Icelandair

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Icelandair
IATA
FI
ICAO
ICE
Callsign
ICEAIR
Founded 1937
Hubs Keflavík International Airport
Frequent flyer program Saga Club
Member lounge Saga Lounge
Fleet size 22 (+9 Orders)
Destinations 24
Parent company Icelandair Group
Headquarters Reykjavík, Iceland
Key people President and CEO: Björgólfur Jóhannsson
Website: http://www.icelandair.net

Icelandair is the flag carrier airline of Iceland, based in Reykjavík. It is part of the Icelandair Group and operates services to 22 cities in 12 countries on both sides of the Atlantic. Its main base is Keflavík International Airport.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

Icelandair traces its roots to 1937 when Flugfélag Akureyrar was founded in Akureyri on the north coast of Iceland. Operations started in 1938 with a Waco YKS-7 floatplane. In 1940 the company moved its headquarters to Reykjavík, and changed its name to Flugfélag Íslands. A company called Loftleiðir had been formed by three pilots in 1944 . Initially Loftleiðir and Flugfélag Íslands concentrated on Icelandic domestic air services.

In 1945 Flugfélag Íslands (Iceland Airways Ltd.) made its first international flights to Scotland and Denmark. Scheduled international services were commenced in 1946 with converted B-24 Liberator aircraft leased from Scottish Airways. Loftleiðir began international operations in 1947 , and its pioneering low-fare services across the North-Atlantic commenced in 1953 . At the time IATA determined the fares for airlines flying between Europe and North-America and all airlines charged the same amount. Loftleiðir was not a part of IATA and could therefore determine its own fares, undercutting all competing airlines. This made them a popular hub for travel between Europe and North-America.

Flugfélag Íslands and Loftleiðir were merged in 1973 and the name Flugleiðir was adopted. The company's English name became Icelandair. A large portion of the air traffic between the United States to Europe flies over Iceland making the island a transfer point for people travelling between the U.S. to Europe and vice versa. This accounts for much of the company's passenger traffic. Icelandair's stopover plan dates back to when Loftleiðir started the plan in 1963 on its transatlantic flights at no extra cost. At the time Loftleiðir was the only airline that did this and therefore pioneered sixth freedom rights. Early sixth freedom flights operated to Findel airport in Luxembourg. That airport was eventually dropped in 1999 in favor of service to more populous cities in Europe. In 1996, Icelandair entered into an interline and marketing agreement with low fare airline, Southwest Airlines.[2] This allowed Southwest to carry American passengers destined for Europe. The agreements are no longer in effect.

A pair of Douglas DC-8s at Luxembourg Airport in 1983
A pair of Douglas DC-8s at Luxembourg Airport in 1983

After the merger, Icelandair was the holding company for the two airlines, but assumed all operating responsibilities in October 1979 . In 1997 it established a subsidiary, Air Iceland, to operate domestic and selected short-haul routes. In January 2002 , Flugleiðir-Icelandair Group became a holding company with 11 subsidiaries, of which Icelandair is the largest. In March 2005 the groups name was changed to FL Group. In October 2005, FL Group sold its airline and travel operations and a new company was formed, Icelandair Group. Icelandair has 2,565 employees (at March 2007).[1]

[edit] Destinations

Icelandair transported over one and a half million passengers in 2005 (1,526,241), the largest number of passengers that the airline has transported in one year. The number of passengers increased 14.5% from the previous year and since 1993 this amount has tripled. On average Icelandair operated 28 flights a day in 2005.[3].

Boeing 757-200 with winglets  taking off
Boeing 757-200 with winglets taking off
Another view of a Boeing 757-200 take off. The nosewheel and main undercarriage doors are still retracting
Another view of a Boeing 757-200 take off. The nosewheel and main undercarriage doors are still retracting

Destinations served from Iceland[1]:

[edit] Europe

[edit] North America

[edit] Fleet

The Icelandair fleet includes the following aircraft (at 8 June 2008):

On order:

On 28 February 2005 Icelandair signed a contract for two Boeing 787s for delivery in 2010 and purchase rights for 5 more. On 5 April 2006 Icelandair signed a contract to exercise two of their five Boeing 787 purchase rights for delivery in 2012.[citation needed]

Icelandair shares many of these aircraft with its sister company Loftleiðir Icelandic. Loftleiðir Icelandic is now operating 6 Boeing 757-200s and 3 Boeing 767-300s. Icelease, another sister company of Icelandair, owns 15 Boeing 737-800's. These aircraft are leased to other companies including Air China and Hong Kong Airlines until the 2008 Olympics end.[citation needed]

[edit] Previously operated

  • The first jets Icelandair acquired for their international routes were Douglas DC-8-63CFs, when the airline was still operating as Loftleiðir Icelandic, and Boeing 727s as Flugfélag Íslands. The DC-8-63CF fleet was acquired from Seaboard World Airlines of the USA. After the merger of the two, both types were used but, during the 1990s, they started acquiring their current fleet of Boeing 757s, along with Boeing 737s that have now been phased out of operation.
  • Former Icelandair subsidiary International Air Bahama, acquired in the early 1970s, which operated a single Douglas DC-8-63CF (N8630; later TF-FLE) between Nassau, Bahamas and Luxembourg. With six weekly rotations, this aircraft became one of the most-utilized in the world. Eastbound flights were usually made nonstop, but the then-short runway at Luxembourg almost always mandated fuel-stops at either Shannon, Ireland or Santa Maria, Azores for westbound flights. Keflavik, Iceland and Goose Bay, Labrador were also used very infrequently, depending on the computer flight plan. International Air Bahama was discontinued when airfares from Miami--where most of its traffic originated--dropped to near-Nassau levels, to more major European cities like Brussels, Belgium; Amsterdam, Netherlands and Frankfurt, Germany.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-04-03, p. 92. 
  2. ^ Southwest links with Icelandair - Baltimore Business Journal:
  3. ^ Icelandair 2005 Annual Report

[edit] External links