dlredline
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2003
- Posts
- 310
Sure is tough to have a business plan based around the acquisition of hundreds of E170's when you can't even finance them. . . .
Sat Sep 18, 2004 12:12 AM ET
WASHINGTON, Sept 18 (Reuters) - U.S. Airways lost the financing for nearly 100 regional jets that were to be a key part of the bankrupt airline's restructuring plan, The Washington Post reported on Saturday.
With the carrier in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, its aircraft manufacturers Bombardier (BBDb.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) and Embraer (EMBR4.SA: Quote, Profile, Research) decided to terminate their financing contracts on the jets, the paper said.
US Airways had built part of its transformation plan around the use of the 50- to 70-seat aircraft during its previous restructuring in 2002. The carrier hoped to deploy the jets on many of its shorter or less popular routes and use them to expand service to short-haul destinations, The Post said.
The Virginia-based airline sought bankruptcy protection this past Sunday after being pinched by low-cost rivals, higher fuel prices and a failure to win new labor concessions.
Sat Sep 18, 2004 12:12 AM ET
WASHINGTON, Sept 18 (Reuters) - U.S. Airways lost the financing for nearly 100 regional jets that were to be a key part of the bankrupt airline's restructuring plan, The Washington Post reported on Saturday.
With the carrier in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, its aircraft manufacturers Bombardier (BBDb.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) and Embraer (EMBR4.SA: Quote, Profile, Research) decided to terminate their financing contracts on the jets, the paper said.
US Airways had built part of its transformation plan around the use of the 50- to 70-seat aircraft during its previous restructuring in 2002. The carrier hoped to deploy the jets on many of its shorter or less popular routes and use them to expand service to short-haul destinations, The Post said.
The Virginia-based airline sought bankruptcy protection this past Sunday after being pinched by low-cost rivals, higher fuel prices and a failure to win new labor concessions.