Jetairfly

Not to be confused with Jet Air, Jet Airways, or Jetair (Germany).
Jetairfly
IATA ICAO Callsign
TB JAF BEAUTY
Founded 2003 (as TUI Airlines Belgium)
Commenced operations 23 November 2005 (as Jetairfly)
Hubs Brussels Airport
Focus cities
Alliance TUI Airlines
Fleet size 21
Destinations 105
Parent company TUI Group
Headquarters Zaventem, Belgium
Key people Elie Bruyninckx, President
Website www.jetairfly.com

Jetairfly is a Belgian airline with its administrative headquarters in Ostend, Belgium and its centre of flight operations at Brussels Airport, Belgium.[1] It operates scheduled passenger flights. Officially known as TUI Airlines Belgium, it adopted its new trading name Jetairfly in November 2005.

Jetairfly is a part of the largest leisure fleet in Europe: together with six other airlines which are linked together by the TUI Airlines alliance, which is part of TUI Group, one of the largest tourism groups in the world. TUI Airlines incorporates Jetairfly, TUI Airlines Netherlands (The Netherlands), Corsair International (France), TUIfly (Germany), Thomson Airways (United Kingdom) and TUIfly Nordic (Sweden), with a combined fleet of more than 150 aircraft.

History

TUI Airlines Belgium was created in November 2003 as home carrier for tour operator Jetair, part of tourism group TUI AG. The original plans were to operate two aircraft, but after charter company Sobelair (home carrier for Jetair) ceased its operations, Jetairfly started its operations with 5 aircraft.

On 23 November 2005, Jetairfly acquired its current name, as part of the rebranding around Belgium's number 1 tourism brand Jetair.

In January 2012 Jetairfly announced that Jet4you, a low-cost Moroccan carrier and also a subsidiary of the TUI AG Group, would be fully integrated in Jetairfly. The merger was complete in April 2012.[2] In March 2012 Jetairfly officially became a full scheduled airline, while previously a part of their flights were conducted as charter flights. As a result, all flights can be booked in both directions even by non-EU citizens.[3]

In the beginning of 2013, Jetairfly was the first leisure airline worldwide to introduce the Embraer E-Jet 190 in its fleet. In the autumn of 2013, the new office building and maintenance hangar "Jetairport" was inaugurated at Brussels Airport. In December 2013, Jetairfly was the first and only Belgian airline to introduce the brand new Boeing 787-8 "Dreamliner".

On 14 November 2014 Jetairfly sealed a wet-lease deal to provide up to four aircraft with crew to operate on behalf of ECAir, the flag carrier of the Republic of the Congo, from mid 2015 on.[4] [5]

In 2015 it was the first and only Belgian airline with an ISO 14001 certification for their focus on sustainability and the smallest ecological footprint.[6] [7]

On 13 May 2015, it was announced by the TUI Group that all five of TUI's airline subsidiaries will be named TUI, whilst keeping their separate Air Operator's Certificate, taking over three years to complete. Jetairfly's name is scheduled to be changed during 2016.[8]

Destinations

Jetairfly has a network of 180 routes to more than 100 airports in the Mediterranean, Red Sea, Caribbean, Canary Islands, Cape Verde Islands, Africa and the United States. The airline's home base is Brussels Airport, but flights are also operated from 8 other bases: Brussels South Charleroi Airport, Liege Airport, Ostend-Bruges International Airport, Antwerp Airport, Lille Airport in France, Mohammed V International Airport Casablanca and Marrakesh Menara Airport in Morocco.[9]

Fleet

Jetairfly Boeing 787-8

The Jetairfly fleet includes the following aircraft, as of March 2016:[10][11]

Jetairfly fleet
Aircraft In Service Orders Passengers
P E Total
Boeing 737-700 6 148 148
Boeing 737-800 13 1 189 189
Boeing 767-300ER 1 31 264 295
Boeing 787-8 1 47 253 300
Embraer 190 3 112 112
Total 24 1

Service

Jetairfly head office in Ostend

Short- and medium-haul

On short-and medium haul flights, Jetairfly offers three kinds of services on their all-Economy Class aircraft:

Long-haul

Boeing 767
Boeing 787[13]

On all long-haul flights there is AVOD for every passenger.

References

  1. "TUIfly Academy Brussels." Jetairfly. Retrieved on 23 October 2009.
  2. "Marokkaanse Jet4you gaat op in Belgische Jetairfly" (in Dutch). Nieuwsblad.be. 10 January 2012. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  3. http://pers.jetair.be/pressroom/persberichten/20120322_Jetairfly.pdf Press release 22 March 2012. (Dutch)
  4. "Congo's ECAIR adds first Jetairfly B737 to fleet". Ch-aviation.com. 7 August 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  5. "Belgium’s Jetairfly Seals Wet-Lease Deal With ECAir". Aerosmart.com. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  6. "Jetairfly, the first Belgian airline with ISO 14001 certification". 20 March 2015. Retrieved 2015-03-23.
  7. "Jetairfly ecological footprint". Retrieved 2015-11-17.
  8. "TUI Group to rebrand five airlines as ‘TUI’". Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  9. "Jetairfly annonce une base à Lille" (in French). air-journal.fr. 22 January 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
  10. "Belgian Aircraft Register". Belgian Government - Official information and services. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  11. http://pers.jetair.be/pressroom/persberichten/20151028_Jetairfly_zomer2016.pdf Press release 28 October 2015. (Dutch)
  12. Spinnae, David (2 December 2010). "Jetairfly breidt uit : nieuwe lijn, verhoogde vluchtfrequenties, vlootuitbreiding met de nieuwste technologie" (in Dutch). Flightlevel. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  13. "Home". JetairFly Dreamliner. Retrieved 29 July 2015.

External links

Media related to Jetairfly at Wikimedia Commons

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