User:Norcandy/Sandbox/Satavian: Difference between revisions
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The price war continued into the early 1950s but was ultimately unsustainable for both airlines, and so resulted in the [[Aviation (Pricing & Regulations) Act, 1955]] which saw both airlines forced to abandon many competing routes in an attempt by the government to control the airlines. Whilst Satavian Airlines had lost significant ground domestically, it had an effective monopoly on international routes originating in Satavia, and was able to rapidly expand into friendly [[Asteria Inferior|Asterian]] states. | The price war continued into the early 1950s but was ultimately unsustainable for both airlines, and so resulted in the [[Aviation (Pricing & Regulations) Act, 1955]] which saw both airlines forced to abandon many competing routes in an attempt by the government to control the airlines. Whilst Satavian Airlines had lost significant ground domestically, it had an effective monopoly on international routes originating in Satavia, and was able to rapidly expand into friendly [[Asteria Inferior|Asterian]] states. | ||
(merger with | In the 1960s, Satavian Airways would be revitalised and began to target the leisure market that had previously been the domain of other Asterian carriers, such as [[Nuvania|Nuvanian]] flag-carrier [[NLM]] and the [[Air Imagua|Imaguan Civilian Air Service]], which both offered more competitive prices. Satavian Airways offered Asteria's first package holiday in 1961, with a flight from Port Hope/O'Connell to [[Peter Hansson International Airport]] in [[Imagua]]. | ||
By the late 1960s, Satavian Airways' main competitor, SRA, had fallen into debts as it struggled to keep up with Satavian Airways and it's significantly larger budget. In 1969, SRA went into a state of {{wpl|insolvency}}, and facing the collapse of Satavia's second largest airline prompted the government to pass the [[Satavian Regional Airlines|Aviation (Insolvency, Protection & Mergers) Act, 1969]] which allowed for the merger of Satavian Airways and SRA. Satavian Airways now dominated the Satavian aviation industry, and following the coup that lead to the installation of a democratically elected government in 1976 allowed Satavian Airways greater access to the international market. For the first time since 1941, the airline re-opened the Port Hope-Morwall connection, operating with just one stop in the city-state of [[Montecara]] before operating non-stop from 1979 with a {{wpl|Boeing 747-200}}. | |||
===1988-2006: Air Satavia=== | ===1988-2006: Air Satavia=== | ||
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<gallery caption="Gallery" mode=packed heights=130px> | <gallery caption="Gallery" mode=packed heights=130px> | ||
File:Satavian Airlines (2018; B747-400) - Native Danger.png|Boeing 747-400, SX-OEI ''Lady of the Vehmens'' on approach to Port Hope/O'Connell in the ''Native Danger'' livery | File:Satavian Airlines (2018; B747-400) - Native Danger.png|Boeing 747-400, SX-OEI ''Lady of the Vehmens'' on approach to Port Hope/O'Connell in the ''Native Danger'' livery | ||
File:Satavian Airlines (2020; Boeing 747-400) - Estmerish Overseas Airways Corporation Livery.png|Boeing 747-400, SX-GNL ''City of Port Hope'', sporting the ''{{wpl|BOAC|EOAC}} Centenary livery'' | File:Satavian Airlines (2020; Boeing 747-400) - Estmerish Overseas Airways Corporation Livery.png|Boeing 747-400, SX-GNL ''City of Port Hope'', sporting the ''{{wpl|BOAC|EOAC}} Centenary'' livery | ||
File:Vlugwell (2011; 777-300ER) - Bright Sea.png|Satavian Airlines subsidiary Vlugwell 777-300ER, pictured here in 2011 operating the ''Bright Sea'' livery | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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===International=== | ===International=== | ||
[[File:Satavian Airlines destination map (2022).png|thumb|right|500px|{{legend|#ff5c5c|Satavia}} {{legend|#0066ff|Satavian Airlines destinations}}]] | |||
{|class="sortable wikitable toccolours" | {|class="sortable wikitable toccolours" | ||
|- | |- |
Revision as of 10:07, 10 April 2022
| |||||||
Founded | 23 January 1935Satavian Imperial Airways Corporation) | (as||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Commenced operations | 18 December 2008 | (as Satavian Airlines)||||||
Hubs | Port Hope/O'Connell | ||||||
Secondary hubs | Port Arthur/Fort Kinnon Victoriaburg | ||||||
Frequent-flyer program | SkyPoints | ||||||
Alliance | Sky Alliance | ||||||
Subsidiaries | SatavianExpress Vlugwel | ||||||
Fleet size | 98 | ||||||
Destinations | 65 | ||||||
Parent company | Government of Satavia (66%) | ||||||
Traded as | PHSX: SATX | ||||||
Headquarters | Greystone, Port Hope, Hope Province, Satavia | ||||||
Key people | Derek Moyne, Chairman Jack Lawson, CEO | ||||||
Revenue | G9.1 billion (2020) | ||||||
Operating income | G995 million (2020) | ||||||
Net income | G412 million (2020) | ||||||
Employees | 18,339 | ||||||
Website | satavian |
Satavian Airlines Corporation Ltd, commonly known as Satavian Airlines, is the flag carrier of Satavia and its largest airline by fleet size, international destinations and passengers carried. Satavian Airlines is one of the world's oldest airlines through its predecessor companies, with Satavian Imperial Airways Corporation, commonly known as SIAC, the oldest of those, founded in 1935 to provide a trans-Vehmens service from Port Hope, at the time capital of the Dominion of Satavia to Morwall, Estmere. Satavian Airlines dominated the Satavian commercial aviation industry during the late 20th century and into the early 21st century but struggled to survive following the 2005 global financial recession. In 2006, the airline entered into administration, before being rescued by the Norton government, which began a huge reconstruction process that saw the airline lose a large portion of its market share both internationally and domestically.
Satavian Airlines remains one of the largest airlines in the Asterias, and is a founding member of Sky Alliance, the world's second-largest airline alliance, through its predecessor Air Satavia. Satavian Airlines operates a fleet of 98 aircraft, across 65 destinations on all four inhabited continents. The airline operates primarily out of its main hub in Port Hope O'Connell International Airport, the larger of the two airports that service Port Hope, in addition to smaller operations originating from Port Arthur-Fort Kinnon International Airport and Victoriaburg Fort Zilverzee International Airport. Its headquarters are in the Greystone suburb of Port Hope, adjacent to Port Hope/O'Connell Airport, situated in Burnaby.
The airline operates a fleet consisting of Airbus A220, Airbus A320, Airbus A321, Airbus A330, Airbus A350, Boeing 747 and Boeing 787 aircraft. Following the nationalisation of the airline in 2006, the airline moderninsed it's ageing fleet. The airline has won Airtrax Best Asterian Airline for three consecutive years, in 2017, 2018 and 2019.
History
1935-1939: The early years
Following Satavia's liberation towards the end of the Great War, Neville Moyne, a wealthy Estmerish businessman, sought to connect Satavia, at the time a part of the Estmerish Empire, to Morwall. On 23 January 1935, Satavian Imperial Airways Corporation, operating a Armstrong Whitworth Atalanta aircraft, flew the first trans-Vehmens flight of the Airline, carrying eleven passengers (including Moyne) and mail. The aircraft, registered G-SVAA Dominion, flew Port Hope-Fort Kinnon-Kingsport-Port Fitzhubert-Montecara-Bouley before arriving in Morwall on 14 February, to find that the war had ended.
Within the same year, the airline (now partly-owned by the Estmerish Overseas Airways Corporation) had expanded its operations to become the largest airline in Satavia. When Satavia declared independence in 1936, the airline's focus was diverted from operating the Port Hope-Morwall connection (although it maintained this route, with less frequent flights) to the Asterian market. In 1937, SIAC began operating flights to Asteria Inferior for the first time, with a twice-weekly rotation from Port Hope Aerodrome to Liberty City Airfield. Later that year, Neville Moyne took the opportunity to raise capital for four brand new Spartan Cruiser aircraft, decreasing his own stake in the company to 33%. By 1939, the airline had grown to become one of the largest in Asteria Inferior, and had acquired many of it's rivals in the region. In February 1939, a military coup displaced the elected government and brought an end to the Union of Satavia.
1939-1988: Satavian Airways and merger with SRA
By late 1939, tensions between Satavia and some of its Asterian neighbours hostile to the coup forced the airline to cancel many of its international routes - including the Port Hope-Morwall connection that the airline had been founded upon. The effects of this, coupled with a financial crisis that gripped the nation in the aftermath of the coup forced the airline into debt. In response, the Satavian military government nationalised the airline, rebranding it as Satavian Airways. For much of the 1940s, the airline struggled to turn a profit whilst running primarily domestic routes and started losing out to privately-owned competitors, such as Satavian Regional Airlines. SRA became Satavian Airways's largest competitor, and began a price war which saw aviation in Satavia increasingly become more accessible and cheaper to the wider public before it did in many other nations.
The price war continued into the early 1950s but was ultimately unsustainable for both airlines, and so resulted in the Aviation (Pricing & Regulations) Act, 1955 which saw both airlines forced to abandon many competing routes in an attempt by the government to control the airlines. Whilst Satavian Airlines had lost significant ground domestically, it had an effective monopoly on international routes originating in Satavia, and was able to rapidly expand into friendly Asterian states.
In the 1960s, Satavian Airways would be revitalised and began to target the leisure market that had previously been the domain of other Asterian carriers, such as Nuvanian flag-carrier NLM and the Imaguan Civilian Air Service, which both offered more competitive prices. Satavian Airways offered Asteria's first package holiday in 1961, with a flight from Port Hope/O'Connell to Peter Hansson International Airport in Imagua.
By the late 1960s, Satavian Airways' main competitor, SRA, had fallen into debts as it struggled to keep up with Satavian Airways and it's significantly larger budget. In 1969, SRA went into a state of insolvency, and facing the collapse of Satavia's second largest airline prompted the government to pass the Aviation (Insolvency, Protection & Mergers) Act, 1969 which allowed for the merger of Satavian Airways and SRA. Satavian Airways now dominated the Satavian aviation industry, and following the coup that lead to the installation of a democratically elected government in 1976 allowed Satavian Airways greater access to the international market. For the first time since 1941, the airline re-opened the Port Hope-Morwall connection, operating with just one stop in the city-state of Montecara before operating non-stop from 1979 with a Boeing 747-200.
1988-2006: Air Satavia
2006-2008: Restructuring and global recession
2008-present: Satavian Airlines
Corporate affairs
Ownership and structure
Head office
Subsidiaries
Sponsorship
Brand and livery
Boeing 747-400, SX-GNL City of Port Hope, sporting the EOAC Centenary livery
Destinations
Hub |
Seasonal service |
Domestic
International
Satavian Airlines maintains codeshare agreements with the following airlines:
Fleet
Satavian Airlines operates a mainline fleet of Airbus and Boeing aircraft exclusively. Regional flights operated by Satavian Airlines' subsidiary SatavianExpress operate a fleet of Bombardier and Embraer regional jets. Satavian Airlines' low-cost subsidiary Vlugwel operates a fleet of Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 family aircraft, of which some are flown under the Satavian Airlines brand but operated by Vlugwel.
Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | Notes | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F | J | W | Y | Total | ||||||
Airbus A220-100 | 12 | — | — | — | 28 | 82 | 110 | Asteria Inferior launch customer for A220 family | ||
Airbus A220-300 | 16 | — | — | — | 28 | 102 | 130 | Asteria Inferior launch customer for A220 family Airbus A220-300 fleet was briefily grounded following several mid-flight engine failures connected to loss of oil pressure in PW1500G engines | ||
Airbus A320-200 | 7 | — | — | — | 32 | 124 | 156 | |||
Airbus A321-200 | 14 | — | — | 14 | 32 | 160 | 206 | |||
Airbus A330-300 | 24 | — | 14 | 48 | 88 | 127 | 277 | |||
Airbus A350-1000 | 11 | 5 | 20 | 48 | 88 | 210 | 366 | 5 further examples are on order, but were delayed following production backlog at the Verlois plant | ||
Boeing 747-400 | 4 | — | 24 | 48 | — | 344 | 416 | To be retired and replaced by Airbus A350-1000 aircraft planned for 2024 | ||
Boeing 787-8 | 10 | — | 8 | 24 | 32 | 178 | 242 | |||
Total | 98 | 5 |
Services
Catering
Cabin
Entertainment
Frequent flyer programme
Lounges
Environmental issues
As part of the airline's climate pledge, it began research and development into sustainable fuels in partnership with Satoil and Clam.
Incidents and accidents
Satavian Airlines maintains a relatively clean safety record and is consistently ranked as one of the safest airlines in Asteria Inferior. Over the course of its 87-year history, Satavian Airlines and its predecessors have suffered four accidents resulting in hull loss, and the deaths of 120 passengers and crew, in addition to nine people on the ground. Satavian Airlines in its current form has suffered only one fatal accident, Satavian Airlines Flight 1445.
- On 11 May, 1943, a Douglas DC-4 (G-SVDL) crashed during a go-around at Morwall International Airport in poor weather, resulting in the death of all 42 passengers and crew.
- On 3 December, 1947, a Douglas DC-5 (G-SVAI) struck the control tower at Port Arthur Aerodrome whilst landing in extreme crosswinds, resulting in the death of 25 of the 28 onboard the aircraft, in addition to all four Air Traffic Controllers.
- On 18 August, 1959, a Vickers Viscount (SX-ADD) suffered substantial hull damage following the collapse of the front landing gear upon touchdown at Pietersburg International Airport, Nuvania. Despite a lack of fatalities, several people were seriously injured and the plane was eventually declared a hull loss and written off.
- On 29 January, 1972, a Vickers VC10 (SX-ALO) suffered severe damage when it caught fire at Port Hope/O'Connell whilst parked at a ramp. A police investigation later ruled that the plane had been the target of arson. Two teenagers were later arrested, but released without charge. The plane was written off.
- On 30 November, 1986, Satavian Airways Flight 1884, a Boeing 747-200, Lady of the Arucian (registered SX-NZX), lost power in all four engines whilst attempting to land at Morwall International Airport, and crash-landed 200 meters short of the runway, having struck the ILS beacon causing significant damage. The aircraft was written off, and four passengers died, in addition to 37 serious injuries.
- On 9 February, 1999, a Boeing 737-400 (SX-NNP) clipped the empennage of another Air Satavia aircraft, a Boeing 757-200 (SX-LAO), ripping off the vertical stabiliser and damaging its own right-wing whilst taxiing at Port Hope/O'Connell International Airport.
- On 22 October, 2004, an Airbus A320-200 (SX-POL) was destroyed whilst parked at a gate at Terminal 3, Port Hope/O'Connell following an electrical fire on board the aircraft.
- On 15 April, 2011, Satavian Airlines Flight 1445, an Airbus A320-200 (SX-DOA) suffered multiple bird strike, resulting in the loss of both engines. The pilots attempted to glide the plane towards the nearest airport, Northport J. D. Haynes Airport, but ultimately landed just short of the runway, crashing into the M12 motorway, killing 49 on board the aircraft, and five more on the ground.
Notes
- ↑ Naua Roa is internationally considered to be a non self-governing territory of Satavia