Showing posts with label AIRASIA X. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIRASIA X. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 June 2026

Airbus Updates No.4672

 

AirAsia X cancels A330neo orders, delays Bahrain hub

AirAsia X (D7, Kuala Lumpur International) has cancelled an outstanding order for fifteen A330-900N aircraft, according to May 2026 orders and deliveries data from Airbus. The previously announced cancellation follows a shift across AirAsia Group to long-range narrowbodies. The group recently committed to fifty A321-200NY(XLR) aircraft.

Separately, AirAsia X has delayed the launch of its planned hub at Bahrain International, citing concerns over the conflict in the Middle East. The carrier confirmed that its planned fifth-freedom Kuala Lumpur International-Bahrain-London Gatwick service, originally scheduled to launch in June 2026, will now commence in August or September, subject to operational and market conditions.

Tuesday, 28 December 2021

Airbus Updates No.3706

 

Vietjet takes delivery of 1st A330

On Christmas Day 2021, Vietjet took delivery of its very first widebody aircraft. The Airbus in question is A330-300 VP-CJW (974), which was welcomed at Ho Chi Minh City by a delegation and got a water-salute by the airport fire brigade. The A330 is leased from ICBC and was previously in use with AirAsia X as 9M-XXB and will be registered VN-A811 in the coming days.

Vietjet will take delivery of at least three leased A330-300s and has announced it will first fly the type to Moscow as its new long-haul destination. The route is due to start in mid-2022.

Sunday, 14 November 2021

Airbus Updates No.3641

 

AirAsiaX cancels Airbus-aircraft

As part of its restructuring, AirAsiaX and Airbus reached an agreement about the cancellation of 63 A330-900s and ten A321neoXLRs. According to the airline, 99% of its debt-holders has agreed to the restructuring, ensuring the airline will be able to survive.

The airline now has fifteen A330-900s and twenty A321neoXLRs remaining on order, which will be delivered in the coming years. AirAsiaX already has two A330-900s in the fleet, which are operated by Thai AirAsiaX

Thursday, 16 September 2021

Airbus Updates No.3557

 

UK's Titan Airways adds first A330-300(P2F)

Titan Airways (ZT, London Stansted) took delivery of its first A330-300(P2F) on August 27, 2021, and began operating the Airbus converted freighter exclusively on behalf of French forwarder GEODIS in early September.

G-EODS (msn 713) is a 15.7-year-old aircraft last operated in passenger configuration by AirAsia X through March 2020. The aircraft was subsequently acquired by Stratos and leased to GEODIS. It underwent conversion at Châteauroux airport and was delivered to London Stansted on August 27. Following test flights within the United Kingdom on September 2-4, it was deployed into revenue service on September 5, Flightradar24 ADS-B data shows.

GEODIS said the aircraft would operate between Amsterdam SchipholChicago O'Hare, London Stansted, and Hong Kong Int'l for at least five years.

"Our AirDirect service has operated more than 650 air charter flights so far across Asia, Europe, North and Latin America in order to secure capacity for our customer shipments worldwide. The experience gained from these operations has led to the decision to charter our own GEODIS Freighter. This will provide our clients with a reliable schedule of flights, under our operational control, helping them overcome the significant logistical constraints that the market is currently enduring,” Executive Vice-President (Freight Forwarding) Eric Martin-Neuville said.

GEODIS has not had any aircraft operated exclusively on its behalf thus far.

For Titan Airways, the A330-300(P2F) is the first widebody aircraft since the retirement of the only B767-300(ER) in May 2020, the ch-aviation fleets history module shows. The British carrier operates two A320-200s, three A321-200s, one A321-200(P2F), two A321-200NX(LR), two B737-400(SF)s, and two B757-200s. Sister carrier Titan Airways Malta operates one A321-200 and one A321-200(P2F).

Monday, 30 August 2021

Airbus Updates No.3530

 A333P2F Geodis 640

Geodis enters dedicated air cargo market

Freight forwarding specialist Geodis is entering the dedicated air cargo market by adding an A330-300P2F. The aircraft involved is EI-GTT (713) which will be operated for the cargo company by Titan Airways and will become G-EODS. The A330 was recently converted at Dresden and is currently at Chateauroux for some final maintenance before being delivered. Before it became a cargo aircraft, the Airbus was in use with AirAsiaX as 9M-XBD and before that with China Eastern as B-6119.

According to CargoFacts, Geodis will have full control over the schedule of the aircraft. It's currently unknown where the aircraft will be based and what routes it will fly.

Tuesday, 20 July 2021

Airbus Updates No.3457

 

UK's Titan Airways to add first A330 freighter

Titan Airways (ZT, London Stansted) is poised to add its first widebody freighter, an A330-300(P2F), for CMI operations for an undisclosed customer, Cargo Facts has reported.

EI-GTT (msn 713), a 15.6-year-old aircraft owned by Stratos, was ferried after conversion by Elbe Flugzeugwerke (EFW) from Dresden to Châteauroux on July 11, 2021, still in the livery of the former operator AirAsia X. Once repainted and re-registered in the UK, it will become G-EODS.

Titan Airways declined to comment concerning the aircraft's future operations, although DHL Express explicitly said it would not be operated on its behalf. The airline has yet to add the type to its Air Operator's Certificate (AOC) as of July 13.

The airline does not currently operate any widebody aircraft in either passenger or freighter configuration. Its fleet comprises two A320-200s, four A321-200s, two A321-200(P2F)s, two A321-200NX(LR)s, two B737-400(SF)s, and two B757-200s. Its only ever widebody, a B767-300(ER), was retired in May 2020, the ch-aviation fleets advanced module shows.

Thursday, 5 March 2020

Airbus Updates No.2545

Airbus to reduce A330neo production due to deferral request from the largest customer


Toulouse, France - European planemaker Airbus considers reducing its A330neo production after AirAsia X, the largest customer of the type, deferred the deliveries of 76 A330-900s on order.
AirAsia X has recently announced that it had to delay some A330neo deliveries due to the coronavirus-driven slump in air travel.
The Malaysian carrier is representing about one-fourth of A330neo orders in the Airbus' backlog. The current situation shows just how quickly the travel slowdown is rippling the airline operators and commercial aircraft manufacturers globally.
AirAsia X is part of the Air Asia Group and the Group's low-cost subsidiary is one of the largest foreign operators in China. The Chinese market represents 30% of its capacity. China is still the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak and commercial flights have fallen by as much as 80% throughout the country.
AirAsia X also said it would return some older planes to lessors earlier than planned.
30 of the popular routes on which A330neos operated are mainly in the Asia-Pacific region and eight of them heavily exposed to the virus. On March 4, CEO Guillaume Faury said that he was expecting a tough year.
The market for wide-bodies was already soft when the coronavirus first started upending travel earlier this year. In February, Airbus scaled back 2020 output plans for A330 aircraft by about 25% from 53 in 2019. It also said it would hold the production of the larger A350 at 9 or 10 per month.
Its rival Boeing said in late January that it planned to reduce the production of its 787 Dreamliner to 10 a month in early 2021 from a planned rate of 12 this year.
While wide-bodies generate more profit per aircraft, airlines are switching to smaller and more-fuel efficient single-aisle jets that can fly long distances. Airbus has seen demand for its A320 family of narrow-bodies soar, especially for larger and longer-range variants.

Thursday, 27 February 2020

Airbus Updates No.2533

AirAsia X asks for lease deferrals on Airbus A330-300's



AirAsia X (D7, Kuala Lumpur Int'l) has asked lessors to either waive or defer lease payments for its A330-300s due to the financial impact of the Covid-19 epidemic, Flightglobal has reported citing unnamed sources.
The carrier did not confirm the report but said that its exposure to the crisis is high as over 30% of its pre-epidemic capacity was to and from China.
Two unnamed lessors said that they were willing to discuss some relief to the long-haul low-cost carrier but were unlikely to accept lease rate waivers.

Tuesday, 4 February 2020

Airbus Updates No.2482

Airbus to pay world's biggest corporate bribery fine, $4bn



Airbus (AIB, Toulouse Blagnac) will pay EUR3.6 billion euros (USD3.98 billion) in a global bribery settlement involving AirAsia, AirAsia X, Citilink, Garuda Indonesia, SriLankan Airlines, and TransAsia Airways. It admitted it had used a network of secret agents around the world to bribe officials in order to win high-value contracts, the United Kingdom's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) said in a statement following a ruling at the High Court of Justice in London.
The European manufacturer agreed to pay the penalties on January 31 after reaching settlements with investigators in the UK, France, and the US, bringing to an end a probe that began four years ago.
“The seriousness of the criminality in this case hardly needs to be spelled out. As is acknowledged on all sides, it was grave. The conduct took place over many years. It is no exaggeration to describe the investigation it gave rise to as worldwide, extending into every continent in which Airbus operates,” said Justice Victoria Sharp as she approved the settlement.
Bribery was “endemic in two core business areas within Airbus,” namely the company's Commercial and Defence & Space divisions, she added.
The company paid bribes in Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, and Ghana, the latter for the sale of military aircraft, between 2011 and 2015, Allison Clare, representing the SFO, told the court.
Airbus, which admitted five counts of failing to prevent bribery, used a network of agents to pay the bribes. The settlement comes just under four years after the SFO began investigating the manufacturer over “allegations it had used external consultants to bribe customers” to buy its aircraft, the statement said.
Under the record-breaking deal, known as a Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA), Airbus has agreed to pay a fine and legal costs amounting to EUR991 million (USD1.1 billion) in the UK as part of a total of EUR3.592 billion (USD3.975 billion) in global corruption fines involving authorities in France and the United States, according to Reuters.
This includes EUR2.083 billion (USD2.3 billion) to the French National Financial Prosecutor’s Office (Parquet National Financier - PNF) and USD581,840,000 to the US Department of Justice and Department of State.
Justice Sharp ruled that the sum reflected “the gravity of the conduct, the full cooperation of Airbus SE in the investigation, and the programme of corporate reform and compliance put in place by new leadership at the top of the company.” Airbus has agreed to full cooperation with the SFO and its partners in any future investigations and prosecutions.
The SFO is still considering whether to prosecute individuals involved in the bribery, Clare told the court. Sue Hawley, executive director of Spotlight on Corruption, told The Guardian newspaper: “This fine will ring extremely hollow if prosecutions of those responsible from Airbus senior management at the time of the wrongdoing do not follow.”
In the US, the charge under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) arose out of “Airbus’ scheme to offer and pay bribes to foreign officials, including Chinese officials, in order to obtain and retain business,” a January 31 Department of Justice statement said.
“Airbus engaged in a multi-year and massive scheme to corruptly enhance its business interests by paying bribes in China and other countries and concealing those bribes,” said Brian Benczkowski, assistant attorney general in the department’s Criminal Division.
On February 1, Malaysia’s AirAsia denied the SFO's allegations that Airbus had bribed two of its executives USD50 million during a deal to buy 180 aircraft between 2005 and 2014. The sum was allegedly “paid to directors and/or employees of AirAsia and AirAsia X airlines as sponsorship for a sports team” jointly owned by the two executives, the UK court documents said.
AirAsia said in a statement to Reuters: “The entering into of each aircraft purchase agreement was never made by any single individual decision, but instead arrived at through careful evaluation, deliberation, and the collective decision of the board members after taking into account technical specifications, aircraft flight performance, and operating economics.”
It added: “We also wish to emphasise that all negotiations and dealings leading to the signing of any aircraft purchase agreement have been undertaken directly with Airbus on an arm’s length basis, and without the involvement of any third parties or intermediaries.”
AirAsia then issued a statement on behalf of Group Chairman Kamarudin Meranun and Group CEO Tony Fernandes who, on February 3, resigned from their respective roles for a period of two months. For the duration of the period, both have now assumed positions as non-executive board members of AirAsia Group.
The DPA was “arrived at without any reference to us; neither were any explanations sought from us. This is in clear violation of fundamental legal principles of fairness. We categorically deny any and all allegations of wrongdoing or misconduct on our part as directors of AirAsia. We would not harm the very companies that we spent our entire lives building up to their present global status,” the statement said.
“So as to facilitate a full and independent investigation by AirAsia, we are relinquishing our executive roles with immediate effect for a period of two months, or such other period that the companies may deem fit. We will nonetheless continue to assist AirAsia in an advisory capacity as and when required. Finally, we welcome any investigations by the authorities and will extend our fullest cooperation.”
Another of the alleged bribes was agreed with a senior executive of Bogota-based Avianca Holdings ahead of the sale of one hundred A320-200neo in April 2015, according to France's anti-corruption agency (Agence française anticorruption - AFA). However, the executive never received the money, as Airbus froze payments to a Colombian sales intermediary in 2014. The Office of the Attorney General of Colombia and Avianca itself have not released statements on the issue, according to the news site Colombia Reports.
On February 3, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa ordered an investigation into the allegation that Airbus offered up to USD16.84 million to SriLankan Airlines to influence the purchase of ten aircraft and the lease of an additional four, according to local media. The sum was allegedly paid to a company registered in Brunei in the name of the wife of an airline executive.
On the same day, Sri Lankan Attorney General Dappula de Livera directed the Criminal Investigations Department to arrest former SriLankan CEO Kapila Chandrasena and his wife Priyanka Niyomali Wijenayaka on charges of money laundering in connection with the Airbus deal, the Colombo Gazette reported.
The airline released a statement on February 2 that it would “cooperate fully with any governmental agency in the event of any investigation/prosecution. The management has also been directed to preserve and study all available internal documentation with a view to take all possible corrective future action.”
In Indonesia, as previously reported, the Corruption Eradication Commission (Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi - KPK) has alleged that Rolls-Royce, Airbus, and Bombardier Aerospace paid bribes totalling IDR46.3 billion rupiah (USD3.4 million) to Emirsyah Satar, a former chief executive of Garuda Indonesia, in relation to the acquisition of A330-200s, A330-300s, and CRJ1000s for the carrier, as well as A320-200s for its subsidiary Citilink. Satar is currently on trial in Jakarta.
In Taiwan, TransAsia Airways ceased operations in 2016 and, as such, was not immediately available for comment.

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Airbus Updates No.4672

  AirAsia X cancels A330neo orders, delays Bahrain hub AirAsia X (D7, Kuala Lumpur International ) has cancelled an outstanding order for f...

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