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Bombardier Flexjet Asia
Asian Aerospace marks the regional launch of Bombardier Flexjet
Asia, a charter network that will facilitate access to business
jets based in Asia. Unlike other Flexjet operations this will focus
not on fractional ownership, but on a region-wide network of charter
operations under a common banner and with uniform standards of safety
and quality.
Until now, businesses chartering jets in Asia have had to deal
with a variety of independent operators in different countries.
Flexjet Asia will make multiple bookings possible with a single
telephone call.
Bombardier will announce here the addition of a Singapore operator
to the network. Flexjet Asia expects to begin operations with its
first contract in the region in a matter of weeks.
"We're in the process now of getting all the players together
and rationalized," said Mike Fahey, Bombardier's regional marketing
VP. "We want to make sure we get the horse in front of the
cart."
He noted there is strong expatriate demand for bizjet charter
around Asia at the same time that the economic downturn has denuded
countries like Indonesia and the Philippines of its fleets of older
but available business jets. Demand, meanwhile, is accelerating
for transportation into China. Here Flexjet will use Shandong Airlines
and its four 604 Challengers. Later it will extend the Flexjet charter
network to Australia as well.
"We can do all this because of the acquisitions Bombardier
has made" in its quest to provide transportation solutions,
Fahey said. A prime example is Skyjet, one of the premier online
charter coordinators/organizers/providers, which will coordinate
Flexjet Asia charter requests in Asia from its offices in Washington,
D.C., and in Hong Kong.
Fahey said Flexjet Asia is already discussing major contracts
with oil companies that do not want to buy their own aircraft but
are seeking block charters of 200-250 hours a year. He is an expert
in this field, having sold the first Learjet 55 into China, to Hainan
Island Airways, purely on the basis of a contract with Exxon.
Flexjet Asia's launch partners are:
- Shandong Airlines Rainbow Jet, headquartered in Jinan, capital
of Shandong Province, about 500 kilometres south of Beijing.
Shandong has ordered four Challenger 604s, the first of which
will be delivered in March. Its parent Shandong Airlines operates
five Bombardier Canadair CRJ airliners and has options on another
five.
- Subic International Air Charter Inc. based at the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport in Manila. It operates a fleet of Bombardier
Learjets including the Learjet 31A, Learjet 35 and the Learjet
45. It has also placed an order for a Bombardier Continental business
jet that is scheduled for delivery in 2003. Subic has agreed to
offer several aircraft from its Bombardier fleet to Flexjet Asia
for charter purposes.
- Jet Asia Limited of Macau, an aviation management and executive
charter company that operates two cabin-class Bombardier Challenger
aircraft on behalf of the Sociedade de Turismo e Diversões
de Macau (STDM).
By John Morris
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