Japanese start-up Zipair
indicates plans for transpacific flights
By Cirium11
February 2020
Japanese start-up Zipair is positioning itself as
a mid- to long-haul carrier and has plans for transpacific flights.
The Japan Airlines subsidiary, which
aims to operate a fleet of 10 Boeing 787s, notes the Dreamliner’s status as a
best seller among major Japanese and US carriers. As such, the ease of
procurement and maintenance makes it a good choice for transpacific routes, it
said during a joint media briefing with Boeing at the Singapore air show.
Source: Zipair
Zipair aims to be the first low-cost carrier to
operate the sector, after it obtains ETOPS certification. It meets the criteria
on two of three fronts – maintenance and flight management, by virtue of
tapping on JAL resources – and is working on pilot training.
Prior to that, the Tokyo Narita-based airline will
launch in May, first with Bangkok flights, followed by a Seoul service from
July.
Zipair says it aims to become a “new basic” class
of carriers, one that sits between the low-cost and full-service categories
that have the aviation industry “polarised”.
“As a mid- to long-haul carrier, I don’t want our
customers to feel exhausted by our flights,” says Zipair president Shingo
Nishida.
The carrier recently unveiled the interior of its
first 787-8, transferred from parent JAL.
Elaborating on that, it states that doing away
with monitors and using synthetic leather for its seats reduced the aircraft
weight by 500kg – equivalent to a 29% reduction per passenger – despite an
increased number of seats.
Nishida tells Cirium that Zipair currently has two
787s transferred from JAL. Its target of 10 787s by 2024 still holds and,
broadly, it expects to receive two aircraft from JAL each year.
“Currently we are recruiting pilots for the third
aircraft onwards… In spring 2021, Zipair will receive its third aircraft.”
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.