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Arctic Air (Norway)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arctic Air
IATA ICAO Callsign
8A AKR Arctic Norway
Founded1996 (1996)
Ceased operations2003 (2003)
Operating bases
Fleet size2 (2003)
Destinations5 (2003)
HeadquartersAlta, Norway

Arctic Air AS was a Norwegian airline which operated between 1996 and 2003. From 2000 to 2003 it built up a network of scheduled services, in part based on public service obligation (PSO) contracts, flying with two Dornier 228. The company was based in Alta.

Initially Arctic Air operated two Cessna 206 seaplanes, mostly in Kautokeino. After unexpectedly winning the 2000 to 2003 PSO tender to link Kirkenes to Vardø, the airline leased its first Dornier 228. A year later services were also introduced to Alta, Lakselv as was an international route to Murmansk. From 2002 the airline won a PSO contract to link Fagernes to Oslo. After losing both contracts in the 2003 tender, the company was liquidated.

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Transcription

History

Arctic Air was established by eleven businessmen in Kautokeino. It registered its two first aircraft, both Cessna 206s, in May 1996.[1] The company began flying general aviation charter missions, with reindeer husbandry and the power company Statkraft as major customers. Operations were summer-only, and based out of various lakes in the municipality.[2]

In 1999 the airline chose to bid for public service obligation contracts with the Ministry of Transport and Communications, bidding for the routes from Tromsø to Sørkjosen, from Tromsø to Hasvik and Hammerfest, as well as from Kirkenes to Vardø.[3] The latter route was won in September, after Arctic Air had bid 37 million kroner for the route.[4] The incumbent, Widerøe, had bid 102 million.[5] The contract, effective 1 April 2000 through 31 March 2003, was awarded in September.[4] At the time the airline lacked suitable aircraft to operate the routes. Arctic Air was met with local opposition. While flown by Widerøe, Vardø Airport, Svartnes had been connected to a network westwards as well as to Kirkenes Airport, Høybuktmoen. With Arctic Air operating, only a feeder service would be provided.[6] By December the population was generally satisfied with the thrice-daily service, and patronage had increased by fifteen percent since they had taken over.[7]

The airline started with two new commercial services from 2 April 2001, to better utilize their aircraft. The first was an onward connection from Vardø to Alta Airport, the second was an thrice-weekly international service from Kirkenes to Murmansk Airport. The route connected with flights at Kirkenes onwards to Tromsø, Alta and Oslo.[8] From July Finnair started a thrice-weekly service from Helsinki via Rovaniemi to Lakselv. Arctic Air joined forces through establishing a feeder service to Lakselv Airport, Banak from Vardø, corresponding with the Finnair flights.[9]

The company had a revenue of 20 million kroner in 2001, of which 13 million was state subsidies. At the time it employed twelve people. By November 2001 the airline was discussing the possibility of bidding for and taking over large or the entirety of the Finnmark network. The airline claimed it would be able to provide cheaper and more frequent services than Widerøe through using smaller Dornier 228 aircraft.[5] Two months later the airline stated that was considering the possibility of launching a low-cost route from Alta to Oslo using a Boeing 737.[10] The following year Arctic Air speculated about opening an air route from Tromsø to the mothballed Kautokeino Airport.[11]

Instead the airline in February 2002 won a PSO contract to fly from Oslo Airport, Gardermoen to Fagernes Airport, Leirin. The contract awarded a subsidy of 8.3 million kroner, with two daily round trips.[12] This caused the airline to procure a second Dornier 228 and station it at Gardermoen. The one-year contract had been called following the bankruptcy in GuardAir.[13]

Widerøe won back the Vardø contract in August 2002, thus curtailing Arctic Air from operating the route.[14] Also the Fagernes route was lost. However, Arctic Air was experiencing record-high patronage on the Fagernes route, up eighteen percent from the previous year.[15] Russian authorities decided in October 2002 that Arctic Air would have to fly at a higher altitude than their aircraft without pressure cabins could withstand. Subsequently, Arctic Air was forced to terminate its route from 25 October.[16] Arctic Air subsequently operated its last scheduled flight on 30 March 2003.[17] The airline filed for bankruptcy in November 2003.[18]

Destinations

The following destinations were served by Arctic Air as scheduled services.

ARctic Air destinations
Location Airport Start End Ref(s)
Alta Alta Airport 2001 2003 [8]
Fagernes Fagernes Airport, Leirin 2002 2003 [13]
Kirkenes Kirkenes Airport, Høybuktmoen 2000 2003 [4]
Lakselv Lakselv Airport, Banak 2001 2001 [9]
Murmansk Murmansk Airport 2001 2002 [8]
Oslo Oslo Airport, Gardermoen 2002 2003 [13]
Vardø Vardø Airport, Svartnes 2000 2003 [4]

Fleet

The following is a list of aircraft operated by Arctic Air. It states the model, total number of aircraft operated, and the year the first entered service and the last left service with the airline.

Arctic Air aircraft
Model Qty First in Last out Ref(s)
Cessna 206 2 1996 2000 [1]
Dornier 228 2 2000 2003 [13]

References

  1. ^ a b Hagby, Kay (1998). Fra Nielsen & Winther til Boeing 747 (in Norwegian). Drammen: Hagby. pp. Hagby: 160, 197. ISBN 8299475201.
  2. ^ "Helikopter-klage avvist" (in Norwegian). Norwegian News Agency. 9 March 1999.
  3. ^ Lillesund, Geir (1 July 1999). "Regionrutene i nord attraktive for småselskaper" (in Norwegian). Norwegian News Agency.
  4. ^ a b c d Johnsen, Oddny (21 September 1999). "Disse fikk rutene". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 6.
  5. ^ a b Rein, Marit (2 November 2001). "Flypriser Arctic Air". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 14.
  6. ^ Fonbæk, Dag (25 March 2000). "Miniputter på norske flyruter". Verdens Gang (in Norwegian).
  7. ^ Rapp, Ole Magnus (18 December 2000). "Arctic Air ønsker å fly til Murmansk". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). p. 3.
  8. ^ a b c Gustad, Ragnhild (10 February 2001). "Arctic Air flyr til Murmansk". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 17.
  9. ^ a b Rapp, Ole Magnus (30 May 2001). "Finnair slår SAS i Finnmark". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). p. 3.
  10. ^ Rein, Marit (23 January 2003). "Arctic Air vil fly Alta–Oslo". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 13.
  11. ^ Sætra, Gunnar (3 August 2002). "Kautofly". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 8.
  12. ^ Endresen, Rune (22 February 2002). "Arctic Air flyr Fagernes–Oslo". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 14.
  13. ^ a b c d Grande, Arne (22 February 2002). "Himmelhøy statsstøtte". Dagens Næringsliv (in Norwegian). p. 40.
  14. ^ Taarnesvik, Geir (29 August 2002). "Arctic Air tapte luftkampen". Nordlys (in Norwegian). p. 8.
  15. ^ Endresen, Rune (11 September 2002). "Arctic Air med suksess". Nordlys (in Norwegian).
  16. ^ "Arctic Air legger ned flyruten Kirkenes–Murmansk" (in Norwegian). Norwegian News Agency. 25 October 2002.
  17. ^ "Slutt for Arctic Air". Verdens Gang (in Norwegian). 5 April 2003. p. 52.
  18. ^ "Arctic Air konkurs". Verdens Gang (in Norwegian). 19 November 2003. p. 36.
This page was last edited on 10 July 2022, at 16:02
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