beech1900kid
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2002
- Posts
- 132
I found this on yahoo airilne news. Also I read an article recently on the net that UAL is selling their 767-200s. I hope this does not continue too much with other assets.
Associated Press
BA buys four Heathrow take off slots from United, source says
Saturday October 11, 6:59 pm ET
By Michael Mcdonough, Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) -- British Airways has bought four trans-Atlantic take off slots at London's Heathrow airport from rival United Airlines, a source with knowledge of the transaction said Saturday.
BA paid 12 million pounds (US$19.2 million) for the prime slots from Heathrow to New York after an auction among carriers, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
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The purchase expands BA's dominant position at Heathrow airport, Europe's busiest, giving it 41 percent of the take off slots.
A BA spokeswoman refused to confirm or deny the transaction.
"We are constantly seeking ways to grow our operation at Heathrow and to improve flight schedules to make them more attractive to customers," spokeswoman Joanne Devereux said.
"We are not prepared to go into details about discussions with other airlines about slots as they are commercially sensitive and subject to confidentiality agreements," she said.
A United Airlines spokeswoman in Britain could not immediately comment. Phone calls to Airport Coordination Ltd., the company which allocates slots at Heathrow, went unanswered Saturday.
Associated Press
BA buys four Heathrow take off slots from United, source says
Saturday October 11, 6:59 pm ET
By Michael Mcdonough, Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) -- British Airways has bought four trans-Atlantic take off slots at London's Heathrow airport from rival United Airlines, a source with knowledge of the transaction said Saturday.
BA paid 12 million pounds (US$19.2 million) for the prime slots from Heathrow to New York after an auction among carriers, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
ADVERTISEMENT
The purchase expands BA's dominant position at Heathrow airport, Europe's busiest, giving it 41 percent of the take off slots.
A BA spokeswoman refused to confirm or deny the transaction.
"We are constantly seeking ways to grow our operation at Heathrow and to improve flight schedules to make them more attractive to customers," spokeswoman Joanne Devereux said.
"We are not prepared to go into details about discussions with other airlines about slots as they are commercially sensitive and subject to confidentiality agreements," she said.
A United Airlines spokeswoman in Britain could not immediately comment. Phone calls to Airport Coordination Ltd., the company which allocates slots at Heathrow, went unanswered Saturday.