Will be immediately engaged into service across Emirates network
Dubai:Emirates, took delivery of its 24th and 25th Airbus A380 and its 78th Boeing 777-300 on Wednesday.
Dubai:Emirates, took delivery of its 24th and 25th Airbus A380 and its 78th Boeing 777-300 on Wednesday.
The aircraft will be
immediately engaged into service across Emirates network of 126
destinations in 74 countries; supporting Emirates planned expansion of
its network and flights. The delivery of three wide-body aircraft in one
day, a record for Emirates, required careful review and advance
preparation within all operational units to ensure the availability of
the required flight crew, cabin crew, engineers, airport staff in time
to ensure a smooth entry into service.
The jubilee Emirates A380 aircraft was handed over to the Emirates aircraft acceptance team by Michael Pflaum, Airbus Head of A380 delivery in Hamburg, during a delivery ceremony at the planemaker’s Jurgen Thomas A380 Delivery Centre. With 25 A380 aircraft now in its fleet, growing to 31 by the end of 2012, Emirates is the largest A380 operator worldwide and with 90 jets on firm order by far the largest A380 customer.
The Dubai-based carrier was the first airline to order the A380 and thus enabled Airbus to proceed with the programme. The further 65 A380s on Emirates’ order book is part of Emirates’ overall 216 aircraft still to be delivered; worth $62 billion (Dh227.67 billion).
The jubilee Emirates A380 aircraft was handed over to the Emirates aircraft acceptance team by Michael Pflaum, Airbus Head of A380 delivery in Hamburg, during a delivery ceremony at the planemaker’s Jurgen Thomas A380 Delivery Centre. With 25 A380 aircraft now in its fleet, growing to 31 by the end of 2012, Emirates is the largest A380 operator worldwide and with 90 jets on firm order by far the largest A380 customer.
The Dubai-based carrier was the first airline to order the A380 and thus enabled Airbus to proceed with the programme. The further 65 A380s on Emirates’ order book is part of Emirates’ overall 216 aircraft still to be delivered; worth $62 billion (Dh227.67 billion).
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