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Bombardier Inc. T.BBD.A

Alternate Symbol(s):  BDRPF | BDRXF | BDRAF | T.BBD.B | BDRBF | T.BBD.PR.B | T.BBD.PR.C | T.BBD.PR.D | BOMBF

Bombardier Inc. is a Canada-based manufacturer of business aircraft with a global network of service centers. The Company is focused on designing, manufacturing and servicing business jets. The Company has a worldwide fleet of more than 5,000 aircraft in service with a variety of multinational corporations, charter and fractional ownership providers, governments and private individuals. It operates aerostructure, assembly and completion facilities in Canada, the United States and Mexico. Its robust customer support network services the Learjet, Challenger and Global families of aircraft, and includes facilities in strategic locations in the United States and Canada, as well as in the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria, the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, China and Australia. The Company's jets include Challenger 350, Challenger 3500, Challenger 650, Global 5500, Global 6500, Global 7500 and Global 8000.


TSX:BBD.A - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by JABombardieron Jul 17, 2003 10:44am
597 Views
Post# 6251021

Bombardier: News!!!

Bombardier: News!!!Regional jets: 10 years later Comair, Delta celebrate strategic -- and revolutionary -- use of planes By Alexander Coolidge Post staff reporter Comair Inc. and Delta officials celebrated 10 years of regional jets Wednesday that have transformed the aviation industry by opening new markets for airlines and preserving existing ones as the industry confronted the travel slowdown in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorism attacks. Cincinnati-based regional carrier Comair pioneered the use of smaller jets to grow its business when other similar-sized carriers stuck on small planes with propellers. The company flew the first 50-seat Bombardier CRJ between the Queen City and Toronto June 1, 1993. Comair essentials * Major hubs: Cincinnati, Atlanta, Dallas/Fort Worth, Orlando. * Daily Flights: 970 to 114 destinations in the U.S., Canada and the Bahamas. * Fleet: 143 regional jets. Officials at Delta Air Lines Inc. in Atlanta, which had a code-share and marketing alliance with Comair, soon realized they could fly smaller state-of-the-art jets profitably into smaller cities and generate more business for their mainline jets at major hubs. Delta bought out Comair in 2000 for $1.8 billion. Code-sharing links big and small airlines together through schedule synchronization. Delta Connection, which supports its parent company's hubs and includes Comair and Atlantic Southeast Airlines, now leads the industry with a fleet of 243 regional jets. Delta flies a total of 347 small jets through three other regional airlines. "I was one of the skeptics when Comair first broached the idea of regional jets back in the early 1990s," said Michael Bell, vice president of schedule development at Delta Air Lines. He made his comments during a panel discussion of airline officials hosted by Comair at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Bell said most of the opportunities for growth then were in mainline service by major airlines, but Comair worked with Bombadier to produce jets and routes that could fly more cheaply to smaller markets. As the decade progressed, other airlines acquired regional jets. More than 1,100 regional jets are in operation throughout North America. "Regional jets have become the link of small communities to the world," said Steve Ridolphi, president of Bombardier Aerospace Regional Aircraft. "About half the world's departures are on regional jets." Delta Connection's regional jets fly more than 2,600 trips a day to 369 markets. Recent industry estimates show that two-thirds of all airports in the United States support only regional flying because those markets won't support larger jet service. Randy Rademacher, Comair's president, said his company is playing a dual role helping its Delta parent maintain a presence and consistent number of flights in markets that have suffered traffic drops since terrorist attacks two years ago sent the industry into a tailspin. The service also helps open new markets for Delta. "Since 9-11, the regional jet has been able to back-fill in routes where traffic is down," he said. "That allows Delta to maintain those routes and those services to keep customers." Comair's fleet of jets, which have 40-70 seats apiece, has grown from about 90 in late 2001 to 143 today. Delta's planes generally have a minimum of 150 seats. Rademacher said Comair opened six new markets this year including Erie, Pa., Moline, Ill. and Bingingham, N.Y. in addition to providing cheaper route coverage for Delta as it has reshuffled its schedules. Deb McElroy, president of the Regional Airline Association, said the flexibility offered by small jets is critical to major airlines as they struggle to cut costs and change their business plans. "Regional jets are the key to the viability at major hubs," she said. "Code-sharing is the lifeblood of the industry." Publication Date: 07-17-2003 Email this story to a friend
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