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Binter Canarias

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Binter Canarias
IATA ICAO Callsign
NT IBB BinterCanarias
Founded1989
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programBintermás
Fleet size22
Destinations20
HeadquartersTelde, Gran Canaria, Spain
Key peoplePedro Agustín del Castillo Machado (CEO)[1]
Websitebintercanarias.com

Binter Canarias S.A. is a Spanish airline based in Telde, Gran Canaria, Spain. It is a regional air carrier operating inter-island services within the Canary Islands. Affiliated airlines operate on behalf of Binter in services to Morocco, Portugal and Western Sahara. The company is headquartered at Gran Canaria Airport, in the town of Telde.

History

The airline was established on 18 February 1988 and started operations on 26 March 1989. It was formed as a subsidiary of Iberia. Binter Canarias began operations as a regional airline and is currently the only one to operate in the eight airports of the Canaries. Binter also operates connections with Marrakech, Dakar, Aaiun in Africa; Madeira, and Lisbon in Portugal; Sal, Cape Verde in Cape Verde; and Vigo and Mallorca in Spain .[1] The airline also flies to the island of Madeira, serving the capital Funchal. Regular flights to the cities of Bergamo and Paris, were trialled but later cancelled as unsuccessful projects. Nowadays has regular flights to Lisbon and Cape Verde for renting technical crew and aircraft (CRJ) to Air Nostrum. The airline also serves Africa: it operates scheduled flights to Marrakech and Casablanca in Morocco and Laayoune in Western Sahara, alongside charter flights to Nouadibou and Nouakchott in Mauritania.[citation needed]

In late 1999 SEPI (the Spanish state holding company of Iberia) implemented the privatisation of Binter Canarias, but held on to a "golden share", permitting it to authorise any future shareholding deal of more than 25%. However, the airline was wholly owned by Hesperia Inversiones Aéreas, which bought the airline in July 2002. In 2003 Binter Canarias, SAU was absorbed by Hesperia Inversiones Aéreas, SA, which took the name of Binter Canarias, SA. It is now owned by Ilsamar Tenerife (49.81%), Ferma Canarias Electrica (10.44%), Agencia Maritima Afroamericana (10.11%), Flapa (10%) and others (19.6%) and has 406 employees. Binter has sales offices, Binter Vende, at the airports and, since 2005, the ground support service has been provided by Atlántica Handling. Since January 2008 the Technical assistance service for Binter aircraft has been provided by BinterTechnic.[1]

Some of the owners of Binter Canarias decided to buy Navegacion y Servicios Aéreos Canarios (NAYSA) and to transfer some planes from Binter to NAYSA in order to reduce costs and increase benefits.

In 2016 the airline agreed a deal for a further six ATR 72-600 aircraft, bringing total commitments to the type to 18. They will replace ATR 72-500 aircraft.[2] In spring 2018, Binter decided to merge Navegacion y Servicios Aéreos Canarios (NAYSA) into its own operations and therefore handed back NAYSA's air operator certificate. Since then, all former NAYSA operations are part of Binter's.[3][4] In June 2018 it began the domestic operation between Madeira and Porto Santo Islands in the northern neighboring Madeiran archipelago.

Destinations

A former Binter Canarias Douglas DC-9
A former Binter Canarias Boeing 737-400 wearing a special livery
Binter Canarias ATR 72-500
Binter Canarias Bombardier CRJ1000

As of January 2019, Binter Canarias serves the following destinations:[5]

Cape Verde
Portugal
Spain
Morocco
Senegal
Mauritania
The Gambia
Western Sahara

Fleet

Current fleet

As of January 2019, Binter Canarias operates the following aircraft:[6][7]

Binter Canarias Fleet
Aircraft In Service Orders Passengers Notes
ATR 72–500 7 68
ATR 72–600 12 72
Bombardier CRJ1000 3 100 2 wet-leased from Air Nostrum,[8] 1 from Medavia
Embraer E195-E2 3 132 to be delivered in late 2019[9]
Total 22 3

Historic fleet

Binter Canarias also used to operate the following aircraft types which have meanwhile been replaced:

Accidents and incidents

  • On 18 October 2016, a ATR 72-600 diverted to Gran Canaria Airport, Canary Islands, Spain, due to problems with the left hand main landing gear. The aircraft operated on a training flight, RSC001K, out of Tenerife-Norte Los Rodeos Airport. Upon returning to Tenerife, it was detected that one or both tires of the left hand main gear had burst or deflated. It was decided to divert to Las Palmas where the aircraft flew to low passes over runway 03L. A safe landing was then carried out at 12:22 UTC.[citation needed]

Accolades

The airline was named Europe's best regional airline in 2005 and, in September 2010, it was announced that the Spanish carrier had won the European Regions Airline Association (ERA) Gold Award for the best Airline of the Year 2010/2011.[10][11] In October 2016 the airline was awarded the European Regional Airlines Association Airline of the Year award and was commended for its constant growth and expansion into new markets.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Binter- La Empresa Imagen Visión y Valores". Binter.
  2. ^ a b "More ATRs for Binter". Airliner World (December 2016): 9. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ ch-aviation.com - Spain's Binter Canarias shutters Naysa Aerotaxis unit 2 March 2018
  4. ^ ch-aviation.com Naysa Aerotaxis retrieved 12 May 2018
  5. ^ bintercanarias.com - Destinations retreived 19 January 2019
  6. ^ a b c d e "Binter Canarias Fleet Details and History". Planespotters.net. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  7. ^ "ch-aviation.com - Binter Canarias". ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  8. ^ "Bombardier Welcomes Binter to the Family of CRJ1000 Operators - Bombardier". www.bombardier.com.
  9. ^ "Binter will have the first E195-E2 jet aircraft that will operated by a European airline". www.bintercanaries.com.
  10. ^ "Binter Canarias flights and passenger information - Europelowcost". Europe Low Cost.
  11. ^ "Search Results - ERA". www.eraa.org.

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