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Carpatair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carpatair
IATA ICAO Call sign
V3 KRP CARPATAIR
Founded1999
AOC #RO-003[1]
Fleet size2[2]
Destinationscharter
HeadquartersTimișoara, Romania
Key peopleNicolae Petrov, President and CEO
RevenueIncrease EUR 8 million (2012)
Websitecarpatair.com

Carpatair S.A. is a privately-owned Romanian charter and former regional airline headquartered in Timișoara.

History

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Carpatair was established in 1999 and started operations in February 1999 in Cluj-Napoca. The present title was adopted in December 1999 when Swiss and Swedish investors took a 49% stake in the company. The airline is owned by Romanian shareholders (51%) and Swiss and Swedish shareholders (49%) The airline is an IATA member since 2006, and has recently successfully received its 5th IOSA (IATA Operational Safety Audit) registration. Carpatair employed 450 staff at March 2007. The current President and Chief Executive of Carpatair is Nicolae Petrov.[3]

Carpatair emerged from the status of insolvency into the one "in reorganization", having continued to offer charter & ACMI solutions. The carrier had filed for Insolvency on 23 January 2014.[4] The statute used was Romanian Law 85/2006, which is very similar to the Chapter 11 status known in the USA, providing the company a special legal status.[citation needed]

Destinations

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As of May 2014, Carpatair dissolved most of its route network; it no longer operates in Romania or Moldova. Carpatair operations now consists of ad-hoc and ACMI charters.[citation needed]

From December 2015, Carpatair operated for Adria Airways between Örebro in Sweden and Copenhagen in Denmark, and also under an NJ flight code route between Stockholm Arlanda Airport and Arvidsjaur/Gällivare in Sweden. From March 2016 until June of the same year, they flew under the Adria Airways call sign from Tallinn. During spring and summer 2016 one aircraft flew under contract for Volotea in France and Italy. From July 2016 they operated the route Stavanger - Oslo under contract for Norwegian Air Shuttle, and a number of routes from Brussels Airport on contract from Brussels Airlines. In summer 2016 Carpatair operated one aircraft on a wet-lease for LOT Polish Airlines on routes from Warsaw to Amsterdam and Gdańsk.[5] Between April and May 2017, Carpatair operated services between Berlin-Tegel and Prague on behalf of now defunct Air Berlin. During the 2018 summer schedule, one aircraft was wet-leased to KLM to operate a couple of European routes from Amsterdam.[6]

Fleet

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Carpatair Airbus A319-100
A former Carpatair Boeing 737-300 (2013)
A former Carpatair Fokker 100

Current fleet

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As of January 2024, the Carpatair fleet consists of the following aircraft:[2][7]

Aircraft In Fleet Orders Passengers Notes
Airbus A319-100 2 156
Total 2

Retired fleet

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Carpatair previously also operated the following types of aircraft:[citation needed]

Aircraft Total Introduced Retired Ref.
ATR 72-500 2 2013 2013
Boeing 737-300 2 2012 2014
Fokker 70 3 2010 2013 [8]
Fokker 100 3 2010 2023 [8]
Saab 340 5 1999 2007
Saab 2000 15 1999 2013
Yakovlev Yak-40 1 1999 2003
A former Carpatair Saab 2000

Incidents and accidents

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References

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  1. ^ "OPERATORI AERIENI ROMÂNI CERTIFICAŢI/AUTORIZAŢI ROMANIAN CERTIFIED/AUTHORIZED AIR OPERATORS 27.05.2022" (PDF). AUTORITATEA AERONAUTICĂ CIVILĂ ROMÂNĂ (in Romanian). AUTORITATEA AERONAUTICĂ CIVILĂ ROMÂNĂ. 27 May 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  2. ^ a b carpatair.com - Fleet retrieved 6 January 2024
  3. ^ Flight International 3 April 2007
  4. ^ Carpatair files for insolvency, continues operations, 2014-01-27, ch-aviation.com
  5. ^ "Nowy samolot we flocie LOT-u - Fokker 100". 9 August 2016.
  6. ^ "Roemeens Carpatair vliegt met Fokker 100 voor KLM". 30 April 2018.
  7. ^ "Exclusive: Carpatair has purchased an Airbus A319 from DAE Capital (foto)". boardingpass.ro. 7 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b "End of an Era: Carpatair Retires the Last Commercial Fokker 100". Airways. 14 October 2024. Retrieved 15 October 2024.
  9. ^ Official italian accident report issued by ANSV and its english translation. Aviation Accidents Database . Retrieved 25 February 2017.
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Media related to Carpatair at Wikimedia Commons