Category: Aviation

  • Max Air apologises to passengers for aircraft incident in Kano

    Max Air apologises to passengers for aircraft incident in Kano

    Agency Reporter 

    Max Air, a private owned airline, has apologized to the entire passengers on its Boeing 737 aircraft over an incident that happened in Kano on Tuesday.

    Mr Harish Manwani, Max Air Executive Director, made the apology during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Abuja.

    The executive director, who lauded the airlin’s experts for their promptness to effect standard practice in aviation to tackle the incident, added that such move averted other likely incidents.

    “The incident that happened yesterday was on take-off of our Boeing 737 aircraft from Kano carrying among the distinguished passengers on board were the Emir of Kano, his entourage and top officials of Max Air Management.

    “As the aircraft took off, one of the engines experienced a bird strike, which called for the Captain to carefully bring back the aircraft to Kano airport.

    “ We humbly apologize to the passengers for the inconvenience caused and assure that safety is our number one concern always“ Harish said.

    According to him, the passengers were asked to disembark after the aircraft safely arrived Kano airport.

    He said the Air Max engineers assessed the damage of the blades on the engine and got them replaced as per procedure.

    “The aircraft was released back to service with the authority’s supervision, and the aircraft departed from Kano to Abuja, “ he added.

    (NAN)

  • Aviation unions to shut down Kaduna Airport

    Aviation unions to shut down Kaduna Airport

    By Kelvin Osa Okunbor

    Aviation workers under the aegis of the National Union Of Air Transport Employees (NUATE), Association Of Nigeria Aviation Professionals (ANAP) and National Association Of Aircraft Pilots And Engineers (NAAPE), will on Sunday, from midnight, shut down operations at Kaduna airport over a strike declared by the Nigeria Labour and Congress (NLC).

    The unions accused the State government of anti-labour practices perpetrated against civil servants by the Governor Nasir El-Rufai-led administration in the state.

    In two separate letters jointly signed by the union’s leaders, namely Ocheme Aba, General secretary, NUATE, Abdulrasak Saidu, Secretary-General, ANAP and Ofonime Umoh , Deputy General Secretary, NAAPE, the workers said they will comply with the directive of NLC to down tools in the state between May 16 and 21, 2021, adding that all workers have been directed to withdraw all services at the airport within the stipulated period.

    READ ALSO: Why flights were diverted out of Kano, Kaduna airports, by NAMA

    “In effect, there will be no operations of any kind into, at, or out of the airport within the period.

    ” This information is provided to enable your management to take steps to safeguard valuable property within the airport vicinity during the period of the industrial action.

    “This action shall be fully carried out unless otherwise directed by the NLC. And all workers are enjoined to fully comply as no form of sabotage shall be tolerated,” the unions said

  • Airlines urged to embrace upscale services as N45bn facility berths

    Airlines urged to embrace upscale services as N45bn facility berths

    By Kelvin Osa Okunbor

    Airline crew and passengers travelling through Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos has been called upon to embrace premium hospitality services as a new facility – Lagos Marriott Hotel, Ikeja opens its doors for business.

    The N45 billion infrastructure put together by SIFAX Group, an investment conglomerate spanning aviation, oil and gas, maritime, haulage and logistic as well as hospitality sectors according to its managers has been positioned to drive a hub status for the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos for West and Central Africa.

    Speaking at a briefing to herald the opening of the facility next week, General Manager, Lagos Marriott Hotel, Janse Van Rensburg said the facility was delivered after six years of spadework in a partnership between SIFAX Group and the renowned global hotel brand Marriott International.

    The 250 – bed, 5- star hotel built on 11 floors has modern facilities including an exclusive flight crew lounge, VIP lounges, 1,000 – capacity ballroom, executive meeting rooms, 400- capacity car park, 206 standard rooms, 44 suites; including three presidential suites, well-equipped gym, continental restaurants and other facilities.

    He said a team from both groups has been working round the clock to use the infrastructure as a signature offering to redefine the nexus between the travel industry and hospitality.

    He said though the company was conscious of the cluster of brands around its location – Ikeja GRA, it intends to utilize the value of premium services to pull the aviation and allied sectors to leverage patronage.

    Using the Lagos Airport as a catchment, the managers said they are working out a template to leverage value to pool patronage for the facility.

    Rensburg said the desire to offer premium hospitality services to the Lagos market was responsible for the huge investment in the hotel.

    He said: “Every client of Lagos Marriott Hotel is set for an unimaginable premium experience like never before. We assure them of world-class hospitality, super customer satisfaction and royalty treatment. Frequent travelers who have points using the Marriott hotel franchise globally can also redeem their points here in Nigeria too. We have an in-club system for our premium members located on the first floor of the hotel.

    “The unique selling propositions of this hotel are the various amazing products we offer our clients which are non-existent in the country’s hospitality industry. The security of our guests is very paramount to us and that’s why every door and window in the facility is bomb-proof. Our pricing is also very commensurate with the quality that we offer.”

    Rensburg further noted that the hotel, which is in the classic premium category on the Marriott quality ranking, will be managed by the franchise owner, Marriott Hotel, for quality assurance purposes.

    Speaking also at the event, Chike Ogeah, Managing Director, Mac-Folly Hospitality Limited, the SIFAX Group’s hospitality subsidiary, applauded Dr. Taiwo Afolabi, Group Executive Vice Chairman, SIFAX Group, for bankrolling the multi-billion naira investment, adding that his vision of a premium hospitality business in Lagos has manifested through the new hotel.

    He said: “The building of this hotel took us six years. We took our time to tastefully select all the materials and equipment that were used in order to serve our clients the best. As a man that has travelled all over the world and experienced first-hand hospitality at its peak, our Chairman, Dr. Taiwo Afolabi, decided to build this hotel in Nigeria in order to promote the hospitality and tourism industry in Lagos and provide opportunities to further improve the economy.”

  • Deepening collaboration for airlines’ profitability

    Deepening collaboration for airlines’ profitability

    Global carriers are inching towards seamless passenger connection to many destinations, using one ticket booking. Such arrangement – interline/code sharing among domestic carriers – will berth this month in Nigeria as experts canvass regulatory guidance for the pilot scheme, writes KELVIN OSA-OKUNBOR

    Inconveniences associated with delayed and cancelled flights due to operational reasons will soon be a thing of the past as industry regulator Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) is working out a framework to achieve interline and code share agreement among domestic carriers.

    The framework, which has reached advanced stage, will see some carriers achieve technical and operational cooperation this month.

    According to experts familiar with the development, the cooperation will end incessant delays and flight cancellations by indigenous carriers wrapped under ‘operational reasons’.

    The cooperation, which will manifest in the form of code share and interline agreement among the carriers, is coming after two decades of preparation.

    When the new regime takes effect, passengers with one ticket booking could travel on any of the partnering carriers to a single or multiple destinations.

    To drive the initiative, Chief Operating Officer (COO), Ibom Air , Mr. George Uriesi, said the carrier had concluded plans to kick start its code share/interline agreement with another carrier this month.

    He said he could not disclose the partnering carrier until regulatory approval and other matters were concluded.

    Describing the industry as very competitive because of proliferation of airlines in a small pool of market, Uriesi said carriers were recording many empty seats when the aircraft doors are closed.

    He said: “‘We are on the last phase of the interline project. This month, we shall launch the project. The challenge of it is to have partners who are organised and who meet the standards of your company.

    “Your work force has to work together, sit together to look at the schedule, and integrate it into your reservation system.”

    Investigations by The Nation revealed that the state-funded carrier would be working with Dana Air to see the pilot project to fruition.

    In an interview, NCAA Director-General Captain Musa Nuhu said the idea of interline for indigenous carriers was long overdue as it would assist airlines to maximise profit and make air travel enjoyable for passengers by eliminating flight delays and cancellations.

    He said: “We are happy about this as a regulatory body. Airlines are supposed to manage their schedules properly.

    “These agreements are business decisions by airlines which have benefits for them and passengers. We must all pull our resources and energy together to bring this to fruition.”

    Also, President of industry thinktank group, Aviation Safety Round Table Initiative (ASRTI), Dr. Gbenga Olowo, said there could be no better time to achieve cooperation among indigenous carriers.

    He said, over the years, poor schedule integrity has eroded the good performance of carriers following passengers complaints of poor services.

    He said: “Poor on-time performance, depleting and inadequate fleet have added to the lingering challenges of airlines.

    “If we had interline agreement, it would have helped to reduce the hardship faced by passengers who often times faced long hours of delay and in some cases cancellation of flights.”

    Also, NCAA’s former Director-General, Dr Harold Demuren, expressing excitement over the development, said the initiative was long overdue.

    Demuren said the slow march to achieving interline/code share among carriers had undermined the growth of aviation in the country.

    Noting that technology would play a major role in driving the process, Demuren said the sector should take the lead in the deployment of technology to make air travel seamless and enjoyable.

    He, however, called for the creation of a domestic clearing house for airlines willing to go into partnership.

    He said airlines would need the protection of the regulator to give bite to the interline and code share agreement among them.

    Demuren said: “Other countries in Africa and, in particular, West Africa have broken these barriers. The industry needs to support the proposed initiative pioneered by Ibom Air. It is the best way to go for airlines in Nigeria.”

    On his part, the representative of International Air Transport Association (IATA) sub-Saharan Africa, Dr. Samson Fatokun, said the time was ripe for Nigerian carriers to integrate into what other carriers had switched on to.

    Describing Nigerian carriers as local champions, Fatokun said the proposed arrangement would enable them play in the big league.

    He said: “Nigerian carriers do not have attractive network because of their inability to either code share or interline with other carriers. They should see the proposed development as an opportunity to tap into seamless operations.”

    To achieve this, Fatokun said the carriers would need to train their personnel on how to generate revenue as well as negotiate commercial agreements.

    Worried over the state of the sector, experts at a recent virtual conference, organised by the ASRTI, identified flight cancellation and the perishabililty of unused seats as important challenges to trigger  interlining and code-share agreements as tools for minimising hardship experienced by passengers and the enhancement of airlines  profitability, quality of service and revenue generation.

    Spokesman of the thinktank group, Olumide Ohunayo, said experts at the meeting acknowledged that interline and code share were business decisions not to be initiated by regulatory fiat but  noted the need  for the endorsement by  the NCAA as a regulatory body through the  use of regulatory inducements and other strategic policies without compromising the stipulated yearly audit on domestic airlines to determine their state of health.

    The experts, he said, noted the  expediency for Nigeria’s aviation supervisory authorities to compliment the safety with economic will, while airlines develop the willingness to embrace technical cooperation arrangements to exploit the huge profitability opportunities in the regional air transport market under such agreements.

    The experts, he said, canvassed the emplacement of a guaranteed payment process such as Bill Settlement Plan (BSP) to enhance airlines’ cooperation while airlines embark on human capacity building for their staff members on commercial agreements, negotiation, code-share, revenue management and applicable work ethics.

    “For Nigerian airlines to be attractive to foreign carriers for code-share and other partnerships, the webinar recommended that operators be international Operations Safety Audit (IOSA)-compliant, develop attractive route networks, ensure good product quality, develop the requisite commercial acumen and understand the contract terms of their engagement.

    “Partnership and cooperation models work among airlines that consider themselves peers and whose operation are complimentary and that no cooperation model fits it all.

    “Therefore, domestic airlines should advance cooperation models that work best for the operations such as the model being implemented by Ibom Air.

    “Compared to the cost of going through the IATA Clearing House system for settlement of airline obligations.

    “We advise that airlines should consider a local clearing system that addresses the challenges of industry credit and place sales in a float account using solutions as the proposed one-ticket solution where funds flow to the holder of the flown coupon.

    “Nigerian banks have demonstrated the benefits of shared systems aimed at easing the convenience of their customers. This can be a model for the airline industry to facilitate the ease of the airline passengers in addressing options due to extended delays and cancellations. They are ready, able and willing to leverage financial technology services  to facilitate airlines’ interline arrangements to attain the ease of transactions for payment and settlement.”

     

  • Green Africa Airways set  for demonstration flight

    Green Africa Airways set for demonstration flight

    Green Africa Airways, a new entrant in the air  transport sector, is poised for its demonstration flight.

    The carrier last week took delivery of its first ATR 72 -600 aircraft as part preparations for the issuance of its Air Operators’ Certificate (AOC) by the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

    In an interview, Senior Manager, Marketing and Communications of the Lagos-based value carrier, Oyinade Osobajo, said the airplane was the first of three leased from ACIA Aero Leasing.

    She said the airline recently unveiled the livery of two aircraft (5N-GAE and 5N-GAA) while the third (5N-GAD) was also now wrapped in the Green Africa livery in preparation for final lap of the AOC process.

    The first aircraft was received by the  Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the carrier:  Babawande Afolabi, president and chief operating officer – Neil Mills and anchor institutional investor – KuramoCapital.

    Afolabi said: “This is a great day for all of us at Green Africa and the beginning of what we all hope is a new era in Nigerian aviation. ACIA Aero Leasing has been a very supportive partner and we are proud of this new relationship.

    “The arrival of our first aircraft is a precursor to the completion of our AOC process and very soon, customers from across Nigeria will be able to make bookings on our website and take their first flight with Green Africa.”

    Chief Executive Officer of ACIA Aero Leasing, Mick Mooney, said: “Whilst the industry is going through a period of significant disruption, there are a few carriers with a strategic roadmap, such as  Green Africa, that are looking to provide effective solutions that the current market opportunity brings. We at ACIA are pleased to provide Green Africa with the first set of aircraft to launch its commercial operations, starting with Nigeria and eventually, the broader African continent.”

     

     

  • Dana Air decorates captains on B 737 aircraft

    Dana Air decorates captains on B 737 aircraft

    Dana Air has decorated new captains for its Boeing 737s and other aircraft in its fleet, assuring its staff members that it will continue to reward excellence and hard work.

    Decorating Captain Shina Agbelese and Captain Ademola Akinyemi in Lagos, the Chief Operating Officer of Dana Air, Mr. Obi Mbanuzuo, said it was  exciting to see our young pilots performing excellently, and doing amazingly well.

    He said: “It takes a lot to train pilots and with over 80 per cent of our pilots trained by Dana Air, we would continue to be a trailblazer in building capacity for homegrown pilots. We are glad to be making a huge impact in this regard and contributing our quota to the growth and stability of the industry.’’

    He congratulated the captains on their success and urged them to sustain the airline’s strict safety standards, and emphasis on professionalism.

    Similarly, Dana Air also announced that all its Pilots, Cabin Crew and Ground staff have all been vaccinated while that of its backend staff is ongoing in Lagos.

    The Media and Communications Manager of Dana Air, Kingsley Ezenwa said, ‘’all our pilots, cabin crew and ground staff have concluded their vaccination while that of our backend staff is ongoing.’’

    ”We had to ensure that all staff having regular interaction with our customers got vaccinated first to guarantee their safety and the safety of other backend staff and customers.

    ”We are not letting the guards down as we still ensure that our customers keep the mask on while onboard, temperature checks done, sanitization before boarding, row by row disembarkation, and regular disinfection of the aircraft after every flight.’’

    ‘’At Dana Air, our commitment to the safety and well-being of our staff and customers is second to none and we will continue to provide safe, seamless and reliable air transport for the flying public, He added.

     

  • Enhancing local capacity in aircraft maintenance

    Enhancing local capacity in aircraft maintenance

    The prohibitive cost of offshore maintenance of aircraft eats deeply into the pockets of airlines in Nigeria. Sadly, some carriers take their airplanes abroad and are unable to bring them home on account of oscillating exchange rate, which increases costs and other considerations. To bridge this gap, some carriers are exploring opportunities in setting up aircraft maintenance centres in-country to boost local capacity in airplane repairs, optimise economies of scales and other benefits, KELVIN OSA-OKUNBOR reports.

    Nigerian carriers are striving to overcome the huge cost of running airlines as part of measures to ensure business sustainability by curtailing the high costs  of fixing their airplanes at aircraft maintenance centres across the globe.

    Besides reducing the huge amount spent in airplanes’ repairs abroad, the airlines are  looking at ways and means to enhance fixing their aircraft at accredited maintenance centres in-country.

    To drive this initiative, fledgling carrier – United Nigeria Airlines –  and  Air Peace  have concluded plans to set up repair centres.

    The repair centre, proposed by United Nigeria Airlines, will be based in Enugu, its operational headquarters.

    The centre, founder and Chief Executive Officer of the airline, Obiora Okonkwo, said will focus on the Brazillian airplane model – Embraer, which is gaining traction among Nigerian operators.

    Okonkwo said the decision of the airline to set up their own repair centre was to ensure reduced cost of operations for the airline and other third party users that will benefit from the facility.

    Speaking in an interview recently in Lagos, he said the carrier had concluded plans with its foreign technical partners to drive the project.

    When completed, the facility would serve airlines in West and Central Africa and would save a projected $500 million for Nigerian airlines, which is the cost of ferrying aircraft overseas, payment for allowances for flight crew and rented space for aircraft, as maintenance schedule could delay aircraft due for checks for months.

    He said the airline was awaiting approval for land allocation from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) for the facility.

    Okonkwo said the choice of Enugu was instructive for the airline as it was its operational headquarters of the airline, which intended to acquire more Embraer aircraft type to achieve pooling of spares, expertise and other economies of scale from the project.

    He said: “We have started a process of acquiring land space from FAAN to set up our MRO, we thought we should have gone far in that. Our operational base in Enugu and we felt it is more appropriate to locate our MRO in that location.

    “FAAN is having some issues with space identification and clearing the available space with all the interested parties involved. We are still in touch with them and hoping that very soon, they will be able to allocate to us the necessary place we need to be able to start our own plan. But on a takeoff plan, we gave ourselves 24 months to be able to do our full C-check in our own facility and also offer that service to other stakeholders in the industry, with that we are already two months behind the schedule but we hope that very soon, FAAN will clear that road for us and we will be able to embark on that project. That is our medium and long-term maintenance plan. So, we think that when that is done, we will be able saving ourselves some foreign exchange and other operators in the sector. We are in touch with some technical partners and that is at an advanced stage.”

    He said the MRO facility was projected to save 40 per cent  in maintenance costs, cutting out the cost of ferrying aircraft overseas, and saving on allowances for flight crew, on hangarage, and the cost of delayed returns due to backed-up maintenance schedules.

    The major problem Nigerian airlines have is lack of major aircraft repair centres.

    Currently, most aircraft are maintained overseas because Aero Contractors facility maintains Boeing 737 Classic and the facility is beset with many aircraft from Nigeria, Ghana, Congo that it is busy throughout the year.

    On its part, Air Peace said it   planned to set up its own Maintenance Repair Overhaul (MRO) facility to save the cost of maintaining its aircraft abroad.

    Its spokesperson, Stanley Olisa, disclosed this in an interview.

    He said: “This is something we are considering in long-haul but not in the immediate,” he said, confirming that Air Peace has 17 aircraft – including E145s, B737s, and one B777 – undergoing heavy maintenance in the Middle East and Morocco. He cited high operating costs and lack of adequate technical manpower as some of the challenges impeding local MRO operation.

    Investigations reveal that Nigerian carriers also lacked the foreign currency to pay for MRO services abroad.

    A home-based heavy maintenance facility would mean airlines would be able to pay in local currency.

    “This is the reason why it is critical that we have maintenance facilities in Nigeria, not just one but two or three because whatever we have will serve West and Central Africa, and by the projected growth of air transport in Africa, many more aircraft will come in a few years,” a source hinted.

    As things stand, Aero Contractors has an MRO facility that can maintain B737 Classics and turboprops like DHC-8-Q400s and DHC-8-Q300s. It is reportedly awaiting certification by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to start maintenance on New Generation B737-700 and B737-800 types.

    Akwa Ibom State’s MRO facility, started some years ago, which should be completed in two years.

    Other operators reportedly considering investing in MRO facilities are Med-View Airline (MEV, Kano), Arik Air, JedAir (Lagos), Caverton Helicopter, and Dana Air, the latter already completing A-checks but looking to acquire land from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) to establish a facility for C-checks, according to the Chief Operating Officer, Obi Mbanuzo.

    In January, Chairman of Air Peace, Allen Onyema, called on a Brazillian manufacturer to establish a maintenance, overhaul and repair (MRO) facility in Nigeria.

    According to industry experts, operators would save about 35 per cent of the cost of aircraft maintenance annually, if the facility were located in the country.

    Managing Partner, TMSS Logistics, Alhaji Nuhu Adam, has canvassed the setting up of more repair centres.

    He said: “The formation of Aircraft Maintenance Organiations (AMO) in the country will be a welcome development.

    “Today, the dominant MRO players on the continent can be divided into African and non-African operators. The African MRO providers include South African Airways Technical (SAAT), Ethiopian Airlines Maintenance and Engineering, Kenya Airways Technical, Air Algerie Technics and Tunisair Technics.

    “This leaves a huge market for West and Central Africa. An estimated $2.5 billion is expected to be accrued annually.”

    Meanwhile, the Federal Government’s planned aircraft maintenance centre has not materialised.

    The Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika, said airlines were spending at least $1.8 million on each C-check on their B737 Classic aircraft – the most commonly used type for domestic flight operations in Nigeria.

    “The lack of an MRO has had a negative impact on the survival of airlines in the region. They have struggled to maintain their fleet or stay in business for consistently long periods due to the exorbitant cost of maintenance and the time it takes to fly the aircraft for checks,” Sirika said.

    He added that a demand forecast study had shown that more than half of the $3 billion yearly expenditure by African airlines on maintenance was taken outside the country.

  • Air Peace crew, others get vaccine jab

    Air Peace crew, others get vaccine jab

    The pilots, cabin crew and other customer-facing personnel of  Air Peace, have started receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.

    The vaccine is to help curtail the spread of the virus and give passengers more confidence to fly with the airline.

    Spokesperson of the airline, Stanley Olisa, who made this known, stated that the vaccine was being administered by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria  (FAAN).

    Olisa, who commended the Federal Government for making the vaccine available, stressed that the airline prioritises the well-being and safety of its staff and customers, adding that all frontline personnel had been directed to receive the vaccine.

    “We directed that our staff, especially those on frontline duties, get vaccinated to protect them and make the flying public feel more confident and reassured whenever they fly Air Peace,” Olisa said.

    He added that Air Peace is committed to providing best-in-class flight services and observing strict standards of safety.

    Air Peace is  the first airline to announce the vaccination of its personnel, a move that accentuates its position as an industry leader in its response to the COVID-19 pandemic and in protecting its staff members and passengers.

  • Emirates flights highlight  travel rebound

    Emirates flights highlight travel rebound

    Emirates Airlines last week operated its one-of-a-kind flight – EK 2021 –  to signal the aviation industry’s readiness for a travel rebound.

    It was also to celebrate the UAE’s remarkable vaccination programme that has administered close to  nine  million vaccines doses to date.

    The special flight, which carried fully vaccinated crew and passengers onboard, was unprecedented in the industry in scale.

    With close to 400 fully vaccinated customers onboard, the flight illustrates confidence and undiminished excitement for air travel.

    EK 2021 was also supported by fully vaccinated teams across the aviation eco-system, from onboard crew to ground staff, demonstrating the readiness of the UAE’s aviation eco-system to support the safe rebound of air travel.

    Despite the pandemic, the UAE has maintained its status as a leading global aviation hub and it will continue to grow its position as a hub for passengers and cargo traffic by investing in innovations and close collaborations with all stakeholders. Onboard EK 2021 was a group of senior officials from key aviation and health sector entities hosted by Emirates.

    Chairman and Chief Executive, Emirates Airline & Group, Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum,  said: “The UAE’s rapid pace and progress in vaccinating our population is a testament of our leadership’s vision and commitment to safeguard our communities, and manage the pandemic by adopting the appropriate measures to protect both nationals and residents.”

  • Chanchangi Airlines mulls ‘come back’

    Chanchangi Airlines mulls ‘come back’

    Nine years after closing shop, Chanchangi Airlines Nigeria Limited is set to return to the  airspace.

    With its head office in the Chanchangi Office Complex in Kaduna, the airline had operated scheduled domestic passenger services.

    The Director-General (DG), Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Capt Musa Nuhu, made this known.

    He explained that the high demand for air travels in the country, saying: “Chanchangi wants to come back and they want to use ATR.They are planning to come back. The demand is there.”

    Capt Nuhu observed a new trend in airline operations where operators are  shifting to smaller aircraft against the bigger ones.

    The DG said: “You mentioned the issue of not using the right fleet. Yes, but with the new trend, I see people going for Embraer, CRJ, ATR42. So, there is a paradigm shift. People are beginning to realise you can’t use 737 for short flights. I can see Air Peace had got an E2195, he is got two and he said on the long term, he is going to replace all its 737. United Nigeria is using Embraer 145. Green Africa is using ATR 42, 72.

    “There is one that has started processing its documents. He wants to use Embraer 145. The thinking is changing because this 737 business is not working for us. It is going to take a while. The economics is forcing the change. It is a positive change in the industry.”

    Also, Capt Nuhu noted that the issue of Azman Air was being settled.

    He added that the NCAA will not release anybody until they are satisfied.

    Nuhu also added that recent responses from Azman had been very encouraging.

    “They are taking what we have explained to them. Now they understand it is even better for them to improve their business model,” Nuhu stated.