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Wiki Loves Monuments: Photograph a monument, help Wikipedia and win! Jet Airways From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Not to be confused with Jetway , Airway (aviation) , or Jat Airways . This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards . (September 2010) This article may need to be rewritten entirely to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards , as article. (December 2010) Parts of this article (those related to article) are outdated. (December 2010) Jet Airways IATA 9W ICAO JAI Callsign JET AIRWAYS Founded 1 April 1992 Commenced operations 5 May 1993 Hubs Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport (Mumbai)

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Page 1: Jet Airways

Wiki Loves Monuments: Photograph a monument, help Wikipedia and win!

Jet AirwaysFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Not to be confused with Jetway, Airway (aviation), or Jat Airways.

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. (September 2010)This article may need to be rewritten entirely to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards, as article. (December 2010)Parts of this article (those related to article) are outdated. (December 2010)

Jet Airways

IATA9W

ICAOJAI

CallsignJET AIRWAYS

Founded 1 April 1992

Commenced

operations

5 May 1993

Hubs Chhatrapati Shivaji International

Airport(Mumbai)

Secondary hubs Brussels Airport

Chennai International Airport

Indira Gandhi International

Airport(Delhi)

Page 2: Jet Airways

Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose

International Airport (Kolkata)

Focus cities Bengaluru International

Airport(Bangalore)

Cochin International

Airport (Kochi)

Trivandrum International

Airport(Trivandrum)

Dabolim Airport  (Vasco da

Gama Goa)

Rajiv Gandhi International

Airport(Hyderabad)

Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel

International

Airport (Ahmedabad)

Frequent-flyer

program

JetPrivilege

Airport lounge Jet Lounge

Subsidiaries JetLite

Fleet size 100 (+49 Orders)

Destinations 76[1]

Company slogan The Joy of Flying

Parent company Tailwinds Limited

Headquarters Mumbai, India [2]

Key people Naresh

Goyal, Founder & Chairman

Nikos Kardassis, CEO

Ali Ghandour , Director

Revenue   145,225.80 million (US$2,628.59

million)(2010-11)[3]

Profit   -858.40 million (US$-15.54

Page 3: Jet Airways

million)

Website www.jetairways.com

Jet Airways is the second largest[4] Indian airline based in Mumbai, Maharashtra. It

operates over 400 flights daily to 76 destinations worldwide. Its main hub is Mumbai,

with secondary hubs at Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Cochin, Ahmedabad, and Bengaluru.[1] It has an international hub at Brussels Airport, Belgium. Jet Airways is owned

by Naresh Goyal.

Contents

  [hide] 

1 History

o 1.1 Early years

o 1.2 Air Sahara buyout

o 1.3 Present

2 Corporate affairs and identity

o 2.1 Head office

o 2.2 Subsidiaries

3 Destinations

o 3.1 Codeshare agreements

4 Fleet

o 4.1 Livery

5 Services

o 5.1 Cabin

o 5.2 Airport lounges

o 5.3 Frequent-flyer program

o 5.4 Ban on Meat Products

6 Awards and achievements

7 Incidents and accidents

8 See also

9 References

10 External links

[edit]History

Page 4: Jet Airways

[edit]Early years

Jet Airways was incorporated as an air taxi operator on 1 April 1992. It started

commercial operations on 5 May 1993 with a fleet of four leased Boeing 737-

300 aircraft. In January 1994 a change in the law enabled Jet Airways to apply for

scheduled airline status, which was granted on 4 January 1995. It began international

operations from Chennai to Colombo in March 2004. The company is listed on

the Bombay Stock Exchange, but 80% of its stock is controlled by Naresh Goyal

(through his ownership of Jet’s parent company, Tailwinds). It has 13,177 employees

(as at 31 March 2011).[5]

Naresh Goyal – who already owned Jetair (Private) Limited, which provided sales and

marketing for foreign airlines in India – set up Jet Airways as a full-service scheduled

airline to compete against state-owned Indian Airlines. Indian Airlines had enjoyed a

monopoly in the domestic market between 1953, when all major Indian air transport

providers were nationalised under the Air Corporations Act (1953), and January 1994,

when the Air Corporations Act was repealed, following which Jet Airways received

scheduled airline status.

[edit]Air Sahara buyout

In January 2006 Jet Airways announced that it would buy Air Sahara for US$500 million

in an all-cash deal, making it the biggest takeover in Indian aviation history. It would

have resulted in the country's largest airline but the deal fell through in June 2006.

On 12 April 2007 Jet Airways agreed to buy out Air Sahara for INR14.5 billion (US$340

million). Air Sahara was renamed JetLite, and was marketed between a low-cost carrier

and a full service airline. In August 2008 Jet Airways announced its plans to completely

integrate JetLite into Jet Airways.[6]

[edit]Present

SM Centre, the former head office

Page 5: Jet Airways

In October 2008 Jet Airways laid off 1,900 of its employees, resulting in the largest lay-

off in the history of Indian aviation.[7] However the employees were later asked to return

to work; Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel said that the management reviewed its

decision after he analysed the decision with them.[8][9]

In October 2008 Jet Airways and rival Kingfisher Airlines announced an alliance which

primarily includes an agreement on code-sharing on both domestic and international

flights, joint fuel management to reduce expenses, common ground handling, joint

utilisation of crew and sharing of similar frequent flier programmes.[10]

On 8 May 2009 Jet Airways launched its low-cost brand, Jet Konnect. The decision to

launch a new brand instead of expanding the JetLite network was taken after

considering the regulatory delays involved in transferring aircraft from Jet Airways to

JetLite, as the two have different operator codes. The brand was launched on sectors

that had 50% or less load factor with the aim of increasing it to 70% and above. Jet

officials said that the brand would cease to exist once the demand for the regular Jet

Airways increases.

According to a PTI report, for the third quarter of 2010, Jet Airways (Jet+JetLite) had a

market share of 26.9%[11] in terms of passengers carried, thus making it a market leader

in India, followed by Kingfisher Airlines with 19.9% .

In July 2012, Jet Ariways officially sought government approval to join Star Alliance.[12]

[edit]Effects of recession

The recession forced Jet Airways to discontinue the following routes: Ahmedabad–

London, Amritsar–London, Bangalore–Brussels, Mumbai–Shanghai–San

Francisco and Mumbai-Brussels-New York [13] . It also had to put an indefinite delay on its

expansion plans. Jet Airways was forced to lease out seven of its ten Boeing 777-

300ERs to survive the financial crunch. Due to the recession all flights to North

America were operated on an Airbus A330-200 replacing the Boeing 777-300ERs. It

also had to sell a brand-new, yet-to-be-delivered Boeing 777-300ER in 2009 and had to

defer all new aircraft deliveries by at least two years. The airline plans to restore

the Mumbai-Shanghai route by the end of 2011.[14]

[edit]Corporate affairs and identity

[edit]Head office

Jet Airways's head office is located in the Siroya Centre in Andheri, Mumbai.[15]

Page 6: Jet Airways

Jet Airways's head office was previously located in the S.M. Centre, a rented, unmarked

six storey building in Andheri.[16][17] In 2008 Robyn Meredith of Forbes stated that the

complex was "as shabby as (Jet Airways CEO Nares) Goyal's home is posh" and that

the complex was "In need of a fresh coat of paint". The complex was 15 minutes driving

time from Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport.[17]

[edit]Subsidiaries[edit]JetLite

JetLite was a wholly owned subsidiary of Jet Airways. It was established as Sahara

Airlines on 20 September 1991 and began operations on 3 December 1993 with

two Boeing 737-200 aircraft. Initially services were primarily concentrated in the

northern sectors of India, keeping Delhi as its base, and then operations were extended

to cover all the country. Sahara Airlines was rebranded as Air Sahara on 2 October

2000. On 12 April 2007 Jet Airways took over Air Sahara and on 16 April 2007 Air

Sahara was renamed as JetLite. JetLite operated a fleet of mixed owned–leasedBoeing

737 Next Generation aircraft and Bombardier CRJ-200ER. JetLite ceased operations on

25 March 2012 after merger with Jet Konnect.[18]

[edit]Jet Konnect

Jet Konnect is the low-cost brand of Jet Airways. It was launched on 8 May 2009, and

shares the same airline designation as Jet Airways.[19] It operates a mixed fleet of ATR

72-500s andBoeing 737-800s.

The rationale for launching Jet Konnect was to close down loss-making routes and

divert the planes to more profitable routes with higher passenger load factors. Jet

already ran a low-cost airline named JetLite. According to Jet Airways, the decision to

launch a low-cost brand instead of expanding the existing JetLite was taken to avoid the

regulatory delays associated with moving excess aircraft and assets from Jet Airways to

JetLite, which have separate operating codes. Jet Konnect offers a no frills flight where

meals and other refreshments have to be purchased on board. To identify if the flight is

a full service or Konnect the flight numbers for Konnect are in the series 9W 2000-2999.[20] Jet Airways merged the JetLite brand into Jet Konnect on 25 March 2012.[18]

[edit]Destinations

Main article: Jet Airways destinations

Page 7: Jet Airways

Jet Airways serves 52 domestic destinations and 24 international destinations, a total of

76[21] in 19 countries across Asia, Europe and North America. Short-haul destinations

are served usingBoeing 737 Next Generation. ATR 72-500s are used only on domestic

regional routes, while long-haul routes are served using its Airbus A330-200 and Boeing

777-300ER aircraft. London,England was the airline's first long-haul destination and

was launched in 2005.

Since 2007 Jet Airways has had a scissors hub at Brussels Airport in Belgium for

onward trans-atlantic connections to Canada and the United States.

[edit]Codeshare agreements

Jet Airways has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:[22]

Air Canada  (Star Alliance)

Alitalia  (SkyTeam)

All Nippon Airways  (Star

Alliance)

American

Airlines (Oneworld)

Brussels Airlines  (Star

Alliance)

Etihad Airways

Emirates Airlines

Gulf Air

Kenya

Airways (SkyTeam)

Malaysia

Airlines (future Oneworldmember)

Qantas  (Oneworld)

United Airlines  (Star Alliance)

Virgin Atlantic Airlines

Jet Airways also has a codesharing agreement with Thalys European rail service.[23]

[edit]Fleet

Airbus A330-200 landing at Birmingham International Airport.

Page 8: Jet Airways

ATR 72-500

Boeing 737-700 taking off from Boeing Field

Jet Airways Boeing 777-300ER at San Francisco International Airport.

The Boeing customer code for Jet Airways is 5R.

As of May 2011, the Jet Airways fleet consists of the following aircraft with an average

age of 5.4 years:[24][25][26][27]

Jet Airways Fleet

AircraftIn

ServiceOrder

s

Passengers

NotesP J Y

Total

Airbus A330-200 12 5 0 30 190 226 10 dry leased

Page 9: Jet Airways

1 owned0 18 236 254

Airbus A330-300 – 5 TBAAll leased from Intrepid Aviation

GroupDeliveries starting 2011[28]

ATR 72-200 20 –0 0 62 62 6 owned

14 dry leased0 0 68 68

Boeing 737-700 11 – 0 16 102 1183 owned

8 dry leased

Boeing 737-800 45 270 16 138 154 12 owned

34 dry leased0 8 162 170

Boeing 737-900 2 – 0 28 138 166 Both owned

Boeing 777-300ER 10 2 8 30 274 312

1 owned3 dry leased

4 leased to Thai Airways International

Boeing 787-8 – 10 TBA Deliveries starting 2015[29]

Total 100 49

[edit]Livery[edit]1993–2007

Jet Airways Airbus A340-300 at London Heathrow Airport in 2005 with the 1993-2007 livery

Page 10: Jet Airways

Jet Airways Boeing 777-300ER with the present livery

Jet Airways' original livery was Navy Blue, Light Grey and Chrome Yellow. The top and

bottom of the aircraft were painted in light grey and had the flying sun logo in the navy

blue background.

[edit]2007–present

Jet Airways' current livery was introduced in 2007.[30] The design retained the dark blue

and gold-accented colour scheme of Jet Airways' previous corporate identity, along with

the airline's "flying sun" logo.[30] The new livery, created with Landor Associates, added

yellow and gold ribbons. A new yellow uniform was simultaneously introduced, created

by Italian designer Roberto Capucci.[30] Jet Airways introduced its new identity in

conjunction with a global brand re-launch which included new aircraft and seating.[30]

Jet Airways unveiled India's first Disney branded Boeing 737 on July 9, 2012.[31]

[edit]Services

Jet Airways Boeing 737 parked inHyderabad International Airport

[edit]Cabin[edit]Domestic & international short haul

Page 11: Jet Airways

Boeing 737 Next Generation aircraft are configured in and Economy Classes. Some

Boeing 737s have an all Economy Class cabin layout. The ATR 72-500 have Economy

class configuration only.

Première

The Première features 40-inch extra-wide seats with a personal Widescreen LCD

attached to each seat. The Première cabin is configured in a 2-2 abreast pattern.

Economy Class

Jet Airways Economy class on its Boeing 737 Next Generation features 30-inch seat

pitch with personal Widescreen LCD behind each seat. Jet Airways was the World's first

airline to introduce in-flight entertainment systems on the Boeing 737 aircraft. The

Economy class cabin is configured in a 3-3 abreast pattern on the Boeing 737 Next

Generation and 2-2 abreast pattern on the ATR 72-500.[citation needed]

[edit]International long haul

First Class on board the Boeing 777-300ER

With the arrival of its new Airbus A330-200 and Boeing 777-300ER aircraft, Jet Airways

has introduced a new cabin with upgraded seats in all classes. The Airbus A330-200

aircraft have two classes: Première and Economy. The Boeing 777-300ER aircraft has

three classes of service: First, Première (Business), and Economy. Being a Full Service

Airline, meals are served on all classes of travel.

First Class

First class is available on all Boeing 777-300ER aircraft. All seats convert to a fully flat

bed, similar to Singapore Airlines first class seat but much smaller. It was the second

airline in the world to have private suites. All seats in First have a 23-inch widescreen

LCD monitor with audio-video on-demand systems (AVOD), BOSE noise cancelling

headphones, in seat power supply, and USB ports etc. Jet Airways is the first Indian

Page 12: Jet Airways

airline to offer fully enclosed suites on its aircraft; each suite has a closable door,

making for a private compartment.

Première

Première on board the Boeing 777-300ER

Première (Business Class) on the Airbus A330-200 and Boeing 777-300ER

international fleet has a fully flat bed with AVOD entertainment. Seats are configured in

a herringbone pattern (1-2-1 on the Boeing 777-300ER, and 1-1-1 on the Airbus A330-

200), with each seat offering direct access to the aisle. Première seats on the A330-

200s leased from ILFC are configured differently in a 2-2-2 non-herringbone pattern.

Each Première Seat has a 15.4-inch flat screen LCD TV with AVOD. USB ports and in-

seat laptop power are provided. All seats are standard recliner business-class seats

with a few newer aircraft with electronic recline and massager.

Economy Class

Economy class on Jet's A330-200/777-300ER aircraft has 32-inch seat pitch. Seats on

the A330-200/777-300ER have a "hammock-style" net footrest. The cabin is configured

in 2-4-2 abreast on the Airbus A330-200, 3-3-3 on the Boeing 777-300ER. Each

Economy seat on the A330-200/777-300ER has a personal 10.6-inch touch screen LCD

TV with AVOD.

All three classes feature Mood lighting on the Airbus A330-200 and Boeing 777-300ER,

with light schemes corresponding to the time of day and flight position.

Page 13: Jet Airways

JetScreen IFE in Economy class on board a Boeing 737-800

[edit]In-flight entertainment

Jet Airways' Panasonic eFX IFE system on board the Boeing 737-

700/800 and Panasonic eX2 IFE system on board the Airbus A330-200/Boeing 777-

300ER, called "JetScreen", offers audio video on-demand programming (passengers

can start, stop, rewind, and fast-forward as desired). It has over 100 movies, 80 TV

programmes, 11 audio channels and a CD library of 125 titles. The system operates via

individual touchscreen monitors at each seat, and is available in all classes.[32]

[edit]Airport lounges

Jet Airways Lounges are offered to First and Première Class passengers, along with

JetPrivilege Platinum, Gold or Silver card members. The international lounge at

Brussels has showers, business centre, entertainment facilities and children's play

areas.[33] Lounges are located in:

Bangalore, Brussels, Chennai, Cochin, Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kolkata, Mumbai, Ne

wark

[edit]Frequent-flyer program

JetPrivilege is Jet Airways’ frequent-flyer program.

[edit]Ban on Meat Products

In June 2011, Jet Airways banned carrying fish, crab, meat and poultry products as

check-in baggage.[34] Jet is the first domestic airline to impose such a ban. Jet claimed

that passengers complained of their baggage getting soiled by seepage from bags

containing meat products.

[edit]Awards and achievements

Page 14: Jet Airways

Best First-Class Service in the World award at Business

Traveller’s 20th annual ‘Best in Business Travel’ awards

Best Business Class & Best Economy Class at the

Business Traveller Awards

Best Program of the Year by Freddie Awards 2007 & 2006

Best Elite Level for the second year in a row, at the 21st

Annual presentation ceremony of the Freddie Awards 2008

Best Overall in Entertainment at the Avion Awards 2010

India's Popular Domestic Airline at the SATTE 2006

Awards

India’s Airline at the World Travel Awards, 2006

Best Technical Despatch Reliability by Beaver 2002

Best Cargo Airline of North Asia by Cargo Airline of the

Year Awards

Best Domestic Airline award for the 1st consecutive year

and the 5th time in the past two years at the 18th TTG

(Travel Trade Gazette) Travel Awards 2007

India’s Most Respected Company in the Travel and Food

Sector by Businessworld 2003

Best Long Haul Carrier ex-Brussels award at the Tm Travel

Awards 2009.

Best Eastbound Airline from India and Best domestic

Airline in India awards at the Abacus Tafi Awards 2009.

Business Traveller’s Best Indian Airline Award In London.

According to.[35]

[edit]Incidents and accidents

On 1 July 2007, Jet Airways Flight 3307, a ATR 72-

212A (registered VT-JCE) which was flying on

the Bhopal-Indore route was involved in an accident

which was caused by a storm. There were no fatalities

amongst the 45 passengers and 4 crew onboard;

however, the aircraft suffered damages beyond repair.[36]

Page 15: Jet Airways

[edit]See also

Naresh Goyal

JetLite

List of airlines of India

List of airports in India

List of companies of India

Transport in India

[edit]References

1. ^ a b "Fact Sheet". Jet Airways. Retrieved 9 December

2010.

2. ̂  "Airline Membership". IATA. Retrieved 2011-06-12.

3. ̂  "BSE Plus". Bseindia.com. Retrieved 2010-09-08.

4. ̂  Thomas J, TNN, Aug 18, 2012, 12.40am IST (2012-08-

18). "IndiGo topples Jet Group as No. 1 airline".

Timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2012-08-19.

5. ̂  Jet Airways India | Know investment options,

shareholding structure, listings & stock codes[dead link]

6. ̂  25 Aug, 2008, 02.08AM IST, Mithun Roy,ET Bureau

(2008-08-25). "JetLite may merge with Jet Airways this

year". Economictimes.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2010-

08-30.

7. ̂  Manju V, TNN, Oct 15, 2008, 09.00am IST (2008-10-

15). "Jet Air lays off 850 flight attendants".

Timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2010-08-30.

8. ̂  17 Oct, 2008, 11.36AM IST,TNN (2008-10-17). "Praful

takes credit for reversal of Jet layoffs".

Economictimes.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2010-08-30.

9. ̂  "Business-standard Jet Airways article". Business-

standard.com. Retrieved 2010-08-30.

10. ̂  Jet and Kingfisher form Alliance[dead link]

Page 16: Jet Airways

11. ̂  PTI, Oct 19, 2010 (2010-10-19). "Lean period air traffic

same, domestic traffic up". Rediff.com. Retrieved 2010-

10-19.

12. ̂  Shukla, Tarun (1 August 2012). "Jet Airways seeks

government nod to join Star

Alliance".liveMint.com (India).

13. ̂  http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-

business/Jet-Airways-to-withdraw-JFK-flights-from-

September-10/articleshow/14151133.cms

14. ̂  Cheng, Wing-Gar; Li, Susan (13 December 2010). "Jet

Air Will Resume India-China Service Amid Good Growth,

Mahadevan Says". Bloomberg.

15. ̂  "Contact Us." Jet Airways. Retrieved on 19 September

2011. "Jet Airways (India) Ltd. Siroya Centre, Sahar

Airport Road, Andheri (East), Mumbai, Maharashtra

400099"

16. ̂  "Registered Office."Jet Airways. Retrieved on 27

February 2010. "Jet Airways (India) Ltd. S.M. Centre,

Andheri-Kurla Road, Andheri (East), Mumbai 400059

India"

17. ^ a b Meredith, Robyn. "Beyond Airlines,Beyond

India." Forbes. 20 March 2008. Magazine dated 7 April

2008. Retrieved on 27 February 2010.

18. ^ a b "Jet Airways discontinues JetLite, merges with

Konnect - The Times of India". The Times Of India.

19. ̂  "Jet Airways launches low-cost service

[http://www.jetkonnects.com/ Jet Airways Konnect"].

IBNLive.com.

20. ̂  "Jet Airways’ low-fare service Konnect takes off today".

The Hindu Business Line.

21. ̂  "Our Network". Jet Airways. Retrieved 9 December

2010.

22. ̂  Codeshare Partners

23. ̂  Jet Airways forms air-rail code share with Thalys -

Yahoo!

Page 17: Jet Airways

24. ̂  jetairways.com – Fleet Information accessdate 20

March 2010

25. ̂  Airbus – Orders, Deliveries, Operators Summary to

28th Feb 2010

26. ̂  Boeing – Orders and deliveries Customer Summary

Through February 2010

27. ̂  Jet Airways fleet list at planespotters.net

28. ̂  "'Jet to lease five A330s as international traffic rises'".

financialexpress.com. 2010-09-21. Retrieved 2010-09-

21.

29. ̂  "'Jet Airways Reveals Tentative 787 Delivery

Schedule'". AeroBlogger. 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2012-

08-02.

30. ^ a b c d "Jet Airways sports new look". Business

Standard. 04-2007. Retrieved 2009-03-03.

31. ̂  "India's 1st DISNEY Plane Unveiled!".

BusinessOfCinema.com.

32. ̂  Verghese, Vijay (2007-7). "Finally, incredible India".

The Nation. Retrieved 2009-03-03.

33. ̂  "Jet opens lounge at Brussels airport". Business

Standard. 2007-10. Retrieved 2009-03-03.

34. ̂  Jet Airways bans meat products, fliers upset -

Hindustan Times

35. ̂  Awards

36. ̂  Accident history for 20070701-0 at Aviation Safety

Network

[edit]External links

Wikimedia Commons has media

related to: Jet Airways

Wikimedia Commons has media

related to: Jet Konnect

Official website

Page 18: Jet Airways

Indian Aviation Business  news report on Bloomberg

News timeline for Jet Airways

Jet Airways buyout of Air Sahara on BBC news [dead link]

Jet Konnect page at Jet Airways website

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