American Airlines ordina 2 B777-300ER


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Insomma da compagnie come AA ci si aspetterebbe qualcosa di più consistente, tuttavia al momento sono i primi 77W ad andare a un vettore statunitense, secondi in Nord America dopo Air Canada.


American Airlines Orders Two New Boeing 777-300ER Widebody Jets to Support Network Strategy and International Growth
American Continues to Invest in Products to Enhance the Customer Experience

FORT WORTH, Texas, Jan. 19, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- American Airlines, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of AMR Corp., today announced it has entered into a purchase agreement with the Boeing Company under which American will acquire two Boeing 777-300ERs to support its global network strategy and to capitalize on international growth opportunities. The two aircraft are expected to be delivered in late 2012.

"These additional widebody aircraft will bolster our network strategy, particularly the international growth opportunities we expect from our joint businesses with oneworld® partners in the trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific markets," said Tom Horton, President, AMR Corp., the parent company of American Airlines and American Eagle. "We value the combination of size, range and performance of the 777-300ER, as well as the extensive customer amenities it offers. The seating capability of the aircraft will give us growth flexibility in slot-constrained airports and provide us with greater ability to serve new long-haul markets."

"American Airlines is an industry leader whose vision and disciplined approach to growth has made it one of the largest airlines in the world," said Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and CEO Jim Albaugh. "American is the first carrier in the United States to order the 777-300ER. These new airplanes will complement their large fleet of 777-200ERs by offering additional flexibility in serving nonstop routes while providing increased efficiency and reliability."

Additional terms of the commitment were not disclosed.

"We hope that this positive step for our airline signals the beginning of a period of domestic and global expansion which will allow our airline to aggressively compete and prosper in the years to come," said Captain David Bates, President of the Allied Pilots Association, the union that represents American's 8,600 pilots.

From 2007 through 2010, American has invested $4.2 billion in aircraft, cabin, and facility improvements to enhance the customer experience.

International Growth Opportunities

The 777-300ERS will expand international service, either incremental frequencies in markets American serves today, or new routes largely resulting from its alliance initiatives.

As part of their recently launched trans-Atlantic business, oneworld members American, British Airways and Iberia announced service on five additional international routes, beginning in spring 2011. They are: New York JFK-Budapest and Chicago-Helsinki (operated by American Airlines), London Heathrow-San Diego (operated by British Airways), plus Madrid-Los Angeles and Barcelona-Miami (operated by Iberia). Also in spring 2011, American will add additional frequencies from New York JFK to Barcelona and Miami to Madrid.

On Jan. 11, American Airlines and Japan Airlines announced the launch of their trans-Pacific joint business. Customers can expect to benefit from better flight schedules, expanded codesharing, more coordinated services, and greater access to a wider variety of fares. Additional consumer benefits over the coming months are anticipated as the cooperation level deepens between the two airlines. Additionally, American plans to start its new nonstop daily service between New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport and Tokyo's Haneda International Airport next month, and to launch service from Los Angeles to Shanghai, China, in April. Japan Airlines began service from Haneda to San Francisco in late October. The carriers have already begun, or plan, to codeshare on these flights.

The trans-Atlantic joint business opportunity, initially representing approximately $7 billion in combined revenue between the carriers, will offer seamless service to 430 destinations in 105 countries, with nearly 5,200 daily departures worldwide. The trans-Pacific joint business, which represents more than $1.5 billion in combined revenue between the two airlines, represents significant growth opportunities for American long term as the Pacific region currently accounts for only about 4 percent of American's total system capacity.

American also continued to grow its service in Latin America in 2010. Last year, it began service from New York's JFK to San Jose, Costa Rica, and to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Dallas/Fort Worth to San Salvador, El Salvador and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It also began service from Miami to Brazil's capital, Brasilia. American is Latin America and Mexico's premier airline with 43 destinations to 17 countries.

"We believe it is important to grow but to do so sensibly, in the right places and, importantly, under the right economic circumstances," Horton said. "Our purchase of additional 777s, our first growth aircraft since 2001, further demonstrates that philosophy and we will continue to look for growth opportunities that make the most sense for our customers, shareholders and employees."

About American Airlines

American Airlines, American Eagle and AmericanConnection® serve 250 cities in 40 countries with, on average, more than 3,400 daily flights. The combined network fleet numbers more than 900 aircraft. American's award-winning website, AA.com®, provides users with easy access to check and book fares, plus personalized news, information and travel offers. American Airlines is a founding member of the oneworld® Alliance, which brings together some of the best and biggest names in the airline business, enabling them to offer their customers more services and benefits than any airline can provide on its own. Together, its members serve approximately 750 destinations in nearly 150 countries and territories. American Airlines, Inc. and American Eagle Airlines, Inc. are subsidiaries of AMR Corporation. AmericanAirlines, American Eagle, AmericanConnection, AA.com, We know why you fly and AAdvantage are trademarks of American Airlines, Inc. (NYSE: AMR)

Current AMR Corp. releases can be accessed on the Internet.

The address is http://www.aa.com

http://aa.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=3127
 
Diceva mia nonna:
HA fatto lo sforzo.:D (sta a voler dire che sembra più una cosa di facciata)
 
mah, sfruttarli sulla jfk-haneda...?.mmm già da tokio a jfk ci vola ANA... buttano un pò di concorrenza?
 
Rende poco l'idea, comunque questa l'anteprima sul sito Boeing nel comunicato che conferma l'ordine

K65100_med.jpg


http://boeing.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=1586

Certo però 2 macchine, sono meno che briciole per un colosso come AA
 
Certo però 2 macchine, sono meno che briciole per un colosso come AA

Immagino che AA, pur essendo uno degli ultimi acquirenti di 787, sia stata colpita dai ritardi del Dreamliner. E' possibile che queste due macchine siano state "tirate dietro" ad AA come forma di compensazione per i ritardi del 787?
 
Immagino che AA, pur essendo uno degli ultimi acquirenti di 787, sia stata colpita dai ritardi del Dreamliner. E' possibile che queste due macchine siano state "tirate dietro" ad AA come forma di compensazione per i ritardi del 787?

AA non ha ordini per 787, ma solo una valanga di opzioni.
 
Insomma da compagnie come AA ci si aspetterebbe qualcosa di più consistente, tuttavia al momento sono i primi 77W ad andare a un vettore statunitense, secondi in Nord America dopo Air Canada.

Come mai questo scarso successo finora del 77W tra le compagnie USA?
 
Non hanno i soldi per comprarli. Del resto non hanno comprato i 380, non comprano niente di grosso, al massimo ordinano dei 787, chissà poi quando li prenderanno veramente. I vettori USA stanno seguendo il luminoso esempio di General Motors e Chrysler, prodotto antiquato di scarsa qualità e zero investimenti.
 
per dire American ha 200 e passa MD80 e ancora non ha fatto un ordine per sostituirli. Per sostituirli poi tutti ci vorranno almeno 7 o più anni
 
Non hanno i soldi per comprarli. Del resto non hanno comprato i 380, non comprano niente di grosso, al massimo ordinano dei 787, chissà poi quando li prenderanno veramente. I vettori USA stanno seguendo il luminoso esempio di General Motors e Chrysler, prodotto antiquato di scarsa qualità e zero investimenti.

Verissimo. Semba però che da poco si stiano risollevando gli interessi per nuovi ordini di questo tipo, dato che cominciano a realizzare di essere attaccati da ambo i lati (chi ha orecchie per intendere...).
 
Si possono tenere aerei obsoleti, ma ad un certo punto diventano vecchi e vanno sostituiti, lo fa persino Alitalia.
In USA hanno appena radiato i Dc9 !!!

Credo che sulle due sponde dell'Atlantico non ci sia la stessa concezione di "obsoleto".
Qui in Europa i 767 ormai sono una rarità, in USA invece la norma.
 
Non hanno i soldi per comprarli. Del resto non hanno comprato i 380, non comprano niente di grosso, al massimo ordinano dei 787, chissà poi quando li prenderanno veramente. I vettori USA stanno seguendo il luminoso esempio di General Motors e Chrysler, prodotto antiquato di scarsa qualità e zero investimenti.
Daccordo anche perche' non se la passano ancora benissimo...$471milioni di perdita nel 2010

American posts $471 million 2010 loss; orders two 777-300ERs

American Airlines parent AMR Corp. on Wednesday reported a 2010 net loss of $471 million, narrowed from a net deficit of $1.47 billion in 2009, and also announced an order for two Boeing 777-300ERs for delivery in late 2012.
CFO Bella Goren told analysts and reporters that the aircraft represent "the next step in our fleet strategy," noting, "We expect to be the first US airline to fly the 777-300ER." President Tom Horton added that the aircraft, valued at around $550 million at list prices, will "bolster" growth opportunities, particularly from the AA-Japan Airlines transpacific joint venture slated to launch April 1 (ATW Daily News, Jan. 12).
Regarding the financial results, which included a $97 million fourth-quarter net loss (the carrier's third loss-making quarter out of four in 2010), Goren insisted that "our improvement versus last year is clearly a step in the right direction." The fourth-quarter deficit was narrowed 71.7% from a $344 million loss in the 2009 December quarter.
"It's fair to say there's a lot for us to be optimistic about in regards to the foundational work we did last year" related to the AA-JAL JV and the AA-British Airways-Iberia transatlantic JV, she said. "It lays the groundwork for us to be strong in the future."
She also emphasized AA's commitment to cost control. Its fourth-quarter CASM ex-fuel lowered 3% year-over-year and Goren predicted "flat unit costs ex-fuel in 2011," denoting an "intense focus on managing and controlling costs."
Full-year 2010 revenue increased 11.3% to $22.17 billion while expenses heightened 4.5% to $21.86 billion, producing an operating profit of $308 million, reversed from a $1 billion operating loss in 2009. Mainline traffic rose 2.5% to 125.5 billion RPMs on a 1% upping of capacity to 153.24 billion ASMs, leading to a load factor of 81.9%, up 1.2 points. Passenger yield grew 8.7% to 13.36 cents as PRASM increased 10.4% to 10.94 cents and CASM rose 3.2% to 12.62 cents. CASM ex-fuel lifted 1.3% to 8.83 cents.
AA plans to increase mainline capacity 3.5% for the full-year 2011 compared to 2010, comprising a 1% domestic uptick and a 7.5% international rise.

atwonline.com
 
In USA hanno appena radiato i Dc9 !!!

Credo che sulle due sponde dell'Atlantico non ci sia la stessa concezione di "obsoleto".
Qui in Europa i 767 ormai sono una rarità, in USA invece la norma.

Delta ha radiato i DC-9-30 e 40. I DC-9-50 sono ancora in servizio e ci resteranno almeno fino al 2015. :)