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Aigle Azur

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former airline in France (1970–2019)

Aigle Azur
IATAICAOCall sign
ZIAAFAIGLE AZUR
FoundedMarch 1970 (1970-03)
Ceased operations6 September 2019 (2019-09-06)[1]
HubsOrly Airport
Frequent-flyer programAzur Plus
Fleet size11
Destinations21[2]
Parent companyGoFast Group
HeadquartersParay-Vieille-Poste,France
Key peopleFrantz Yvelin (CEO)
Websiteaigle-azur.com

Aigle Azur was a Frenchairline based and headquartered atParis Orly Airport. The airline operated scheduled flights from France to 21 destinations acrossEurope,Africa, and theMiddle East,[2] with a fleet ofAirbus A320 family andA330 aircraft. The airline filed forbankruptcy and was placed inreceivership on 2 September 2019. Takeover bids were received, but none proved viable and the airline was liquidated by the court on 27 September 2019.

History

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Douglas DC-3 from Aigle Azur in 1953, equipped with a Turbomeca Palas ventral booster engine
DC-3 in Aigle Azur's 1950s colours at the company's 60th anniversary
A former Aigle AzurBoeing 737-300
A former Aigle AzurAirbus A321-200

1946–1955

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Aigle Azur was founded in 1946 by Sylvain Floirat, becoming the first post-war private company and began operating a fewJunkers Ju 52s with an increased capacity of 32 passengers. Its founder also managed to secure special transport contracts with the authorities, such as contracts for overseas teachers during the school holidays, with its first destinations to Tunisia and Lebanon. Purchasing more modern equipment from American surplus allowed the company to extend its activities intoIndochina and Algeria, where an important market was therepatriation of people back to France.

On 1 May 1955, Sylvain Floirat transferred the entire fleet to theUnion Aéromaritime de Transport (UAT), along with 54 of the company's crew members and its hotel staff.

1970–2000

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In 1970, the company was re-established as a regional airline under the nameLucas Aviation. Its registered office was at Pontoise airport. Lucas Aviation initially operated regional scheduled flights traded asLucas Air Transport, including a year-round connecting service betweenDeauville andLondon Gatwick. The company name was later changed once again toLucas Aigle Azur.

In addition to this regular route, Aigle Azur provided business flights for politicians, businessmen, sporting figures and artists.

Since 2001

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In 2001, Aigle Azur was in decline, with only twoBoeing 737-200 aircraft. It was taken over by the GoFast group (a firm with specialties in freight, logistics, industrial projects and tourism), which invested capital into the company and updated its fleet, while primarily focusing on charter flights to Algeria. WhenAir Lib ceased trading, Aigle Azur opened regular routes to Algeria. It also benefited from the closing ofKhalifa Airways, which had served Algeria from France along with Air Algeria.

In 2006, with open sky agreements in place in Morocco and Tunisia, the company was operating numerous regular flights to Morocco's main cities, notablyCasablanca,Rabat,Marrakesh,Agadir,Fes,Tangier andOujda.

In 2007, Aigle Azur was offering 30 regular destinations from several French cities, and launched regular flights fromParis Orly toDjerba, Paris Orly toRimini andMarseille toSal, Cape Verde. It also rolled out electronic tickets.

At the beginning of 2008, the company was able to add new destinations, with regular flights toFaro, in the south of Portugal andBamako in Mali. At the end of April 2008, it received its thirdAirbus A319, registered as F-HBMI, increasing the size of its fleet to 11 aircraft. In June 2008, itsloyalty programme, Azur Plus, was launched.

In May 2009, the company received its first newAirbus A3202, and its presence at theParis Air Show enabled it to order a fourthAirbus A319 fromAirbus a month later. This aircraft was delivered in April 2010. A fifth Airbus A319 was received in May 2010.

In June 2010, the company announced its plan to open a route between Paris andBaghdad, starting from September 2010. In July 2010, Aigle Azur began a partnership with the Malian companyAir Mali. This meant that Aigle Azur was able to begin selling flights to other African cities, particularly toDakar,Abidjan andBrazzaville. The agreement came into effect as from 1 August 2010. On 30 October 2010, the company's inaugural flight to Baghdad took place. The airline opened reservations for Baghdad, with the first commercial flights beginning in mid-December 2010. This route was discontinued in mid-2011 due to a lack of reservations resulting from events in the country.

On 23 November 2011, Aigle Azur opened a new regular route to Mali.

In July 2012, Aigle Azur opened a route between Paris Orly andMoscow Vnukovo. To accelerate its growth strategy and expand its network into the long-haul sector, on 23 October 2012 Aigle Azur announced that the Chinese conglomerateHNA Group had bought shares, leaving HNA Group (notably the owner ofHainan Airlines,Hong Kong Airlines, China West Airlines,Lucky Air,Tianjin Airlines, andHong Kong Express) as the owner of 48% of Aigle Azur's capital. Thus the company was owned by Weaving Group, Lu Azur and the HNA Group. On 18 December 2012, Aigle Azur andCorsair International signed a commercial partnership agreement to harmonise their respective networks in order to enhance their passenger connections at Paris Orly. Aigle Azur and Corsair were then both able to make the most of their geographic deployments by cross-selling tickets each to their own customers, and in doing so generating additional revenues5.

By 2014, Aigle Azur was the second-largest French airline afterAir France, and ahead ofAir Austral andCorsair International, and employed 1,400 people6. The company was mainly competing with Air France,Air Algérie,EasyJet andTAP Air Portugal. In 2015, it opened connecting flights between Marseille and Dakar, then Lyon and Dakar, followed by a route toConakry in 2016.

In 2017, Weaving Group sold the remaining 32% of its shares toDavid Neeleman (who was known to be involved withAzul Brazilian Airlines andTAP Air Portugal, and previously had ties toJetBlue)7, thereby withdrawing from the company. At the request and with the support of the three Aigle Azur shareholders HNA Group, David Neeleman, and Lu Azur,Frantz Yvelin was named CEO of Aigle Azur8, becoming the third entrepreneur to lead the company. Frantz Yvelin previously foundedL'Avion in 2006 (nowOpenskies) andLa Compagnie in 2013. 2017 also saw the launch of routes toBeirut,Berlin Tegel, andMoscow Domodedovo, and two Airbus A330 aircraft were ordered for the launch of long-haul flights.

On 29 March 2018, Frantz Yvelin held a press conference in Paris to present the company's new strategic directions. After major development of the network in 2017, the company announced new long-haul routes to São Paulo and Beijing to open in July and September 2018, respectively, with year-round service. Aigle Azur received two Airbus A330-200 aircraft formerly operated byAir Berlin in April 2018 to operate these two routes. Both were equipped with new cabins and a new visual identity9. Aigle Azur also launched its first domestic route in 2018, between Lyon and Nantes, as well as a service to Italy (Milan). The company also developed new partnerships, including withAir Caraïbes,S7 Airlines, andTAP Air Portugal, in addition to the existing ones with Azul and Hainan Airlines.

On 22 January 2019, Aigle Azur announced it would launch a regular route to Kyiv by 18 April 2019.

French businessman Gerard Houa – who controls around 20% of the carrier – tried to take control but was rejected by HNA Group and David Neeleman.After that, the carrier was placed under the control of a temporary administrator on 27 August 2019 at the request of its president.[3]

Bankruptcy and liquidation

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Aigle Azur filed for bankruptcy and was placed inreceivership on 2 September 2019, while it continued to operate flights.[3] Flights to Mali, Brazil and Portugal were suspended as of 5 September, and ticket sales ceased for all flights after 10 September.[4] Later on 5 September, the receiver decided to suspend all flights as of the evening of 6 September, citing the company's financial situation and operational difficulties.[1]

A deadline of 9 September was set for takeover offers. Aigle Azur's 9,800 slots at Orly are reportedly of particular interest; the slots cannot be purchased directly, however, only via a takeover of the company.[5] In total, 14 takeover offers were received. Confirmed bids to take over a significant proportion of assets were received fromAir France, Groupe Dubreuil (owners ofAir Caraïbes andFrench Bee) and Lu Azur (owned by former shareholder Gerard Houa). Expressions of interest primarily for activities at Orly were received fromEasyJet,Vueling and other unnamed bidders.[6]

A commercial court hearing on 16 September gave bidders until 18 September to submit revised proposals. A joint bid from Air France and Groupe Dubreuil was deemed by trade unions to offer the best conditions for personnel, though legal problems relating to the conditions on which personnel would be transferred to the new owner remained to be resolved. The receivership period was extended until 27 September to allow negotiations to continue.[7][8] None of the bids proved viable, and the airline was formally liquidated by the commercial court on 27 September 2019.[citation needed]

Livery and logo

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Aigle Azur most recently used a “Eurowhite”-type livery, with white paint along the front of the fuselage and the company's name in navy blue. The tail represented a cloud in a blue sky, with a schematic representation of an eagle flying over the top with spread wings. The engines and thewinglets were also painted azure blue. From 1946 to 1955, the fuselage of Aigle Azur aircraft was bare metal, separated under the cabin windows by a dash of the same azure. The vertical fin, also in bare metal, was adorned with two parallel horizontal dashes on therudder and the old logo (an eagle flying over a globe). At the end of 2012, the company unveiled new graphic branding: a new font using capital letters for the name, as well as a digital prototype of an A320 from the fleet; the tail (becoming navy blue) was adorned with the old logo, enlarged and in azure, with three parallel lines of the same colour. Thewinglets also remained azure blue.

Destinations

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Codeshare agreements

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Aigle Azur hadcodeshare agreements with the following airlines:[9]

Fleet

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Aigle AzurAirbus A320-200
Aigle AzurAirbus A330-200

At the time of closure, the Aigle Azur fleet consisted of the following aircraft:[citation needed]

Aigle Azur fleet
AircraftIn
service
OrdersPassengersNotes
CYTotal
Airbus A319-1001144144Leased toTAP Air Portugal
Airbus A320-20081741741 leased toTAP Air Portugal
180180
Airbus A330-200219268287
Total11

Historical fleet

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Aigle Azur previously operated the following aircraft:[10][11]

Aigle Azur historical fleet
AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredNotes
Amiot AAC.1 Toucan719471949
Airspeed AS.65 Consul319471954
Airbus A321-100520032014
Beechcraft A90119781984
Beechcraft C90119781994
Beechcraft 200219841997
Boeing 307 Stratoliner519511960
Boeing 737-200319932002
Boeing 737-300120042006
Boeing 737-300QC120012005Leased fromEurope Airpost
Boeing 737-400320022006
Bristol Freighter219541956
Caudron C.440 Goéland319461947
Curtiss C-46 Commando319531956
de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide719521954
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver719531960
de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter319571958
Dassault Falcon 20219881996
Douglas C-47 Skytrain2819471960
Douglas C-54 Skymaster119501953
Douglas DC-6319541955
Embraer EMB-110 Bandeirante219801996
Saab 340A119901996
Sud-Ouest Corse1UnknownUnknown
Sud-Ouest Bretagne619541956

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ab"Aigle Azur annule tous ses vols à partir de vendredi soir" [Aigle Azur cancels all its flights from Friday evening].www.lefigaro.fr (in French). 5 September 2019.
  2. ^abaigle-azur.com - Nos destinations (French) retrieved 5 September 2019
  3. ^abMichael Gubisch (3 September 2019)."Aigle Azur confirms bankruptcy filing".Flightglobal.
  4. ^"France's number two airline suspends some flights, ticket sales".International Business Times. AFP. 5 September 2019.
  5. ^"Aigle Azur en redressement judiciaire : ses slots intéresseraient Air France" [Aigle Azur in receivership: its slots could be of interest to Air France].Air Journal (in French). 4 September 2019.
  6. ^"Aigle Azur: 14 offres de reprise mais un avenir encore flou pour les salariés" [Aigle Azur: 14 bids received but the future for the staff is still unclear].LCI (in French). 10 September 2019.
  7. ^"Aigle Azur : l'offre de reprise commune d'Air France et du groupe Dubreuil est "une lueur d'espoir" pour la CDFT" [Aigle Azur: the joint takeover bid by Air France and Groupe Dubreuil offers a "glimmer of hope" for the CFDT].Franceinfo (in French). 16 September 2019.
  8. ^"Reprise d'Aigle Azur : Guérin se retire, Air France et Dubreuil font une offre combinée" [Aigle Azur takeover: Guérin withdraws, Air France and Dubreuil make a joint offer].La Tribune (in French). 16 September 2019.
  9. ^"Our Partners".Aigle Azur. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved17 July 2019.
  10. ^"Aigle Azur (1946-1960) fleet".aerobernie.bplaced.net. Retrieved20 February 2021.
  11. ^"Lucas AT / Aigle Azur fleet".aerobernie.bplaced.net. Retrieved20 February 2021.

Bibliography

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  • Gradidge J.M.G.DC-1 DC-2 DC-3 The First Seventy Years. Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. Tonbridge, Kent. 2006.ISBN 0-85130-332-3.

External links

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Media related toAigle Azur (1970) at Wikimedia Commons

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