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Delta Q1 Report more aircraft phase outs

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Godfather

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Delta to phase out DC 9-50 jets, Saab turboprops after Labor Day

Delta announced in its first-quarter earnings report that it will retire 130 of its least-efficient aircraft over the next 18 months.
FlightGlobal.com reports the retirements will include “all McDonnell Douglas DC 9-50 and Saab turboprop aircraft along with 60 50-seat regional jets.”
Bloomberg News says Delta’s “DC 9-50 jets … are about 35 years old on average.”
The phase-out of the aircraft comes as Delta plans to reduce the amount of flying it does in the second half of the year.
FlightGlobal.com writes “after Labor Day, (Delta’s) system capacity will be down approximately 3% from a year ago. Trans-Atlantic capacity will be down 8% to 10% by the end of the fourth quarter.”
Delta Air Lines is blaming escalating fuel costs for its $318 million net loss in the first quarter and says it is raising fares and retiring its “least efficient aircraft” over the next 18 months in an effort to compensate.
Boosted by higher fares, first quarter operating revenue rose 13% to $7.75 billion compared to a year ago. Operating expenses, however, were up 16% to $7.83 billion because of higher fuel costs, maintenance volume and employee wage increases. The company reported an operating loss of $92 million.
“Fuel is the biggest challenge facing this industry and Delta is actively reducing capacity, implementing fare actions, hedging our fuel needs and attacking our cost structure in order to offset fuel’s impact on our earnings,” says Delta CEO Richard Anderson.
The fuel bill increased by 29%, or $483 million, during the first quarter when Delta paid $2.89 per gallon for fuel with 41% of its fuel consumption hedged. That is expected to increase to $3.26 per gallon in the second quarter with 40% of fuel hedged.
The company attributed a $90 million shortfall in passenger revenue to “severe winter weather” and an additional $35 million loss due to the tsunami in Japan.
Delta plans to retire 130 aircraft over the next 18 months, which includes all McDonnell Douglas DC 9-50 and Saab turboprop aircraft along with 60 50-seat regional jets. The company expects that after Labor Day, system capacity will be down approximately 3% from a year ago. Trans-Atlantic capacity will be down 8% to 10% by the end of the fourth quarter.
“This was a particularly tough quarter for Delta, as we faced significant pressure on our business from rising fuel prices, the impact of events in Japan, industry overcapacity in the trans-Atlantic and mounting cost pressures,” Delta CFO Hank Halter said in a memo issued to employees. “As a result we have a great deal of work ahead of us in 2011.”

Source: Flight Global, USA Today
 
there goes any hiring at big D. 60 50 seaters - WOW, are these in addition to the previous reductions in 50 seat RJ's?
 
If Delta doesn't want the Saabs, Usair does. This is a very efficient aircraft for it's intended purpose and appropriate market.
 
I'm curious who's 50 seaters are going bye bye..

Of the 50 RJ's... How many is Comair being stripped of?

The Comair page from APC says "shrinking fleet of 97 planes to 44 by end of 2012" and they currently have 67 50-seaters.
 
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I'm curious who's 50 seaters are going bye bye..

I'm guessing all of Comair's and some of ASA's. Could Skywest Inc. be purchasing Comair's -700's & -900's and parking (Skywest and ASA) -200's and replacing them 1 for 1? Who knows???
 
Skywest is moving 6 of their 200s to united from delta. It was part of the deal to get those 8 new 700a for delta out of lax.
 
These are all previous announced cuts. Approximately 52 of the 200's are the ones being cut from Comair and the other 8 are from skywest/asa in the form of one for one replacements to get the above mentioned 900's , so nothing really new here.
 

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