Best Documentary 2014 On
Emirates Airlines Must See
During the mid-1980s, Gulf Air began to cut back its services to
Dubai as it was concerned it was providing regional feeder flights for other carriers. As a result Emirates was conceived in
March 1985 with backing from Dubai's royal family, and was required to operate independent of government subsidies, apart from
US$10 million in start-up capital. In mid-1980s,
Pakistan International Airlines played a large role in establishing the
Emirates airline.
First by leasing two of its airplanes –
Airbus A300 and
Boeing 737 – as well as providing technical and administrative assistance to the new carrier. Also Emirates leased a new Boeing 737–
300 and an Airbus 300B4-200, both from Pakistan International Airlines.
The Royal Family's
Dubai Royal Air Wing also provided the airline with two used
Boeing 727–
200 Adv. The airline's first flight, flight EK600, was Dubai–
Karachi on
25 October 1985
Maurice Flanagan, who previously worked at
British Airways, Gulf Air, and
BOAC and at the time was overseeing Dnata, was appointed chief executive officer of the new airline.
To acknowledge his services for aviation, in
2000,
Flanagan was made
CBE in the
Queen's Birthday Honour List, and later honoured with knighthood.
He would be joined at the airline by
Sheikh Ahmed bin
Saeed Al Maktoum (as chairman) and now-Emirates president
Tim Clark.
Current chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum has since inherited the role of
CEO. During its first year, it carried about 260,
000 passengers and 10,000 tons of freight.
To highlight the airline's early success, Gulf Air, during Emirates' first year of operations, suffered a 56% drop in profits, and a loss the following year.
By
1986, the airline had added new destinations such as
Colombo,
Dhaka,
Amman and
Cairo to its route network. In
1987 a second Boeing 727 was purchased from the Dubai
Government and an
A300 was temporarily replaced by a second example from
Kuwait Airlines. On 3 July, Emirates received its first bought aircraft, an
Airbus A310 (registration A6-EKA),[20] and with two examples, launched daily non-stop services to
London Gatwick on 6 July 1987. The airline in 1987 added
Frankfurt via
Istanbul, and
Malé (
Maldive). By the end of 1987, Emirates was serving 11 destinations.[citation needed] This was followed by an expansion into the
Far East market in 1985, with flights to
Bangkok,
Manila and
Singapore, and Hong Kong in 1991. During the first decade of operations, Emirates recorded strong growths averaging 30%.
By the early
1990s, Emirates was among the world's fastest growing airlines; revenue increased approximately
US$100 million each year, approaching
US$500 million in the year
1993. The airline carried 1.6 million passengers and 68,000 tons of cargo and in the same year, respectively.
The
Boeing 777 has become an integral part of the fleet in recent years. Emirates is the world's largest
operator of the Boeing 777 and the only airline to have operated every version of the aircraft.
With the onset of the Gulf War, business increased for Emirates as the war kept other airlines out of the area; it was the only airline to continue flying in the last ten days of the war.
Following the conflicts, a total of 92 air carriers were flying to markets internationally and Emirates faced intense competition at its home base. It carried about three million passengers a year to
Dubai International Airport in the mid-1990s. Emirates continued to expand during
the late 1990s. The growing cargo business accounted for 16 percent of the airline's total revenues.
even more details links are here:
http://www.emirates.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Emirates
https://twitter.com/emirates
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emirates_(airline)
- published: 09 Feb 2015
- views: 133085