Copa Airlines Embraer 190 Business Class,COCKPIT view,Curacao-Panama [AirClips full flight series]
Compañía Panameña de Aviación,
S.A. is the flag carrier of
Panama. It is headquartered in
Panama City, Panama, with its main hub at
Tocumen International Airport. It operates more than 326 daily scheduled flights to 72 destinations in 30 countries around
North, Central and
South America, and the
Caribbean.
Copa is a subsidiary of
Copa Holdings, S.A. as well as a member of the
Star Alliance. The airline is also the main
operator and owner of Colombian airline AeroRepública, currently known as
Copa Airlines Colombia.
Copa was founded in
1947 as the national airline of Panama and it began domestic operations to three cities in Panama shortly afterwards. The airline then abandoned its domestic flights in
1980, in favor of international flights. In
1998, Copa formed a strategic partnership with
Continental Airlines, adopting a new brand image and the OnePass frequent flyer program, later replaced by MileagePlus (will be replaced by ConnectMiles in July
2015).
As of 2013,
Copa Airlines employed over 9,
000 people, most of them residing in Panama and was one of the fastest growing and largest companies in the country. It is headed by
Chief Executive Officer Pedro Heilbron.
The airline was established as Compañía Panameña de Aviación (hence the acronym
COPA) on June 21,
1944, and started operations on
August 15, 1947. It was founded by a group of prominent
Panamanian investors with assistance from
Pan American World Airways, who took a 32% stake. It began operating domestic flights with a small fleet of
Douglas DC-3 aircraft. The airline started its first international flights in the early
1970s, with services to cities in
Jamaica,
Colombia, and
Costa Rica.
Until the early
1980s, the airline had significant competition from Air
Panamá Internacional, which had a higher profile. Copa discontinued domestic flights in 1980 and acquired its first jet, a
Boeing 737-100.
Today, the airline operates flights to
San Juan, Puerto Rico, as well as to the
Dominican Republic and
Miami, Florida. Until the introduction of the
Embraer 190 in
2005, the airline had an all-Boeing
737 fleet.
Aviation Partners Boeing (
APB) announced
10 October 2013, that Copa Airlines placed an order to retrofit some of its existing Boeing
Next Generation 737's Blended
Winglets with APB's new
Split Scimitar Winglets, as part of its environmental strategy.
The new APB winglet technology will save Copa more than $21 million in jet fuel costs fleetwide and more than 63,000 tons of
Carbon Dioxide (
CO2) outputs per year.
In
January 2014, Copa Airlines announced three new destinations and revealed its business strategy for the year, which included the delivery of eight new
Boeing 737-800 aircraft and the increase of flight frequencies to some destinations. The new destinations are
Montreal, Canada;
Fort Lauderdale,
United States and
Georgetown, Guyana. In July, it added
Campinas, Brazil; and
Santa Clara, Cuba. In
April 2014, Copa Airlines became the first airline in
Latin America and the third in the world to implement the Split Scimitar Winglets on its
Boeing 737 NG fleet.
In
April 2015, the airline announced an order for 61
Boeing 737 MAX 8/9 aircraft worth$6.6 billion at list price.
The
Embraer E-Jet family is a series of narrow-body medium-range twin-engine jet airliners produced by Brazilian aerospace conglomerate Embraer.
Launched at the
Paris Air Show in
1999, and entering production in
2002, the aircraft series has been a commercial success. The aircraft is used by both mainline and regional airlines around the world. As of
31 December 2013, there is a backlog of 279 firm orders for the E-Jets, 689 options and 998 units delivered.
The
E-190/195 models are a larger stretch of the
E-170/
175 models fitted with a new, larger wing, larger horizontal stabilizer and a new engine, the GE CF34-10E, rated at 18,
500 lb (82
.30 kN). These aircraft compete with the
Bombardier CRJ-1000 and
CS100, the
Boeing 717-200 and
737-600, and the
Airbus A318. It can carry
100 passengers in a two-class configuration or 124 in single-class high density configuration.
The first flight of the E-190 was on
March 12, 2004 (PP-XMA), with the first flight of the
E-195 (PP-XMJ) on
December 7 of the same year. The launch customer of the E-190 was New York-based low-cost carrier JetBlue with 100 orders and 100 options.
British low-cost carrier Flybe launched the E-195 with 14 orders and 12 options.
As the 190/195 models are of mainline aircraft size, many airlines operate them as such, fitting them with a business class section and operating them themselves, instead of having them flown by a regional airline partner. For example,
Air Canada operates 45 E-190 aircraft fitted with 9 business-class and 88 economy-class seats as part of its primary fleet. JetBlue and
US Airways also operate the E-190 as part of their own fleet thus allowing airlines increased crewing flexibility by having the ability of air crews to work aboard narrow-body or widebody aircraft all the same.