Alaska Airlines said Thursday the Boeing 737 Max 9 grounding will cost it $150 million and that the airline would hold Boeing accountable.
06.01.2024 - 12:53 / skift.com / Edward Russell
Japan Airlines expects minimal financial fallout from the the crash of one of its Airbus A350 jetliners at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport on Tuesday. Insurance will cover the cost of the plane while the temporary closure of Haneda’s longest runway is forecast to take a small bite out of the airline’s profits.
“Our main concern is that Haneda Airport is not operating its main runway, Runway C, due to the wreckage of the crashed aircraft,” said Shuei Nishizawa, head of the finance department at JAL, in an analyst call on Thursday. “Therefore, roughly 60 flights to 70 flights, mainly domestic flights, for both JAL and ANA [All Nippon Airways] are cancelled every day now.”
He declined to say how long the runway will remain closed but indicated it will likely be several weeks.
Haneda is the busiest airport in Japan, and an important hub for both ANA and JAL. It is also the main gateway to Japan for a number of foreign carriers, including Air France, American Airlines, British Airways, and Delta Air Lines.
A reduction in flights at Haneda will reduce revenue for JAL and, Nishizawa said, cut into profits. The airline is evaluating the impact on its 2023 fiscal year that ends in March, he added.
JAL previously forecast 1.7 billion Japanese yen ($1.4 billion) in revenue and a 130 million Japanese yen operating profit in the current fiscal year.
The crash Tuesday occurred when JAL flight JL516 from Sapporo to Tokyo collided with a Japanese Coast Guard De Havilland Dash 8 upon landing at Haneda at 5:47 p.m. local time. All 367 passengers and 12 crew members aboard the JAL plane survived and evacuated safely. Five of the six aboard the Coast Guard aircraft lost their lives.
Many have described the successful evacuation of all aboard the JAL plane as a “miracle.” It took 18 minutes from touchdown until the last person aboard the aircraft evacuated at about 6:05 p.m. local time, according to the airline.
The A350 was subsequently engulfed in flames. The Coast Guard plane was destroyed upon impact.
Japanese authorities, with assistance from American, British, and French investigators, will lead the investigation into the exact cause of the crash. However, an initial transcript of air traffic control communications with both aircraft suggest that the Coast Guard aircraft taxied onto the runway where the JAL plane was landing without permission.
The loss of one of JAL’s 16 A350-900s will cost the airline roughly 15 billion Japanese yen ($104 million), it indicated in a stock exchange filing. However, those loses will be fully covered by insurance.
What insurance will not cover is the fact that JAL is down one of its largest aircraft. That is estimated to reduce the airline’s capacity by roughly one percentage point. It will
Alaska Airlines said Thursday the Boeing 737 Max 9 grounding will cost it $150 million and that the airline would hold Boeing accountable.
In a city of ravenous for art, in Tokyo lines for exhibitions are as long as those for the latest pop idol's concerts.
The U.S. may be in the middle of a bitter cold spell, but Japan is looking straight ahead to spring with their predictions of when its famed cherry blossoms are returning.
Spirit Airlines, once a fast-growing low-cost carrier, is struggling to convince investors that it has a clear path forward after an antitrust ruling blocked the sale of the company to JetBlue Airways.
The new president of Japan Airlines is the first woman to helm the top job at the company, the airline announced in a statement on Wednesday.
Mitsuko Tottori started her career at Japan Airlines in 1985 welcoming passengers aboard. Now she’s being welcomed as the incoming president of JAL.
If you are heading to Japan this spring in hopes of seeing the Somei Yoshino (Yoshino cherry) trees, the Japan Meteorological Corporation released its peak bloom prediction dates for more than 1,000 cities throughout the country.
I used to apply for multiple rewards-earning credit cards each year. My over-stuffed (mobile) wallet tells that tale as it's stacked with over 20 rewards credit cards from a long list of banks.
In 2024, more of us, apparently, are resolving to take more trips by air. Or at least that was how it was looking before two back-to-back in-flight incidents kicked off the start of the year: the Japan Airlines airplane that burst into flames after a runway collision, and the Alaska Airlines plug door blowing out that led to the global grounding of Boeing 737-9 Max planes.
American Airlines announced a slew of changes to its American Airlines AAdvantage loyalty program Tuesday. There's a lot to digest, but so far, I'm pleasantly surprised that there's not a major devaluation. In fact, there are surprisingly some things to like about the news.
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Diane Higgins, one of the 155 people who survived the "Miracle on the Hudson" crash alongside her mother, Lucille Palmer, in 2009. It has been edited for length and clarity.
Airline safety is at the forefront of many people's minds after a fiery Japan Airlines collision with a Japanese Coast Guard plane in Tokyo.