier jets, has been testing short-distance service with an AgustaWestland AW109 GrandNew over the past year. The helicopter is based in St. Moritz and has been used to fly customers to such places as Milan, Geneva, Munich and Monte Carlo, as well as for heli-skiing excursions in the Swiss Alps. “Since we don’t have light jets here at VistaJet, we wanted an aircraft that could cover shorter trips,” VistaJet founder and chairman Thomas Flohr told AIN. Over the past year, VistaJet’s AW109 has logged about 150 hours, with the average passenger trip being about 40 minutes. Flohr said he is considering adding more helicopters, noting London and Moscow as possible bases. Here at EBACE, Flohr (left) and AgustaWestland head of region for Western Europe, Turkey and Italy Luca Tonini celebrated the one-year anniversary of VistaJet’s helicopter service. –C.T.
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Fly Comlux has the management contract for yet another Airbus ACJ, however it will not be available for charter.
Andrew Winch will design first Dreamliner VIP interior by James Wynbrandt Steve Taylor, president of Boeing Business Jets (BBJ), announced here at EBACE 2014 the company has sold its first VIP 787-9 Dreamliner, and the undisclosed customer has chosen London’s Andrew Winch Designs (AWD) and EH Aviation Advisors to handle the completion. Taylor noted that AWD has handled interior design for several BBJs. “This is going to be spectacular,” he said as he showed renderings of an interior scheme from AWD at the BBJ press conference. (Renderings of the client’s selected
Winch Gets Into Leather Also here at the show, Andrew Winch and Foglizzo Leather (Booth 5123) of Torino, Italy introduced the Andrew Winch Collection of leathers, which the two companies developed in partnership. “We have worked with [AWD] on yacht projects, and airplane projects, so we thought, why don’t we do something more together?” said Marco Foglizzo. The collection features a variety of leather colors and grains, and they are available to architectural firms and designers for use in their projects. –J.W.
interior were not displayed as per AWD’s confidentiality policies.) Founded in 1988, AWD is noted for its yacht designs but established an aviation department 12 years ago in response to a client’s request to design the interior of his new BBJ2, Winch told AIN. AWD’s Jim Dixon will head the 787-9 design team. EH Aviation Advisors of Basel, Switzerland, will be responsible for design integration, ensuring the interior plans are “buildable, reliable and maintainable,” Taylor said. Selection of the completion center is “still in development,” Winch said. No timetable has been set for delivery of the completion, but given the trust clients place in him and his drive for perfection, it could be several years. A VIP A340 the firm designed took four years to complete. As for the cost of such an interior, “All I can say is, it’s significant,” Winch said. “Each of our projects is designed to our client’s specific tastes and lifestyles, individually tailored, as if a bespoke Saville Row suit.” The 787 project had its genesis “years ago,” according to Winch, soon after Boeing announced the 787 Dreamliner. “As a company of dreamers, you can’t do better than the Dreamliner,” he said. o
Fly Comlux adds an ACJ318, another gem in its Airbus crown by David Donald Fly Comlux has added an Airbus ACJ318 to its managed fleet. The aircraft was previously managed by another operator but is now part of the Comlux stable in the Middle East. It is operated purely for its owner and will not be available for charter. Comlux (Booth 5152) was the launch operator of the ACJ318 seven years ago, but has recently been without the shortcabin version of the ACJ until this new arrival. When Fly Comlux takes delivery of an ACJ321 that is currently still in completion, it will be the only operator in the world to fly all of the single-aisle Airbus corporate jets, with single examples of the ACJ318, 320 and 321 and three of the ACJ319 on its books. One of the latter is also undergoing completion, and all are in VVIP configuration. Fly Comlux has established itself as a major
ACJ operator, and one of only a few to have CAT IIIB landing and 180-minute ETOPS clearance. In 2016 one of the ACJ319s will enter a retrofit program to install Airbus’s Sharklet upturned wingtips, Comlux becoming the first customer for this upgrade for an ACJ319. Saudi Arabia’s Alpha Star Aviation Services is the first customer for an ACJ320 Sharklet retrofit, which will also be undertaken in 2016. Sharklets reduce fuel consumption by about 4 percent, as well as enhance the aircraft’s ramp appeal, and have been delivered on new-build ACJs since last October. This week Airbus announced an order for an ACJ320 from a Saudi Arabian owner, with the aircraft to be operated by Aviation Link, which already manages two ACJ319s and an ACJ320. o
Boeing Business Jets president Steve Taylor is understandably excited at the prospect of Andrew Winch Designs performing the first VIP interior completion on a 787-9 Dreamliner platform.
MRO specialist Jets is to further expand into Dassault Falcon maintenance at its London Biggin Hill airport base. The facility, which 328 Group acquired at the end of 2012, is an authorized service center for Falcon 2000s and Falcon 900s. “In the next 12 months we hope to further expand our remit with Dassault,” said managing director Alan Barnes. Separately, at the same site, Jets (Booth 5546) has recently appointed more engineers dedicated to the Bombardier Challenger 300. Operations at the company’s main base at Bournemouth remain focused on heavy base maintenance for the Hawker and Challenger aircraft. The two sites employ 30 and 35 personnel, respectively. Last month, Jets also set up a mobile rapid response team for AOG services. The company is at EBACE 2014 marking 10 years of operation as it enters a period of strong, stable growth, Barnes predicted. –T.D.
14 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
MARK WAGNER
Jets To Expand Biggin Falcon Maintenance Activity
le repas, c’est moi Universal Weather and Aviation chefs Neil Pope, left, of London Stansted Airport and Herve Bourdon of Paris Le Bourget are offering their best creations on the company stand (6534).
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Artliner back at EBACE, adding a touch of class Farnborough Airport for creative audio and visual experiences in June and July this year (the opening is on Saturday June 7 and it will run until the last day of the Farnborough show). “The project…will include a series of events, including music and performance,” said Ojjeh. “We are hugely appreciative of our superb sponsors, namely; Breitlng, Bombardier and Harbert Management…all our sponsors and supporters, including TAG Group…have really bought into the project, which is now set to expose the significance of the wind tunnels in a unique way.” AIN enjoyed a preview of the wind tunnels last month, with the vast return duct showing incredible acoustics akin to a cathedral. –I.S.
MARK WAGNER
Tatiana Ojjeh’s company Artliner is back at EBACE again adding a now customary touch of art to the show at the TAG Aviation chalet here (Booth 5559). The hotly-anticipated theme this year is “Between Here and the Surface of the Moon” featuring a collaboration between Artliner and Patricia Low Contemporary (which has galleries in Gstaad and St. Moritz). The exhibition is named after a work by Darren Almond and includes paintings, sculpture and photographs by 14 established international and upand-coming artists, and points to “physical travel and adventure.” Artliner’s next aviation project will be bigger and more ambitious than ever, opening the old, capacious aircraft research wind tunnels at TAG
Jersey aircraft registry gets some expert help One issue with the Jersey Aircraft Registry is that nearby Guernsey already launched its registry last December, naming it the Channel Islands Aircraft Registry (2-REG). Here at EBACE this week it announced that it had registered its first aircraft, 2-TRAV, a Gulfstream GIV operated by ExecuJet Aviation Group. Johnson said he has been brought in through Appleby “to teach them how to set up the aircraft registry modeled on the Isle of Man–with the same ideas with some improvements [which the Isle of Man has implemented since launch].” The ZJprefix has been reserved for
MARK WAGNER
Having enjoyed spectacular success with the launch of the Isle of Man Aircraft Registry in 2007, Brian Johnson moved to Appleby (Booth 4439) to help the legal services company and offshore specialist advise Jersey, in the Channel Islands near France, launch its own registry. Ironically, Johnson was recently thrown back into his old role as his replacement in the Isle of Man, Hartley Elder, took early retirement. But wearing two hats–acting director of civil aviation in the Isle of Man and as director of operations at Appleby–has not created a conflict between the old and the new registries, Johnson told AIN.
Brian Johnson, left, helped develop aircraft registration procedures for Chris Kelleher, strategy policy manager for the economic development department, States of Jersey.
MARK WAGNER
by Ian Sheppard
Tatiana Ojjeh, above left, owner of Artliner, and Patricia Low of the Patricia Low Contemporary Art Gallery, have joined forces to present a stunning collection of art at the TAG Aviation booth (5559) at EBACE. Ojjeh’s next project is to open the old experimental wind tunnels at TAG Farnborough Airport for creative audio and visual experiences. At lower right she is standing inside a tunnel.
Jersey and although there is no go date as yet–as approval has to be given by the UK’s Privy Council that overseas British crown dependencies such as Jersey and Guernsey–Johnson said there has been a lot of interest, “so we are aiming for the third quarter of 2014.” Johnson would like it if Jersey could replicate the success of the Isle of Man (which registered 51 aircraft in its first year). He sees it not so much as a competition as giving customers a wider choice in the market, as some prefer the M-register. In fact he said that the Isle of Man, where Appleby also has an office, can handle setting up special purpose companies that can benefit from the Isle of Man’s VAT and customs status with the UK, even
16 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
if the owner prefers the aircraft to be on the Jersey or another register. All of the three registries (Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey) are limited to private aircraft, as commercial air transport aircraft are handled by the UK CAA’s G-register. Meanwhile the Isle of Man’s success continues. On May 15 Johnson told AIN, “So far this month we have had 15 registrations in 15 days” at the Isle of Man registry, taking the total now to 434 on the seven-year old register. (It has registered 688 in total but some aircraft leave or are on the registry temporarily while being imported/ exported to/from Europe, and it is permitted to register airliners temporarily while awaiting new homes after repossessions, for example.) o
parisian group boosts bizav Hubstart Paris Region (Booth 5525), an alliance of organizations with the goal of promoting economic development of the Greater Roissy area encompassing the Paris-Le Bourget and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airports, is promoting the advantages of Le Bourget, in particular, as “Europe’s leading business-aviation hub.” The group is also emphasizing two lesser-known Paris airports, namely Pontoise-Cormeillesen-Vexin and Melun-Villaroche, which it considers “key sites in Europe for business growth and economic development.” n
Lenders show concern over Russian tensions
MARK WAGNER
Russia has been a growing market for business jets, but the recent Cold War-like tensions between the country and the U.S. have clearly raised concerns among aircraft financiers over the status of their clients’ aircraft. “Certainly I think the big news is the geopolitical stresses that we see with respect to the Ukrainian space as well as Russia,” said Michael Kahmann, managing director and group head of CIT Business Aircraft Finance. Here at the EBACE show, CIT (Booth 6143) announced that it has provided financing for a 2013 Embraer Lineage 1000 for a Kazakhstan-based energy resource management company. “We are pleased to
MIchael Kahmann, managing director, CIT Business Aircraft Finance.
complete this transaction, which represents our first ultra-largecabin business aircraft financing in Kazakhstan,” Kahmann told AIN. While the company declined to identify how many private aircraft it has financed in Russia and the CIS, CIT has had a great deal of experience operating in the area and like many lenders it has developed a suite of prudent measures above the typical know-your-customer pro cedures. “The transactions that we’ve done in those regions all have as a common denominator an independent third-party manager that we vet very carefully,” Kahmann said, noting that other safeguards in place include independent pilots and independently monitored maintenance. “One of the reasons is [that] they are mobile assets, they can be flown anywhere and so you do have to watch them very carefully.” Despite the current political concerns, CIT expects to remain engaged in the area. “We continue to look in a cautious but measured way in terms of being able to provide financing to those regions,” said Kahmann. “Cautious in the sense that we’re not immune or ignorant of the realities of the political situation, but also measured in a sense that a lot of people in those regions have multinational business ventures.” o
Aircell offers programs for SwiftBroadband service Inflight connectivity provider Aircell (Booth 5223) unveiled at EBACE 2014 new SwiftBroadband airtime programs for business aviation. Aircell has long been a distributor for Inmarsat’s SwiftBroadband service and also manufactures SwiftBroadband transceivers. Business aircraft operators can now choose from a variety of SwiftBroadband data and voice plans offered by Aircell with accompanying services. Pay-as-you-go monthly data plans are available. These come with single monthly invoices for all Aircell SwiftBroadband, Iridium and Gogo Biz airtime
services. Data compression is included at no additional charge. Heavy data users are offered special annual plans. A feature of the Gogo service is Aircell’s new Gogo Text & Talk subscription service, which allows passengers to call and text with their own smartphones and mobile numbers. For those customers that activate a new SwiftBroadband service plan prior to Dec. 31, 2014, Aircell is offering one month of free data service. Aircell also announced the appointment of Shuaib Shahid as its new manager for services sales. –T.D.
DAVID McINTOSH
by Curt Epstein
best of showrooms No, you just can’t walk into a local Falcon dealer and kick a few tires, smell the leather and try one on for size. But at EBACE, the showroom comes to you. Full-size mockups, such as this one in the background for the upcoming Falcon 5X, and an eager team of experts are there to answer any and all questions. So, what are you waiting for?
Bell caters to Europeans with expanded services by Rick Adams Fort Worth, Texas-based Bell Helicopter is riding the success of the upcoming Bell 505 Jet Ranger X and the twoyear-old Bell 429 to increase sales activity in Europe. According to Patrick Moulay, managing director for Europe and Russia, sales activity was up 37 percent in 2013 versus 2012 after “more than doubling” the year before. “We are investing in Europe,”
Moulay told AIN, including a new customizing hub in Prague so EU customers can pick up their EASA-certified aircraft closer to home instead of traveling to the U.S. or Canada. Although Bell would not provide specific total sales numbers, Moulay said sales of the new five-seat “short light single” 505, with Bell’s first-ever Turbomeca engine and dual-channel Fadec, is nearing 200 orders, of which
“a very large part have been signed by European customers.” In Belgium, Bell has logged nine 505 sales. Most customers are private operators and flight training schools. Moulay said the Bell 505, announced last year at the Paris Air Show and in mockup form at the Bell booth, is on track for first flight by the end of the year. Some potential customers of the Bell 429 in Europe and the U.S. are frustrated that EASA and the FAA will not provide an exemption to operate the aircraft under Part 29 certification. The 429 is certified at the Part 27/7,000-pound (3,175 kg) takeoff weight, but it is also capable–in the opinion of Bell and some regulators–of flying safely at 7,500 pounds. To date, Transport Canada and 17 other national aviation authorities around the world have exempted the Bell 429 to Part 29. “We have an aircraft which is capable of flying much beyond 7,000 pounds,” Moulay told AIN. The extra weight would “enable customers to use the full capability of the aircraft,” as well as create an extra safety margin by allowing the carriage of additional fuel,” he said. o
Italy’s Mecaer Aviation Group has created a customizable VVIP interior configuration for the Bell 429, including a Silens noise abatement system and I-Feel touch-screen entertainment management.
www.ainonline.com • May 22, 2014 • EBACE Convention News 17
UK’s LEA joins up with Luxembourg’s Luxaviation
Consolidation is Key
by Ian Sheppard London Executive Aviation (LEA) has become the latest European business aircraft operator to join a group after predictions in recent years that consolidation would be necessary for survival in an increasingly competitive marketplace. The company has signed a deal with Luxaviation, of Luxembourg, “cementing Luxaviation’s position as one of Europe’s largest business aviation groups,” according to LEA. The deal was completed on 7 May having been signed on 7 April. LEA joins Unijet of France and Belgium’s Abelag in becoming part of Luxaviation group, which also has an operation in Germany (from its acquisition of FairJets) and a commercial office in Singapore, which it hopes it will be a springboard to expansion in Asia Pacific. Bringing LEA’s fleet of 27 aircraft under the Luxaviation umbrella creates a combined fleet of 90 aircraft from King Airs to Globals, Patrick Margetson-Rushmore told AIN during a flying visit to LEA’s headquarters at Stapleford Airport, northeast of London, the week before EBACE. He added that Luxaviation has bought a significant stake in LEA but that he and George Galanopoulous, two of LEA’s co-founders, would continue in their current positions running the company, with the LEA name being retained. New branding is being developed to reflect the new ownership structure. Patrick Hansen, CEO of Luxaviation Group, commented at EBACE: “The integration of London Executive Aviation…represents a further important
George Galanopoulos, left, and Patrick Margetson-Rushmore started London Executive Aviation in 1996. Here they are pictured at the company’s Stapleford base near London, where they opened a new executive lounge.
step in our international growth strategy and superbly complements Luxaviation’s market-leading operations in Germany, France, Belgium and Luxembourg.” LEA said in a statement that the company would “retain its identity, leadership and operational independence while benefiting from valuable synergies within the group. These benefits include economies of scale in the purchasing of fuel, insurance, training and other significant cost areas; increased aircraft availability and utilization within the group, with a broader range of aircraft types; and collaboration with other group companies to enhance best practice in all operational areas.” Margetson-Rushmore was keen to highlight that LEA had “not been bought out” but that the company had for a while been “interested to be part of a larger group to get the benefits.” He and Galanopoulos were clearly excited at the prospect that LEA could now get long-range aircraft itself, such as Globals and Gulfstreams, by learning from the likes of Abelag. At present the largest aircraft LEA operates is a Dassault Falcon 2000, and it also has
Beechcraft King Airs, Cessna Citation Mustangs, Embraer Legacys and Bombardier Challenger 300s. LEA is a significant boost for the Luxaviation group; not only does it add the UK’s largest business aircraft operator to the group, it also brings a charter team that provides around 250 quotes a day. “We probably do as many quotes as the rest of the group put together,” said Galanopoulos. “We have a very charterable fleet.” All but one of LEA’s fleet is available for charter, and it manages the aircraft for their owners, rather than owning them itself. The combined group will have 450 employees, including the 115 from LEA. Margetson-Rushmore, who like Galanopoulos is an experienced pilot and is focused more on developing LEA, said that the company has “probably had 10 or 12 approaches in recent years, but you can’t put a square peg in a round hole.” Only when Luxaviation approached it in January did LEA finally find a partner that operated and thought the same “flexible” way as it did. Galanopoulos concluded by saying the deal would “benefit everybody.” o
Patrick Hansen, CEO of Lux Aviation, who like LEA’s Patrick Margetson-Rushmore has a background in “venture capital and M&A,” said the company had started with one jet five years ago, “but it was clear immediately that we wouldn’t make any money.” So the company analysed the business aviation market in Europe, where most operators had very few aircraft (250 with one aircraft and another 100 with fewer than four). It became clear from this that consolidation was the only way to profitability. “So we started consolidation in 2011 when we took control of FairJets and then Abelag and Unijet and now LEA.” He confirmed that Lux Aviation had taken a 70 percent stake in LEA with the founders retaining the other 30 percent. Lux Aviation now has more than 90 aircraft under five AOCs, including one in Singapore with an Embraer Legacy and a Challenger 604. “And we’re working on the next three.” Hansen told AIN yesterday here at EBACE that Asia had been the company’s focus for some time but it kept finding opportunities to acquire companies in Europe that had a similar mindset, although very few pass the test of being “cash flow positive,” he said. Hansen believes that the market in Europe will “most likely consolidate more and more” and fears for small operators that don’t take part, because they won’t be able to keep their cost base low enough to compete or handle the increasing amount of legislation and regulation that operators must cope with. One condition of the acquisition of LEA is that the company will acquire new aircraft. “They have to build their fleet,” said Hansen– and that is LEA’s ambition anyway. By having a broader range of types Hansen believes Lux Aviation is now more attractive to aircraft owners wishing to have their aircraft managed and offered for charter. In addition, charter customers get lots of benefits–and this includes support in AOG situations (LEA is now the largest operator of Embraer Lagacys, for example, with 11). –I.S.
following the red carpet to recovery
MARK WAGNER
If there is one message that comes through consistently here at EBACE, it’s that the rebound for business aviation in Europe is underway. It may not be moving at near the pace we'd like to see, but the signs point to progress. A strong showing among exhibitors and visitors here in Geneva is further evidence that blue skies and fair winds are on the way.
18 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
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MedAire’s review board develops new series of kits
DAVID McINTOSH
by David Donald
for those who prefer to do it themselves Flying your own modern personal light aircraft is like driving a fine luxury sedan through the sky. Modern computer avionics, custom leather interiors and heat/air conditioning climate control make piston airplanes like this Cirrus unlike anything that came before. And there’s the added security of a ballistic whole-airplane parachute.
by James Wynbrandt Italian helicopter manufacturer AgustaWestland (Booth 6629) is showcasing an innovative VIP interior concept for its in-development AW169 at EBACE 2014, replete with artist renderings, color samples and a scaled-down mockup. The four-passenger interior concept features earth tones and swiveling seats with translucent shells. It was created by design firm Lanzavecchia + Wai for the “Flydeas for the City” contest sponsored by AgustaWestland and the contemporary design magazine Interni. “The interior gives the people inhabiting the aircraft the
right to adjust it depending on their needs,” said designer Francesa Lanzavecchia. “Everyone has their own chair to live in with a table, light and recharging socket. It’s private, but it becomes public the moment you decide to [position the seats] in conference seating.” Lanzavecchia + Wai is primarily a furniture design company with no experience in aircraft interiors. “For us it’s amazing to be able to work with such a big and technical piece of equipment,” Lanzavecchia said. “The concept was about transmitting in a calm and relaxed way the fast speed [of the helicopter]. Speed is the
new VIP Contracts For Airbus Corporate Jet Centre Airbus Corporate Jet Centre has added new contracts in 2014 for its cabin and airframe services for Airbus Corporate Jet aircraft. Two Asian customers have appointed ACJC as their continuous airworthiness management organization (CAMO) for the outfitting phase of their ACJs, while an eastern European government operator of two ACJ319s has extended its VIP Pass contract for another year. The VIP Pass was introduced in 2009 as a total support package covering CAMO services, maintenance checks and component support. Three customers have chosen ACJC for A-checks and six-year checks so far in 2014, and the company has signed a five-year maintenance support services agreement with one of the Middle East’s largest ACJ operators. Other work this year has included several entry-into-service support contracts and also the first Sharklet winglet retrofits, applied to an ACJ319 and an ACJ320. ACJC (Booth 6613) has also landed a contract to outfit an ACJ319 for an Asian customer, following on from two cabin completion projects from Asia that were landed late last year. The most recent contract covers a cabin fit in an atypical configuration, and this also includes CAMO support. –D.D.
20 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
monitor. The Aircraft First Aid Kit Rx includes a bronchodilator and anti-nausea drugs. As well as meeting or exceeding regulations, the MedAire kits are integrated with the company’s travel risk management solutions, including MedLink. This a 24/7 global emergency response center for inflight medical assistance. The company also provides medical training for flight crew. MedAire has devised the Trip Ready app that provides a wide range of useful information about destinations around the world. Users with MedAire membership can also receive timely information about disease outbreaks, civil unrest or natural disasters that may affect their safety, giving them a tool to aid decision-making. The Trip Ready app was initially compatible with the iPad, but has now been extended to the iPhone. o
DAVID McINTOSH
Innovative VIP interior for AW169 on display
keyword of AgustaWestland.” The leather sidewalls feature endless rows of long pockets for storing iPads or other personal belongings, or for tucking photos to display during flight. “This meets our customization requirements–we want to have a personalized aircraft,” said an AgustaWestland spokesman. “The aircraft must be the customer’s, not something standardized.” No timetable for completion of the interior design has been set, he said. The AW169 is scheduled for certification in 2015. o
Airborne medical specialist MedAire (Booth 6543) has released a new series of improved airborne medical kits that were developed by the company’s medical products review board. The latest kits draw on the experience from more than 100,000 inflight medical events. The new range was created with ease-of-access and ease-of-use as key features for both crew and passengers. At the upper end of the range is the Advanced Aviation Medical Kit, which includes contents that can stabilize patients in critical situations and begin the inflight treatment of common ailments. It includes antibiotics so that treatment of bacterial conditions can be initiated rapidly and a digital blood-pressure monitor. Updated Aircraft First Aid Kits include medications for motion sickness and oral rehydration salts and a wrist blood-pressure
MedAire managing director Peter Tuggey, left, and product marketing manager Mandy Eddington demonstrate the company’s latest kits and its Trip Ready mobile app.
Falcon 7X clocks speed record A Dassault Falcon 7X earlier this month set a speed record from New York Teterboro airport to London City (LCY) airport, cruising at Mach 0.88 for most of the 3,465-nm trip. At 8:04 a.m. local time on May 2, Dassault test pilot Philippe Deleume and Dassault operational pilot Olivier Froment took off with three passengers on board. The aircraft was fully equipped for normal operation. Five hours and 54 minutes later, at 6:58 p.m. local time, the trijet touched down on the 4,000-foot runway at LCY. The data has been sent to the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale
in Lausanne, Switzerland for recognition as an official world record. From LCY, the Falcon 7X provides the longest range of any business jet, according to Dassault, to serve destinations such as New York or Dubai, for example. Flying from LCY’s short runway, it is limited in weight and thus in fuel. Therefore, on the outbound flight, it reached Teterboro in 7 hours 35 min, flying at its optimum long-range speed of Mach 0.80. The Falcon 7X’s maximum range is 5,950 nm but, over shorter distances, it can cruise at speeds up to its maximum operating limit of Mach 0.90. –T.D.
news clips z DC Aviation Passes IOSA Audit
MARK WAGNER
Executive charter operator DC Aviation (Booth 4859) has again passed the IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) with a very positive assessment, the Stuttgart, Germany-based company announced this week. In February, five auditors reviewed more than 1,000 standards and processes at DC Aviation. The areas covered aviation law and regulations, technology and safety and quality management and flight operations. Many new questions had to be answered as part of the audit, according to DC Aviation. The IATA operational safety audit was originally devised for airlines but in 2007 DC Aviation decided to undergo the process, as a way to raise its safety standards. According to the company, only a few business jet operators subject their operations to the IOSA audit.
z ABS Jets Marks 10th Anniversary At EBACE abramovich’s ‘little bandit’ Businessman Roman Abramovich’s Boeing 767 is known as “Bandit” for the whimsical mask painted around its windshield. The trick is reprised on his Falcon 900DX, known affectionately as “Little Bandit.”
BBA plans overhaul shop for Middle East clients by David Donald BBA Aviation’s aftermarket services division is shortly to open a purpose-built major overhaul facility to service the Middle East region through its subsidiary H+S Aviation. The facility will perform engine repair and overhaul (ERO) tasks for a range of turbines, and is scheduled to be operational by the end of the year (location to be selected).
H+S Aviation is headquartered at the former Portsmouth airport in the UK and collaborates closely with BBA Aviation sister company Dallas Airmotive. Between them, they operate 12 regional turbine centers and have four major overhaul facilities, with the Middle East location to become the fifth. In addition, more than 100
dassault taps amac for falcon service AMAC Aerospace (Booth 2946) and Dassault Aviation officials mark the launch of their authorized service center (ASC) business for Falcon aircraft maintenance in Turkey. Left to right, Atilla Guney, AMAC Aerospace Turkey COO; Kadri Muhiddin, group executive chairman and CEO, AMAC Aerospace; Jacques Chauvet, senior vice president, worldwide Falcon customer service, Dassault Aviation. AMAC’s 1,500sq-m facility at Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul is now a Dassault ASC, enabling EASA Part 145 line maintenance up to level 4A+ on Falcon 900 and 900EX EASy models. Falcon 2000, 2000EX EASy and 7X approvals are expected later this year. –R.A.
field service representatives are located at the world’s busiest business aviation airports. “In today’s evolving environment, more and more engine service is done in the field and there has been rapid growth of aircraft flying outside of North America,” said Mark Taylor, managing director of H+S Aviation. “We are responding by expanding our global support network to be closer to the customer.” H+S and Dallas work on engines from several OEMs, covering more than 80 percent of the engines that are in use on general aviation turbine aircraft and helicopters. H+S Aviation has a long history of working on Pratt & Whitney Canada products and is an authorized distributor and designated overhaul facility for the JT15D and PT6T. Dallas Airmotive also provides similar services for the PT6A and PW500, while General Electric and Honeywell turbines are also supported. Through its Team 250 H+S Aviation operates Europe’s largest authorized maintenance, repair and overhaul center (AMROC) for the Rolls-Royce M250 turbine, which powers numerous helicopters. In February the company signed an AMROC agreement covering the Rolls-Royce RR300. Another of BBA Aviation’s subsidiaries is Ontic, which focuses solely on providing OEM-quality manufacturing support of legacy systems and components. Recently Ontic has concluded deals with Curtiss-Wright and Safran and has also taken over support of the Rolls-Royce Dart engine. BBA Aviation is exhibiting at EBACE at Booth 4246. o
Prague-based ABS Jets (Booth 2538), a full service charter and management company, is celebrating its tenth anniversary at EBACE 2014. The company started with two jets and 20 employees and today has a dozen aircraft and more than 200 employees. Over the years the company has also added flight planning and ground handling, aircraft sales and consulting and maintenance to its portfolio. “People are a key competitive differentiator that has led to ABS Jets’ success,” said Vladimir Petak, CEO and member of the company’s board of directors. “Committed people deliver value to customers and drive customer loyalty; customers bring growth to the business, and growth offers opportunities to a company.”
z Jet Aviation, AJT Team for AOG Service Jet Aviation Basel is now cooperating with AJW Aviation to develop a component support and AOG service for Airbus and Boeing business aircraft operators on a global basis. The team is a natural marriage of two key players in their fields and will result in quicker and more reliable spares support to owners and operators. Jet Aviation brings to the table a global 24/7 network of AOG teams, and the Basel facility is an authorized service center for both Airbus ACJ and Boeing BBJ aircraft. AJW Aviation operates spares stocks for Airbus and Boeing types at several locations around the world and supports nearly 500 aircraft.
z Esterline’s New EFB and AIS On Display Esterline CMC Electronics (Booth 3339) is showcasing at EBACE 2014 its new PilotView information management solution, designed for integrated cockpit connectivity via an Aircraft Information Server (AIS). Making its EBACE debut, the system offers versatile aircraft network connectivity, secure file storage and aircraft interface capabilities with virtually any type of electronic flight bag (EFB). The new AIS addresses the increasing informationsharing and information-management requirements associated with cockpit, cabin, health monitoring and aircraft maintenance systems. It also reduces the complexity and implementation costs of similar systems, according to CMC. The Montreal-based avionics provider also has on display here its new PilotView Class 2 EFB, the CMA-1612, featuring a 12.1-inch LED-backlit display with multi-touch support. The EFB delivers high-end processing capabilities for applications, while offering versatile aircraft network connectivity, according to Jean-Marie Bégis, CMC’s director of EFB systems. The CMA-1612 has been selected as a factory option on the Bombardier CSeries airliner and as a standard option for a variety of business jets from Dassault Falcon and Embraer.
www.ainonline.com • May 22, 2014 • EBACE Convention News 21
Europe responds well to Nextant’s offerings three sales representation agreements. FortAero has been sales agent in Russia for a year, and operates two 400XTis in the country, but now has had its sales territory expanded to include the Francophone region of Europe: Belgium, France, Luxembourg and Switzerland. The company is partnering in its sales efforts with luxury Swiss watchmaker De Bethune, which enjoys strong relationships with high-net worth individuals and corporate entities in Europe. For the markets in the UK, Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and Ireland, SaxonAir (part of Klyne Aviation Group) has been appointed as the Nextant sales representative. In the summer the operator will add a 400XTi to its AOC, making it the UK’s first operator. SaxonAir managing director Chris Mace remarked, “As the UK
Nextant has 400XTis operating in four European countries, with a fifth to join the roster this summer. The company demonstrator at EBACE is sporting a new-look 2014 cabin interior.
Jetcraft’s JetCoast targets green Bombardier bizjets by James Wynbrandt Global aircraft brokerage Jetcraft of Raleigh, North Carolina, is introducing its JetCoast completions program, a refreshed facet of its acquisition services, at EBACE 2014. An alliance between the
company, Jet Aviation (Booth 418), and Bombardier Aerospace (Booth 6656), JetCoast offers buyers customized completions on new Challenger series and Global series jets. Under the program, Jetcraft
where would you like to go? EBACE exhibitor Hadid International Services, an aviation handling specialist based in Dubai, UAE, has offices in Libya, Algeria, Niger, India and Pakistan. Founded in 1981, Hadid considers itself a full service provider.
emerges from its austerity programs there is a strong focus on value for money. The great thing about the 400XTi is that there is no tradeoff between price and performance. The aircraft is a proven money-maker for companies and as a charter aircraft.” The third new sales entity is Nextant Poland, owned by luxury vessel manager Power Boats Poland. As well as the promise of the 400XTi, Nextant Poland sees a bright future for the King Air C90-based Nextant G90XT. “Our customers have come to depend on us to advise them on the right equipment and to support them,” said general manager Maja Darowska. “The 400XTi has earned its reputation, and with the value proposition of the G90XT we foresee similar success.” Elsewhere in Europe Time Air already covers central Europe, while JetHQ is the representative in Turkey (and Middle East territories). Nextant’s G90XT remanufacturing program is being undertaken with key partners Garmin (avionics) and GE (H75 engines). The latter are manufactured at a facility in Prague in the Czech Republic, which will also provide maintenance support for Europe.
Nextant is to open a completion center for the G90XT there and also a completions showroom for the EMEA region. To cater for a growing fleet Nextant has put in place a worldwide support network with 24/7 service. With a global parts distribution service and strategically located depots, the network has demonstrated an average AOG return-to-service time of less than
(exhibiting at the static display) buys green aircraft from Bombardier and oversees the completions, which are performed at Jet Aviation’s facility in St. Louis, Missouri. The prices are about the same through either channel (Jetcraft is asking for $44 million for a JetCoast Global 5000 and $54 million for a JetCoast Global 6000), but Jetcraft can offer customers more customization and faster delivery than available through Bombardier, according to the company.
“We’re in our first two JetCoast Globals,” said Jetcraft president Chad Anderson, who sees the program as a win-win-win for customers, Bombardier and Jetcraft. “The OEM already has a strong backlog of aircraft and lots of institutional buyers [that don’t need or want customization],” he said. “It’s easier for the OEM to complete those aircraft on order rather than do near-term delivery with frequent changes to the specs,” as often happens with custom completions.
22 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
nine hours. There are currently 13 authorized service centers, eight of which are in the U.S. In Europe, service centers are located at Augsburg, Germany, and in Geneva at Jet Aviation. Elsewhere there are centers in Dubai, Singapore and Johannesburg, South Africa. Beyond its current network, Nextant has plans to open further centers in the UK, India, China and Australia. o
DAVID McINTOSH
Nextant Aerospace has been pleasantly surprised by the level of interest shown in Europe for its 400XTi remanufactured light jet, of which six are currently flying on the continent, and forthcoming G90XT turboprop. The company expects that interest will continue to grow and has expanded its sales network in the continent. “The 400XTi is clearly the right aircraft for the region and we are proud to bring our new sales partners on board in Europe,” said Jay Heublein, executive v-p of sales and marketing. “As European economies are showing signs of sustained growth, aircraft buyers are keen to leverage the value of business aviation at the lowest cost. However, customers are still demanding market-leading range and speed, with a spacious and quiet cabin.” This week Nextant is signing
DAVID McINTOSH
by David Donald
galley gallery One element of Bombardier’s impressive Global 7000 mockup, the largest in business jet history, is this full-size galley.
The program actually dates to early this century, Anderson said, as an alternate completion channel for Challenger 604s. Jetcraft eventually completed and sold 30 new 604s before moving into Challenger 605s and selling close to another 20. “Here we are in 2014, and now Jetcraft clients have evolved into more and more global aircraft, so we’re moving into the Global 5000 and Global 6000,” Anderson said. “It’s the natural next step from the earlier days.” o
It’s easy to see which Falcon owners have long-range plans.
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One cure for aerial claustrophobia is bigger windows. Fokker Technologies has teamed with Boeing Business Jets to bring just that feature to market. The Panoramic Window is 54.5 inches wide, slightly larger than three conventional window bays. It also stands 40 percent taller than the conventional window height. Find out more at the Fokker booth (3223).
Alpha Star ramps up its tech, Jetcraft: European recovery adds EFBs, LiveTV, winglets lags U.S. by 12 to 18 months by Thierry Dubois
by Chad Trautvetter Airborne Internet connectivity offers speeds of up to 4.5 Mbps. In 2016, Alpha Star will have Airbus’s Sharklets (winglets) installed on its inservice ACJ320. The retrofit comprises local structural reinforcement of the outer wing, a software upgrade to several flight-control computers and replacement of the existing wingtips by Sharklets. The operator has thus become the first Airbus ACJ320 owner to order the retrofit. Alpha Star expects to save about 4 percent in fuel burn, while also enhancing performance and appearance. Separately, the Saudi operator has obtained ISO 9001 quality system certification, which comes on top of its implementing the international standard for business aircraft operations (IS-BAO). In addition to charter flights, Alpha Star, founded in 2010, also offers air ambulance, aircraft management, line maintenance and consultancy services. o
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24 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
“The European business aviation market recovery is lagging that of the U.S. market by 12 to 18 months,” Chad Anderson, president of business jet broker Jetcraft (static display), told AIN here at EBACE 2014. “Many European operators are rightsizing their fleets, which makes this a stronger recovery. However, there is still a lot of price fragility in the pre-owned business jet market.” If anything, Anderson said, the U.S. market is helping to prop up the recovery in Europe. “Europe has an ample supply of good, young pre-owned business jets, which are quickly being snapped up by buyers in the U.S.,” he said. “Essentially, this region is presently an export market for pre-owned jets.” But there are still buyers in Europe, “particularly those in it for the long term,” he said. “The market for pre-owned business jets is pretty strong in the UK and Germany. We also consider Africa to be an extension of the European market, and we’re seeing strong demand there, especially in Nigeria and the metroplexes in South Africa.” Due to the tensions in Ukraine and Crimea, “Russia, which has typically been a strong player in the market, is an unknown at the moment,” Anderson said. “In the short term, there are more sellers than buyers there. However, we see these tensions as a temporary flare-up. The geopolitics there should settle soon.” With prices of pre-owned jets “bouncing along the bottom” and ample supply, Anderson said the good news is that there are a lot of great values in the resale market. While sellers are getting less for their aircraft, “The real opportunity for them is when they purchase another aircraft, which they can also buy at a depressed price,” he added.
The European business jet market has typically been driven by light and midsize jets, a segment that Anderson said is driven by high-net-worth individuals who make “emotional purchases rather than business ones.” But as sales in these segments have diminished, he said the business jet market in Europe is now being buoyed by increased demand for large-cabin jets, which are typically bought by corporations that must justify the expense. Over the next 12 to 24 months, Anderson expects the pre-owned business jet market in Europe and elsewhere will carry on with its recovery. That said, he believes prices will continue to bounce along the bottom. o
DAVID McINTOSH
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based charter operator Alpha Star Aviation Services (Booth 3824) has equipped its entire fleet with electronic flight bags (EFBs). The six VIP aircraft include three Airbuses (ACJ318, ACJ319 and ACJ320), one Gulfstream G550, one Hawker 900XP and one ATR 42. The company intends to have its pilots using EFBs–iPads connected to a Rockwell Collins system–during the entire flight in the short term. “Our crews were trained by Lufthansa and FlightSafety,” CEO Salem Al Muzaini added. Alpha Star also announced that it is adding its A318 to the air operators certificate that it has from Saudi Arabia’s civil aviation authority. The aircraft will therefore become the first of the type to reach Saudi Part 135 safety standards, the company claimed. Alpha Star’s ACJ318 is fitted with a LiveTV system that receives programs via U.S., European, Arabsat and Nilsat satellites.
Jetcraft president Chad Anderson said one reason for a recovery lag is uncertainty in the Russian market.
Analysts predict slow rebound for Europe by Ian Goold Business aircraft manufacturers here at EBACE this week will be hoping to disprove suggestions that demand for new airplanes in Europe from current (or prospective) operators will decline. While Bombardier Aerospace foresees the region remaining second only to North America in its long-term requirements, equipment supplier Honeywell has detected less short-term enthusiasm. Globally, both companies’ market forecasts predict delivery of almost 10,000 new business aircraft in the next 10 years. Over the coming 20-year period, Bombardier predicts that “despite its continued economic challenges,” Europe is still the second-largest market for new business-jet deliveries behind North America. The Canadian manufacturer says European operators will receive 1,670 new aircraft during 201322 and an additional 2,230 units in the following 10 years, these aircraft comprising some 16.25 percent of the 24,000 units forecast in the market sectors served by Bombardier.
resilience previously shown by European operators in the face of lackluster economic conditions may have reached the point of fatigue, with weak growth prospects expected for 2014.”
Its analysis has been influenced by reduced survey participation by Russia, which previously “has supported the region with strong local purchasing ambitions, [but like the rest of
Europe] has slipped in reported purchase plans.” Honeywell notes that Russia’s “small [response] sample has added an element of volatility not present in prior surveys and may be understating the true demand.” European operators’ planned purchases suggest “fairly even demand in the next three years,” averaging about 20 percent per
year. Nevertheless, Honeywell does expect operators in Europe (excluding Russia) to fly more often this year after a slight decline and to fly to more varied destinations. “Modest growth is expected in 2014, driven in part by improved economic prospects in Western Europe, but also [by] a stronger outlook for Eastern Europe,” the report said. o
Market forecasts predict delivery of almost 10,000 new business aircraft in the next 10 years. Honeywell, which bases its forecast on the declared “purchase expectations” of more than 1,500 non-fractional business-aircraft operators worldwide, said that in 2013 European intentions to acquire additional or replacement aircraft were equivalent to 25 percent of their current fleets–well below “the 30- to 33-percent levels” seen in its previous three surveys. It puts the European share of estimated global five-year demand at 12 percent, down from 18 percent 12 months earlier. The company suggests that aircraft owners might finally have responded to recession: “The
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www.ainonline.com • May 22, 2014 • EBACE Convention News 25
Strength.
Brussels takes drastic action to save Single European Sky
Inside and out.
by Bill Carey
Our strength doesn’t just come from 40 years of experience in our industry. It comes from relationships built on trust and integrity. After all, It’s not just about doing business, it’s about doing it right.
The Single European Sky ATM Research (Sesar) effort, the “technological pillar” of the future Single European Sky (SES) vision, has a new lease on life. In April, the European Parliament voted to extend the mission of the entity managing the research and development program, known as the Sesar Joint Undertaking (SJU), by eight years until 2024. The SJU expects the European Union Council of Ministers will approve the extension this summer. The SJU’s extension means that Europe will continue driving air traffic management technology improvements even as the continent digests the ongoing restructuring of its ATC infrastructure. In a separate action during its plenary session in March, the parliament approved amended Single European Sky legislation known as SES 2+, which redoubles the EC’s effort to break down state barriers and reorganize the continent into more efficient “functional airspace blocks” (FABs), which have been slow to begin functioning. Among several changes to the program, the SES 2+ legislation calls for “full organizational and budgetary separation” of national authorities from the ATC organizations they oversee; opening ATC support services to competitive bidding; and strengthening ATM performance targets. SES 2+ also strengthens the central role of Brussels-based Eurocontrol as
“network manager” to perform networklevel services across Europe, including air traffic flow management, route design and coordination of radio frequencies and radar transponder codes. Need to Improve FABs
Last month, the European Commission (EC) issued formal letters of notice to Germany, Belgium, France, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to “improve” their FAB–the first of the nine regional airspace entities to receive such notification. The five countries and non-EU state Switzerland ratified a treaty forming Functional Airspace Block Europe Central (FABEC) in June 2013, missing the EU’s December 2012 deadline. “We have to finally overcome national borders in the European airspace,” said EC transport commissioner Siim Kallas. “FABs are a necessary, vital component of the Single European Sky. Right now these common airspaces exist only on paper; they are formally established but not yet functional. I urge member states to step up their ambitions and push forward the implementation of the Single Sky.” Trade unions representing controllers and some air navigation service providers (ANSPs) have protested the reforms embodied in SES 2+, arguing that its cost and performance targets are unrealistic and compromise safety.
BROKERAGE & ACQUISITIONS +1 303 444 6766 • JETSALES.COM The Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre, a member of FABEC, provides ATC for the upper airspace of Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and northwest Germany. It is a prime example of the harmonization of airspace and a model for cross-border projects in the spirit of the SES.
26 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
Last year, the European Business Aviation Association (EBAA) was among airspace user groups that advocated stronger measures to achieve the Single European Sky vision. “European airspace users are negatively impacted and therefore extremely concerned by the lack of achievements: the Single European Sky needs to be put back on track by stronger leadership from the European Commission and enforced commitment by member states,” the EBAA said in a joint statement with the Association of European Airlines, the European Low Fares Association, the European Regions Airline Association and the International Air Carrier Association.
has entered the deployment phase of the Sesar effort, the final phase planners envisioned to create the SES by 2020. It has a new executive director, Florian Guillermet, who previously worked for Eurocontrol, French air navigation service provider DSNA and Air France before joining the SJU as chief program officer in 2008. Guillermet’s
appointment as executive director became effective on April 1. He is the organization’s second permanent executive director, succeeding Patrick Ky, who now heads the European Aviation Safety Agency, and Claude Chêne, who served in an acting capacity after Ky’s departure. Earlier this year, the SJU published a fourth set of 20 Sesar
technology validation exercises it plans to conduct this year. Among them, it will conduct a “shadow mode” trial at Saarbrücken Airport in Germany to assess the functionality of a “remote tower” concept–providing ATC services from a remote location to an airport with low-to-medium traffic density of 20,000 movements per year of less. A second trial at Röst
airport and Vaeröy Heliport in Norway will validate the feasibility of providing simultaneous air traffic services to multiple remote aerodromes by a single operator. The SJU managed 68 total validation exercises over three previous releases. It proved the remote tower concept at several Scandinavian airports in the third release. o
BILL CAREY
AMAC Aerospace: Swiss Excellence in Business Aviation
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Florian Guillermet took over as the new executive director of the Sesar Joint Undertaking on April 1.
While the SES institutional framework has been slow to form, the Sesar research pillar is considered successful. In addition to approving an extension of the SJU’s mission from December 2016 to 2024, the Parliament endorsed the EC’s proposal to contribute €600 million ($831 million) toward its operations through the EU’s Horizon 2020 framework program for research. In a draft opinion recommending the SJU’s extension last year, Antonio Cancian, rapporteur with the parliament’s transport and tourism committee, said: “In the context of recent developments concerning the implementation of the Single European Sky performance pillar, including unsatisfactory and slow progress in setting well-functioning performance and charging schemes or the functional airspace blocks which are still to deliver the expected results, the rapporteur sees the technological pillar as the leading element in the implementation structure of the whole Single European Sky concept. That is why the continuity of its structure, both in terms of funding and human resources, is of crucial importance.” The Brussels-based SJU, a public-private partnership that includes industry contributions,
AMAC Aerospace is the largest privately owned aviation firm in the world specializing in completions, maintenance, charter and brokering. We provide corporate and private aircraft maintenance, refurbishment and completion services, as well as aircraft management and charter services. Located at EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse in the new expansion zone, our three stateof-the-art maintenance and production facility hangars enjoy generous workshop and office space as well as 31,325m² securely fenced tarmac that opens directly onto the linkage taxiway. Of our three hangars, we dedicate one wide-body hangar to maintenance, the second to completions and refurbishment and a third, smaller hangar to maintenance work on a variety of smaller aircraft. Total floor space extends over 21,000m² The two large hangars comfortably accommodate multiple narrow and wide-body aircraft, Boeing B747s, B777s, B787s, Airbus A340s, A330s and extend to service an A380. The smaller hangar simultaneously serves two narrow-body aircraft, Boeing Business Jets and/or Airbus A318, A319, A320 or Gulfstreams and select Bombardier jets. We are proud to offer our esteemed clientele the chance to experience AMAC professionalism and we look forward to welcoming you!
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www.ainonline.com • May 22, 2014 • EBACE Convention News 27
FSF’s new chief pushes for progress by Robert P. Mark The Flight Safety Foundation (FSF) has a new president and CEO, Jon Beatty,
who until recently held the same positions with International Aero Engines.
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copies of the FSF’s approach and landing accident reduction toolkit in use around the world,” added Beatty. “We’re working on an update to that toolkit right now.” The foundation plans to release the findHe comes to the aviation safety advo- ings this year of that additional survey on cate with solid manufacturing industry go-arounds, which was initiated in 2012. Also among the top three concerns experience, having begun his career as a quality engineer with Sikorsky. He was for the foundation and its new CEO is confirmed in his post in April and is now enabling data sharing, while also maxheading up FSF’s efforts to promote fur- imizing data protection. The FSF is working with Mitre, the International ther advances in flight safety. One of the foundation’s top concerns Civil Aviation Organization and the is go-arounds, not just the lack of pilots International Air Transport Organizaactually performing the maneuver, but tion to develop the ability to share data also how poorly many of those pilots han- and apply analytics to solutions to help improve aviation’s already dle this seldom-used event. outstanding safety record. The FSF (Booth 1315), in conThe FSF also co-chairs the junction with 15 other aviation ICAO task force on safety organizations, studied the issue information protection inand in June 2013 released findtended to establish legal ings about the true risks of a guidelines to protect data lack of pilot proficiency. from punitive use, except in A recent survey of 2,500 the case of gross negligence working pilots showed 96 perof illegal activity. cent of approaches are sta“Data will, of course, set ble. Of the other 4 percent, us free,” said Beatty. “But up however, almost none were Jon Beatty, until now there has always terminated with the aircraft president and CEO been a lot of data that peoperforming a go-around, a Flight Safety Foundation ple don’t want to share maneuver the foundation calls a part of normal, everyday flying. “We because they’re fearful of what might have a pretty good protocol right now for happen to it. Right now ICAO has some how we fly approaches,” Beatty told AIN. of the information and IATA also has “What is less well documented is when some. The world would be a better place to make a go-around decision. The most [if we could all see the data], but one of recent accidents [Asiana 214 and UPS the obstacles is that lack of a common 1354] have both involved approach and database. So many individuals treat this information as proprietary. I think we landing [configurations].” Experts agree that, at least in the case should be comparing ourselves to the of the Asiana Airlines July 2013 crash in industry, not our competitors.” The foundation’s goal is to help creSan Francisco, a timely go-around would have prevented the accident. The data ate a system where the data is cleansed so has not yet been released on last August’s that only the relevant facts appear, and the person or company sharing that data UPS crash in Birmingham, Alabama. “There are now more than 40,000 is unidentified. “We need to give all organizations a vision of how overall industry safety could be improved if we can raised the bar on everyone,” stated Beatty.
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28 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
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The FSF is also quite proud of its safety audit arm, which is known as the basic aviation risk standards (BARS) program and is based in the organization’s regional office in Melbourne, Australia. The foundation created these specialized audits to assist operators in the natural resources sector and other remote operations. The BARS program benefits all companies that contract aircraft operators to carry people, so each can focus on safe operations, not redundant audits. Beatty is still getting used to his new desk in the Flight Safety Foundation office in Alexandria, Virginia. AIN asked if he had a dream for what the foundation could become. “I like a version of the Boy Scout motto for this,” he said. “I hope to make the foundation a better organization by the time I leave than the way I found it... I think the FSF brings the voice of reason to this industry. We’re the only pure safety organization...I think we make a perfect third leg to the three-legged stool of manufacturers and regulators.” o
Afirs is an elegant fix for flight-data tracking by David Donald The recent tragedy of the still-missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 has brought the tracking of aircraft sharply into focus, and at a conference last week in Montreal ICAO forged a consensus to develop aircraft tracking as matter of priority. While this is a welcome move, the ability to transmit more than just positional data is critical in allowing ground experts to not only determine the causes of losses, but also to give aircrew a better chance of averting a loss. Continuous streaming of aircraft data has been possible for some time, but it comes at a high price and typically has high bandwidth demands. Flyht Aerospace Solutions (Booth 6242) has an elegant answer in the form of its Afirs (automated flight information reporting system), a virtually tamper-proof system that is already flying on around 350 aircraft, although not all have streaming capability. Afirs uses the Iridium satellite network to transmit data,
which has a number of benefits, such as worldwide coverage (most satcom systems do not cover the polar regions). It has also been proven to offer robust links, with aircraft able to maintain a connection even at extreme off-normal attitudes. However, Iridium is a low-bandwidth solution, so Flyht has developed a smart compression system that finally allows full aircraft data to be streamed through the Iridium network. Bandwidth requirements, and therefore cost of operation, are also reduced by designing the system so that it only streams data when automatically triggered to do so. Automatic Reports
In normal circumstances Afirs provides a technical reporting service for operators. It periodically transmits technical reports of around 60 to 100 aircraft and system parameters, plus positional information, back to ground operations, It can also include a fuel-management
The Afirs system has a simple control panel on the flight deck, although it operates automatically and cannot be turned off in the air. The electronics are packaged into a box accommodated in a standard avionics rack. In normal operations Afirs sends positional and system status reports on a pre-set time interval, shown here set for every five minutes.
function that allows operators to save on their fuel costs. However, if an abnormality is detected, the system immediately and automatically generates and transmits a report to alert ground operations. Typically such events are abnormalities that are not critical safety of flight issues, but that will require closer monitoring and possible remedy after the aircraft has landed. The report allows ground operations to mobilize the necessary maintenance teams and parts to minimize downtime when the aircraft lands. In an exceptional emergency situation, such as a depressurization, engine failure, fire, unusual attitude change or any other event that may threaten the safety of the aircraft,
Afirs automatically begins live streaming of data. This detailed flow of information not only charts in real time the aircraft’s progress and status, but also provides an instant bank of information enabling ground experts to aid the aircrew in taking remedial action, by communicating through an Iridium voice channel. Operators can also choose to have emergency streams relayed to equipment OEMs and air traffic, rescue or other agencies. In the event of an aircraft loss, the streamed Afirs data also provides accurate track and last-position data and acts as a backup to the primary “black box” flight data recorder. The ground system records data to allow an instant
Air BP helping airports with World Cup deluge
MARK WAGNER
by David Donald
gulfstream gaggle Gulfstream brought a full complement of five business jet models, testament to the expanding value of the European market.
Brazil’s airports are standing by for a huge influx of executive aircraft as the FIFA soccer World Cup gets under way next month. Supporters, teams and other stakeholders will turn to business aircraft for transportation to and from Brazil, and also as a means of traveling around the country during the competition. Recognizing the need to meet the temporarily increased demands for fuel services, Air BP (Booth 634) has launched a number of initiatives to augment its well-established Brazilian fuel services. During the games Air BP will operate a Fast Track program for aircraft flying to and from the competition. Provided that an operator gives the arrival airport at least three hours’ notice, Air BP will guarantee to have a refueler at the client’s aircraft within 20 minutes of landing. Alternatively, clients can book a pre-arranged refueling time. This initiative will help operators that may have tight turnaround times and might be
30 EBACE Convention News • May 22, 2014 • www.ainonline.com
otherwise be held up in longerthan-usual fuel queues. Another initiative is to hold domestic and international fuel prices at current levels until the end of July, allowing operators to plan their fuel costs well in advance. Fast Track services and frozen pricing will be implemented at all 16 airports
playback of similar information as recorded by the FDR, and also provides access to aircraft data from before the time that the emergency was first detected and notified. Flyht quotes a price of around $50,000 for the Afirs equipment, and a similar amount for an installation, which takes two or three days to perform if not part of a wider maintenance activity. To offset the acquisition investment, the company claims that Afirs can pay for itself in a short time due to the potential fuel-savings it generates. While it is an everyday tool intended to streamline commercial and business aviation operations, its potential value to safety and accident investigation is incalculable. o in Brazil where Air BP operates. Special fuel pricing deals are being created for what are likely to be the two most popular entry-points during the competition: São Paulo-Guarulhos and Galeão-Antônio Carlos Jobim near Rio de Janeiro. To complete its World Cup initiatives, Air BP has teamed with Tri-Star Handling Concierge of São Paulo to offer navigation, flight planning, weather and Notam services. Additional services can be provided by Tri-Star Concierge, and special rates are available to Air BP customers. o
Air BP is expecting a huge rise in demand for fuel services during the World Cup and has put in place a number of initiatives to assist operators during the competition.
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