In
This Issue |
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FAA
Reauthorization Clears House 267-151 |
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Bizjet
Forecast Shows Blue Skies, with a Few Clouds |
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PMI
Media VLJ Outlook Contains Mixed Messages |
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Leading
Aviation Experts Call For Privatized ATC |
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AEXJet
To Keep Flying Despite Bankruptcy Filing |
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NTSB
Gives More Details of Beechjet Dual Flameout |
Also
Noted...
The
Air Force has suspended deliveries of the Hawker
Beechcraft T-6A Texan II trainer pending
investigation of contract delivery issues, according
to a spokesman for the Air Education & Training
Command (AETC), which operates the single-engine turboprop
for Air Force specialized undergraduate pilot training.
AETC continues to execute its primary mission
of undergraduate pilot training under a g limitation
suggested by the program office, the spokesman
said.
The
FAA released multiple notams
that restrict GA operations in New York metro airspace
during the UN General Assembly next Monday through
Wednesday. La Guardia and JFK Airports will be off
limits to Part 91 operators during certain times,
and multiple TFRs will be present in the area. Special
ingress and egress procedures will also be in effect
for Morristown Airport. GA operations at Teterboro
will remain available due to a 2-nm exclusion in one
of the TFRs. Special procedures are currently in effect
for New York City heliports and seaports until October
5.
A
King Air C90 crashed in a shopping center parking
lot just after 8 p.m. last night while on approach
to Chattanooga (Tenn.) Metropolitan Airport.
There were no fatalities, but four people aboard suffered
injuries after the turboprop twin hit a utility pole
about 2,000 feet from the runway and then cartwheeled
into cars in the parking lot. The NTSB is on-scene
investigating the accident.

Austrian
charter operator JetAlliance placed a $105
million order for 10 Citations at the Jet Expo international
business aviation exhibition in Moscow, Cessna
announced yesterday. The order consists of one CJ1+,
two CJ2+s, two CJ3s, three XLS+s and two Sovereigns.
Deliveries will take place in 2009 and 2010. JetAlliance
announced an order for 25 Citations in May.
PremiAir has introduced first-come, first-served
rationed slots for access to the London Heliport
after increased landing fees failed to control rising
demand at the movements-restricted site. The facility
is limited to just 12,000 movements per year. Concern
that the heliport would reach this quota before year-end
forced the company to restrict the daily number of
slots.
Signature Flight Support has added two more
FBOs to its European network. It has opened a new
facility at Liege in Belgium and has acquired
the former ATAS base at Greeces Thessaloniki
Airport. The group has also just reopened its
Paris Le Bourget FBO after extensive remodeling.
Signature, which is part of the BBA Aviation, now
has a global network of 82 locations throughout North
America, South America, Europe, Africa and Asia.
See
you at NBAA!
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FAA Reauthorization Clears House
267-151
The
House of Representatives this afternoon approved an FAA reauthorization
bill that raises the tax on jet-A from 21.8 to 35.9 cents a gallon
and the tax on avgas from 19.3 to 24.1 cents a gallon. To the relief
of general aviation, it contains no user fees and no concessions
to the airlines. The airline taxesincluding 7.5 percent on
tickets and 4.3 cents a gallon on jet fuelwill remain at existing
levels. Money from the tax hikes on GA fuel would be earmarked exclusively
for ATC modernization. But the battle between the airlines and GA
is far from over. The Senate still has to pass its version of FAA
reauthorization, a version that contains a $25 per-flight user fee
for turbine IFR operations, and then a conference committee has
to reconcile differences. President Bush has threatened a veto because
the House bill contains a provision that would force the FAA and
the National Air Traffic Controllers Association to reopen the disputed
contract put into force last summer. The House bill does not currently
have sufficient support to overturn the veto.
Bizjet
Forecast Shows Blue Skies, with a Few Clouds
Forecast International yesterday released a prediction that 14,978
business jets, worth some $192 billion, will be manufactured between
2007 and 2016. The Connecticut-based market research firm estimates
that very light jets will account for 39 percent, or 5,783, of business
jet deliveries during the time frame. Further, Forecast projects
that annual business jet production will top 1,000 aircraft this
year, exceed 1,200 next year and reach 1,500 by 2011. However, not
everything is good news within the business jet industry, according
to the forecaster. The report notes that demand in the key North
American market has been cooling due to market saturation, but this
is being offset by demand from other regions such as Europe, the
Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region. Another problem is that
existing sizable order backlogs have resulted in capacity
bottlenecks for certain manufacturers, leading to frustrated
customers who just want their airplanes sooner rather than later.
Forecast International also noted that implementation of aviation
user fees in the U.S. could adversely affect demand.
PMI
Media VLJ Outlook Contains Mixed Messages
A soon-to-be-released very light jet forecast from PMI
Media estimates that 7,650 VLJs, worth some $18.36 billion, will
be delivered between 2007 and 2016. We are predicting 2007 deliveries
of VLJs to be around the 200 mark, up from our 2006 forecast of 175.
In the first half of 2007, 31 Cessna Mustangs and Eclipse 500s were
delivered, so the second half of the year should see a steep ramp
up in production activity, the forecaster wrote. While the VLJ
order book currently stands at more than 4,010 aircraft, the research
firm said there are still major uncertainties in this
emerging market. In particular, PMI cites questions about the suitability
of the new aircraft types to the robust demands of the air-taxi market
and the consequence of continuing production delays at Eclipse. Another
worrisome indication, the forecaster said, is some anecdotal
evidence that the current volatility in global economic markets might
soon impact the VLJ and wider business jet sectors.
Leading Aviation Experts Call For
Privatized ATC
The Reason Foundation has assembled a group of nine leading
aviation expertsincluding former DOT Secretary Jim Burnley,
former FAA Administrator Langhorne Bond and former NBAA president
Jonathan Howethat is calling for significant changes
to the U.S. ATC system. According to the libertarian think tank, these
experts warn that without serious reforms, the air traffic system
will be unable to accommodate growing air travel, forcing the U.S.
to ration its airspace. Reason said the group wants a privatized air
traffic organization (ATO) that is run like a business, separated
from the FAA and funded by a steady, reliable revenue stream
that isnt subject to politics. The groups position on aviation
user fees is fuzzy, but it would like the ATO to be funded directly
by aviation customers. It also suggests that the ATO be allowed
to consolidate, reorganize and improve its facilities and equipment
to better accommodate users, as well as reconfigure airspace consistent
with NextGen capabilities. The Reason Foundation has been advocating
a privatized U.S. ATC system for more than 10 years.

AEXJet
To Keep Flying Despite Bankruptcy Filing
Aspen Executive Air (AEXJet), an ARG/US Platinum-rated charter operator,
voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last week in
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware. The petition lists
up to $100 million in liabilities, with more than 200 creditors. The
list of liabilities includes $19,834,442 to JLT Aircraft Holding for
money owed on the lease of two Gulfstream G200s; $11,206,764 to Walker
Aircraft on the lease of a Dassault Falcon 900B; $300,847 to FlightSafety
International; $167,554 to Pratt & Whitney Canada; and $44,210
to CAE SimuFlite. This is a necessary step that will strengthen
the company and allow AEXJet to move forward, CEO John Gallager
stated. The company will continue operating, Gallager said, and would
be entering into a business combination with another charter
operator. He added that the identity of the operator must remain
confidential, but noted that negotiations should be complete
by the end of next week.
NTSB Gives More Details of
Beechjet Dual Flameout
The NTSB this week finally released initial factual information about
the Flight Options Beechjet 400A that experienced a dual engine flameout
on Nov. 28, 2005. Both of the airplanes Pratt & Whitney Canada
JT15D-5 turbofans, which had been inspected 31 hours earlier, failed
on a positioning flight to Marcos Island, Fla., when power was reduced
after the fractional jet was cleared to descend to FL330 from FL380.
The two ATP-rated pilots, the only occupants, declared an emergency.
The pilot told the NTSB that he believed ice in the fuel lines caused
fuel starvation. Weather was VMC, with light drizzle and an 8,000-foot
overcast. Temperature was 21 degrees C and dew point 19 degrees C.
Attempts to restart the engines were unsuccessful. The crew was vectored
for an emergency landing at Jacksonville International Airport, where
the local controller provided mileage calls for the last 15 miles.
According to the Safety Board, the twinjets right main tire blew
after the crew landed the airplane deadstick on the runway. Damage
was minor, with no injuries. The incident is still under investigation.
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