All Nippon Airways
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All Nippon Airways 全日本空輸 Zen Nihon Kūyu |
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IATA NH |
ICAO ANA |
Callsign ALL NIPPON |
Founded | 1952 (as Nippon Helicopter) | |
Hubs | Narita International Airport Tokyo International Airport(Haneda) Kansai International Airport Osaka International Airport |
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Focus cities | Chubu Centrair International Airport New Chitose Airport |
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Frequent flyer program | ANA Mileage Club | |
Member lounge | Club ANA Lounge | |
Alliance | Star Alliance | |
Subsidiaries | Air Nippon Air Japan Air Next Air Central ANA & JP Express |
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Fleet size | 172 (+ 86 orders) | |
Destinations | 71 | |
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan | |
Key people | Mineo Yamamoto (CEO), Yoji Ohashi (Chairman) | |
Website: English Website |
All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd. (全日本空輸株式会社 Zen Nihon Kūyu Kabushiki-gaisha?, TYO: 9202, LSE: ANA), also known as Zennikkū (全日空?) or ANA, is an airline headquartered in Tokyo, Japan. It is the country's second-largest international airline after Japan Airlines and the country's largest domestic airline.[citation needed] It operates services to 49 destinations in Japan and 22 international routes. ANA employed 22,170 staff as of March 2007.[citation needed]
ANA's main international hubs are at Narita International Airport outside Tokyo and Kansai International Airport in Osaka. Its main domestic hubs are at Tokyo International Airport, Osaka International Airport, Chubu International Airport (near Nagoya), and New Chitose Airport (near Sapporo). [1]
In addition to its mainline operations, ANA controls several smaller carriers[2]:
- Air Nippon, ANA's regional airline
- Air Japan, which handles charter flights for ANA
- Air Next, a low-cost carrier based at Fukuoka Airport
- Air Central, Q400-based airline based at Chubu Centrair International Airport
- ANA & JP Express (AJV), a freighter operator.
ANA has also announced they intend to create at least one LCC subsidiary, together with another as of yet unnamed Asian airline by fiscal 2009[3]
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Formation
ANA's earliest ancestor was Nippon Helicopter and Aeroplane (日本ヘリコプター輸送 Nippon Herikoputā Yusō?), an airline company founded on 27 December 1952.[citation needed] Nippon Helicopter was the source of what would later be ANA's IATA airline code, NH.[citation needed]
NH began helicopter services in February 1953. On 15 December 1953, it operated its first cargo flight between Osaka and Tokyo using a de Havilland Dove, JA5008.[citation needed] This was the first scheduled flight flown by a Japanese pilot in postwar Japan. Passenger service on the same route began on 1 February 1954, and was upgraded to a de Havilland Heron in March.[citation needed] In 1955, the Douglas DC-3 plane began flying for NH as well, by which time the airline's route network extended from northern Kyūshū to Sapporo.[citation needed]
ANA's other ancestor was Far Eastern Airlines (極東航空 Kyokutō Kōkū?).[citation needed] Although it was founded on 26 December 1952, one day before NH, it did not begin operations until 20 January 1954, when it began night cargo runs between Osaka and Tokyo, also using a de Havilland Dove. It adopted the DC-3 in early 1957, by which point its route network extended through southern Japan from Tokyo to Kagoshima.[citation needed]
FEA merged with NH on 1 December 1957. The combined companies had a total market capitalization of 600 million yen. They initially planned to use the name Zen Nippon Kōkū (全日本航空) or "All Japan Airlines" for the combined company. However, the statute authorizing the formation of Japan Airlines also banned any other company from using the words "Japan Airlines" (Nippon Kōkū) in its name, so the English name was changed to "All Nippon Airways" and the Japanese word kōkū (航空, "airline") was changed to kūyu (空輸, literally "air transport").[citation needed]
[edit] Domestic era
ANA grew steadily through the 1960s, adding the Vickers Viscount to the fleet in 1960 and the Fokker F27 in 1961.[citation needed] 1961 marked ANA's debut at the Tokyo Stock Exchange as well as the Osaka Securities Exchange; in the same year, the airline was granted a permit to operate flights to Okinawa, technically international flights since Okinawa remained occupied by the US military.[citation needed]
1963 saw another merger, this one with Fujita Airlines, raising the company's capital to 4 billion yen.[citation needed] In 1964, ANA introduced jet services with Boeing 727s on the Tokyo-Sapporo route. It also introduced Japan's first homegrown turboprop airliner, the YS-11, to replace Convair 440s on local routes.[citation needed] In 1969, ANA introduced Boeing 737 service.[citation needed]
As ANA grew, it started to contract travel companies across Japan to handle ground services in each region. This strategy was unique to ANA at that time.[citation needed] Many of these companies received shares in ANA as part of their deals. Some of these relationships continue today in different forms: for instance, Nagoya Railroad, which handled ANA's operations in the Chūbu region, maintains a permanent seat on ANA's board of directors.[citation needed]
ANA soon became Japan's largest domestic airline.[citation needed] However, the Ministry of Transportation had granted JAL a monopoly on international scheduled flights, which remained intact until 1986. ANA was allowed to operate international charter flights: its first was a 727 charter from Tokyo to Hong Kong on February 3, 1971.[citation needed]
ANA purchased its first widebody aircraft, six Lockheed L-1011s, in November 1972, following a lengthy sales effort by Lockheed which had involved negotiations between US president Richard Nixon, Japanese premier Kakuei Tanaka and UK premier Edward Heath (lobbying in favor of engine maker Rolls-Royce). Tanaka also pressed Japanese regulators to permit ANA to operate on Asia routes as part of the package.[4] The aircraft entered service on the Tokyo-Okinawa route in 1974. The carrier had initially ordered McDonnell Douglas DC-10s, but cancelled the order at the last minute and switched to Lockheed. It was later revealed that Lockheed had indirectly bribed Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka to force this switch: the ensuing scandal led to the arrest of Tanaka and several managers from ANA and Lockheed sales agent Marubeni for corruption.[5]
Boeing 747s were introduced on the Tokyo-Sapporo and Tokyo-Fukuoka routes in 1978, and Boeing 767s were introduced on Shikoku routes in 1983.[citation needed]
[edit] International era
In 1986, ANA began to expand beyond Japan's key domestic carrier to become a competitive international carrier as well.[citation needed] On 3 March 1986, ANA started scheduled international flights with a passenger service from Tokyo to Guam.[6] Flights to Los Angeles and Washington followed by year's end, and ANA also entered a service agreement with American Airlines to feed the US carrier's new flights to Narita.[citation needed]
ANA expanded its international services gradually: to Beijing, Dalian, Hong Kong and Sydney in 1987; to Seoul in 1988; to London and Saipan in 1989; to Paris in 1990 and to New York in 1991.[citation needed] Airbus equipment such as the A320 and A321 was added to the fleet in the early 1990s, as was the Boeing 747-481 jet. ANA joined the Star Alliance in October 1999.[7]
2004 saw ANA's profits exceed JAL's for the first time. That year, facing a surplus of slots due to the construction of new airports and the ongoing expansion of Haneda, ANA announced a fleet renewal plan that would replace some of its large aircraft with a greater number of smaller aircraft.[8]
Also in 2004, ANA set up low-cost subsidiary Air Next to operate flights from Fukuoka Airport starting in 2005, and became the majority shareholder in Nakanihon Airline Service (NAL) headquartered in Nagoya Airport.[9] In 2005, ANA renamed NAL to Air Central, and relocated its headquarters to Chubu Centrair International Airport.[10]
On July 12, 2005, ANA reached a deal with NYK to sell its 27.6% share in Nippon Cargo Airlines a joint venture formed between the two companies in 1987. [11] The sale allowed ANA to focus on developing its own cargo division.
In 2006, ANA, Japan Post, Nippon Express, and Mitsui O.S.K. Lines founded ANA & JP Express (AJV), which would operate freighters. [12] ANA is the top shareholder of AJV. It absorbed Air Japan's freighter operations.
Air Transport World named ANA its 2007 "Airline of the Year", and the airline has been recognised by FlightOnTime.info as the most punctual scheduled airline between London and Tokyo for the last four consecutive years, based on official UK CAA statistics.[citation needed]
ANA planned to launch ANA Business Jet on 25 March 2007 as an extension of its business class offering, using Boeing 737-700ER aircraft configured with 48 seats in two classes. The two aircraft would initially be used on daily services between Nagoya and Guangzhou.[13] Additionally, ANA will also use this jet to fly between Tokyo and Mumbai, in a configuration utilizing 36 seats.[14]
[edit] Destinations
See full article: All Nippon Airways destinations
ANA's route network extends through Asia, Oceania, North America and Europe. Its key international hub is Narita International Airport, where it shares the South Wing of Terminal 1 with its Star Alliance partners.[15]
[edit] Fleet
The ANA fleet includes the following aircraft (at March 2007)[citation needed]:
Aircraft | Total | Passengers (First/Club ANA/Premium Economy/Economy International) (Super Seat/Economy Domestic) |
Routes | Notes |
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Airbus A320-200 | 33 | 166 (166) 110 (20/90) |
Short-medium haul | |
Airbus A321-100 | 1 | ? | Short-medium haul | |
Boeing 737-700 | 10 (30 orders) |
118-136 48 (24/24) |
Short-medium haul | |
Boeing 737-700ER | 5 | 38 (38 Club ANA) 48 (24 Club ANA/24 Economy) |
ANA Business Jet | |
Boeing 747-400 | 8 | 287 (10/75/20/182) (Narita-Frankfurt or Paris) 338 (12/56/270) (Narita-Hong Kong) |
Long haul | Exit from service: 2010 |
Boeing 747-400D | 11 | 569 (27/542) | High-capacity domestic | General Electric CF6 engines |
Boeing 767-300 | 33 | 216 279 (12/267) |
Medium haul and domestic | |
Boeing 767-300ER | 21 (3 orders) |
216 | Medium-long haul | |
Boeing 777-200 | 16 | 415 (21/394) 382 (12/370) 234 (12/222) |
High-capacity domestic | |
Boeing 777-200ER | 7 | 223 | Long haul | |
Boeing 777-300 | 7 | 524 (21/503) | High-capacity domestic | |
Boeing 777-300ER | 8 (5 orders) |
247 (8/77/24/138) | Long haul (Narita - USA and London) | |
Boeing 787-3 | (30 orders) | Short-medium haul | Launch customer | |
Boeing 787-8 | (20 orders) | Long haul | Launch customer | |
Bombardier Dash 8 Q300 | 5 | Regional | ||
Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 | 13 (4 orders) |
Regional |
First Class, Club ANA and Premium Economy is avaiable on international flights and certain domestic flights. Super Seat (branded as "Super Seat Premium"; to be renamed "Premium Class" in April 2008 with the introduction of the Boeing 737 and newer seats) is available on domestic flights.
ANA operates 9 specially painted jets: 3 Pokémon jets (2 Boeing 747-481D and a Boeing 767-381 for domestic service), 4 Star Alliance jets, and one Woody jet in affiliation with USJ, the Universal Studios theme park in Osaka [2].Recently, a Boeing 767-318ER has been painted in a special panda themed livery ("Fly Panda"), celebrating the 20th anniversary of flying service between Japan and China.[citation needed]
[edit] Retired fleet
The average age of All Nippon Airways fleet is 10.3 years as of April 2006.[16]
ANA will be the launch customer for the new Boeing widebody, the Boeing 787, ordering 50 examples with an option for 50 more during April 2004. Deliveries will begin in 2008. ANA has split the order between 30 of the short-range 787-3 and 20 of the long haul 787-8 and during October 2004 announced it had selected Rolls-Royce to supply the engines. The aircraft will allow new routes to be opened to mid-sized cities not previously served, such as Denver and Montreal. This move is part of ANA's continuing plan to become an all-Boeing airline.[citation needed] Boeing is scheduled to deliver the first Boeing 787 to launch customer ANA in May 2008.[17]
On 17 February 2005, ANA signed a contract for an additional four Boeing 777-300ER aircraft, bringing the order total for that model to ten, the first of which was delivered in October 2004.[citation needed] Seven 777-300s (all of which were delivered), twenty 777-200s (fourteen of which have been delivered), and seven 777-200ERs (six of which have been delivered) were also ordered, according to Air International (April 2005)[citation needed]. The airline has contracted for three A320s and is in the process of leasing two others as a temporary measure until their 737-700 deliveries are complete. Thereafter, A320s will be withdrawn for domestic service but will remain in the fleet. Five A320-200s were ordered to serve Chinese routes because they could carry Unit Load Devices (containers) while B737s could not.[citation needed]
ANA announced on January 31, 2006, that it would be converting two of its previously ordered 737-700s to 737-700ERs, thus becoming the launch customer of this longest-range version of the 737.[citation needed]
ANA announced on March 6, 2007 that it had ordered 4 Boeing 777-300ER aircraft as part of its continued fleet expansion.[citation needed]
Originally, there was more than one YS-11 in the All Nippon Airways fleet, although most of the YS-11's were used under the name of ANK, or Air Nippon, a subsidiary of All Nippon Airways.[citation needed] Most all of these YS-11's are in museums, or otherwise scrapped or taken apart.[citation needed] After a final retirement process through September of 2006, all YS-11's were downed, obligated to retire, unless privately owned and were privately renovated. The YS-11 was a big part of All Nippon Airways back in the 1970s to the early 1990s, when it was used as a domestic carrier throughout the Japanese industry of flight.[citation needed]
[edit] Codeshare agreements
As of November 30, 2007, All Nippon Airways has codeshare agreements with the following airlines [18]:
Note: This list includes Star Alliance partners. Partners who are in an the Star Alliance have a 15-pixel picture of the Star Alliance logo to the right of the airline names.
[edit] Subsidiaries
ANA Group is a group of companies which are wholly or primarily owned by ANA. It comprises [19]:
[edit] Airlines
- Air Nippon
- Air Nippon Network (A-net)
- Air Next
- Air Japan
- Air Central (87% shareholding)
- Air Hokkaido (80% shareholding, ceased operation on March 31, 2006)
- ANA & JP Express (48.61% shareholding, a cargo airline)
[edit] General Aviation
- All Nippon Helicopter (dedicated for the public broadcaster NHK.)
[edit] Freight and airmail
[edit] ANA Cargo
ANA Cargo is the brand of ANA Group's freight service. As of June 2007, domestically it offers 937 daily flights on 135 routes. Internationally it offers 704 weekly flights to 28 destinations by ANA and ANA & JP Express. In the fiscal year ended on 31 March 2007 it earned 30,574 milion yens (Mys) from freight and 8,936 Mys from airmail domestically as well as 62,195 Mys from freight and 3,438 Mys from airmail internationally.[20]
It owns four Boeing 767-300F freighters as well as is wet leasing two Boeing 767-200S from ABX Air. [21]Passenger aircraft carry other freights.
[edit] ANA and Nippon Cargo Airlines
ANA was a founding (1978) and 27.5-percent shareholder of Nippon Cargo Airlines but in 2005 it sold its all stake to the co-leading shareholder, shipping company Nippon Yusen. The technical partnership is continuing.[citation needed]
[edit] Incidents and accidents
- ANA's first crash occurred in 1958, when a Douglas DC-3, registration JA5045, crashed.[citation needed]
- In 1958, dynamite was planted in another ANA DC-3 by a candy salesman as part of a suicide plan. Although the would-be bomber killed himself by leaping from the aircraft, the bombs failed to detonate.[22]
- In 1960, another Douglas DC-3, registration JA5018, was lost.[citation needed]
- In 1966, an ANA Boeing 727 was landing in Tokyo when it crashed into Tokyo Bay, with the loss of all passengers and an ANA YS-11 crashed shortly afterward in Matsuyama.[citation needed]
- On July 30, 1971, Flight 58, a Boeing 727, registration JA8329, collided with a JASDF F-86 Sabre fighter stationed at Matsushima Air Base.[citation needed]
- In 1999, a man hijacked Flight 61 and killed the pilot. He was subdued by other crew members, and nobody else on the airplane was hurt.[citation needed]
- On 13 March 2007, Flight 1603, a Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 aircraft, bound from Osaka to Kōchi, nose-landed safely at Kochi airport after the front wheel of the plane failed to deploy.[citation needed] None of the 53 passengers or 4 crew were injured. Bombardier advised all operators to inspect the nose landing-gear mechanism of the aircraft.[citation needed]
[edit] References
- ^ Online Timetable (Japanese) http://www.ana.co.jp/dom/airinfo/timetable/index.html
- ^ http://www.ana.co.jp/group/gyoken/ae.html#1 in Japanese as of 2008-01-18
- ^ Low-cost airlines making their way to Japan - Japan News Review 18/12 2007.
- ^ Somebody Up There Likes Lockheed, TIME, November 13, 1972.
- ^ Bribery Shokku At the Top, TIME, August 9, 1976.
- ^ 'The History of ANA's 20 years of international flight Service', ANA Sky Web (June 2006). Retrieved 2 September 2006.
- ^ http://www.staralliance.com/en/meta/airlines/NH.html browsed 2008-01-21.
- ^ Japan Times, (1 October 2004). Retrieved 2 September 2006.
- ^ Air Central, Corporate History (会社沿革 Kaisha Enkaku?). http://www.air-central.co.jp/information/pdf/enkaku.pdf (in Japanese) browsed 2008-01-21.
- ^ Air Central, Corporate History (会社沿革 Kaisha Enkaku?). http://www.air-central.co.jp/information/pdf/enkaku.pdf (in Japanese) browsed 2008-01-21.
- ^ ANA, ANA to Sell Share in Nippon Cargo Airlines to NYK http://www.ana.co.jp/eng/aboutana/press/2005/050712.html browsed 2008-01-21
- ^ http://www.ana.co.jp/pr/06-0406/pdf/06-ana-jp-ne-sm0427.pdf
- ^ Boeing delivers first 737-700ER
- ^ Fly Mumbai-Tokyo in `business class' jet
- ^ 'Terminal 1 South wing open at Narita Airport', ANA Sky Web (June 2006). Retrieved 2 September 2006.
- ^ ANA Fleet Age
- ^ Darren Shannon. "American reveals plan to buy 787s as it revises 737 order", Flight International, 2007-04-03, p. 8.
- ^ Codeshare partners
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://www.ana.co.jp/eng/aboutana/anacargo/index.html, browsed 2008-01-13.
- ^ ANA, ANA CARGO No. 34, Autumn 2007. http://www.ana.co.jp/cargo/information/bimonth/crg342007e/pdf/cargo_no34e.pdf Downloaded 2008-01-13.
- ^ Emoto's Plan, TIME, January 12, 1959.
[edit] External links
- All Nippon Airways website for Japan (Japanese)
- All Nippon Airways website (worldwide)
- ANA Fleet Detail
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