Wizz Air's New A321XLR: The Future of Aviation
Everything You Need to Know About Wizz Air's New Aircraft
Everything You Need to Know About Wizz Air's New Aircraft
After a nine-year hiatus, the Scandinavian airline reintegrates Tel Aviv into its destination network as part of a strategic expansion. This new route will strengthen ties between Israel and Northern Europe, offering convenient connections to major aviation hubs in Europe and the U.S
Major Airlines Boost Partnership with WestJet Through Unprecedented Moves - Massive Investment, Surprising Equity Sharing, and Expansive Global Cooperation Plans. Delta Intends to Transfer 2.3% Stake to Air France-KLM for $50 Million
Since the debut flight of the Airbus A380 in 2005 and its entry into commercial service in 2007, the super-jumbo has made over 800,000 flights, carrying more than 300 million passengers. Today, about 180 A380s continue to operate actively worldwide
The Israel Pilots' Association criticizes foreign flight suspensions, citing Israel's top-tier air defense and calling for an updated national aviation strategy — last reviewed in 2008
In a major upgrade to passenger experience, Israir is outfitting all nine of its aircraft with onboard internet – aligning itself with global aviation airlines like United, and Delta, and signaling a bold new era for Israeli short-haul travel
PassportNews studio will broadcast live from the international mediterranean tourism market (IMTM) in Tel Aviv, May 7-8. For the 1st time: Aviation and Tourism seniors will take part in "Passport's Salon" - Double conference hosted by Passport Group
During the ATM tourism fair in Dubai, Emirates announced a global expansion move including aviation agreements with seven new countries. The move features luxury destinations, an upgraded fleet, and a renewed premium experience, reinforcing the airline’s status as a global leader
Airports report power supply restored with generator support; Metro almost fully operational; National rail service announces 50% train restoration in Madrid
What was the British airline's reasoning behind cancelling the route to Ben Gurion Airport? IATA's CEO in Israel: "International regular aviation cannot operate for long without operational certainty". And is there a connection to the Turkish airlines story?