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Tag: EgyptAir

Boeing and EgyptAir Maintenance & Engineering Sign MRO Service Agreement

  • Supply chain deals include Landing Gear Exchange and Quick Engine Change kit solutions
  • Companies also establish agreement to add regional MRO provider to Boeing’s growing global network

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Nov. 17, 2019 — Boeing [NYSE:BA] and EGYPTAIR MAINTENANCE & ENGINEERING (EGME) today announced agreements that will approve the Cairo-based MRO as Boeing’s first maintenance supplier in Africa and the Middle East region. The agreement enables EGME to provide aircraft, engines and component maintenance services and solutions to Boeing customers.

EGME will also receive landing gear exchange and overhaul support through the Boeing Landing Gear Exchange Program. The program provides flexible exchange solutions that allow customers to quickly repair and replace serviceable landing gear in hours.

Boeing will also supply parts for a Quick Engine Change kit. The kit includes hardware and components used to efficiently build up a spare engine to service-ready condition, lowering the maintenance time required to replace an engine and return aircraft to service.

“EGYPTAIR is optimizing operations for our growing fleet, which includes a sixth 787-9 Dreamliner aircraft, to always deliver a better experience for our customers,” said Ahmed Adel, chairman and CEO of EGYPTAIR Holding Company. “We are able to leverage the strength of a global supply chain network and increase efficiency by continuing to partner with Boeing.”

EGYPTAIR’s maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) subsidiary, EGYPTAIR Maintenance & Engineering (EGME), also signed a supplier agreement that will allow EGME to support Boeing’s customers with parts provisioning, engineering support and line maintenance.

“EGYPTAIR Maintenance & Engineering brings strong technical expertise with locations across the Middle East and Africa that enable us to better serve our customers in the region,” said Ted Colbert, president and CEO of Boeing Global Services. “Our customers rely on us to keep their airplanes in revenue service. With our global supplier network, which now includes EGME, we help make sure that our customers and their passengers fly Boeing airplanes with confidence every single day.”

“It’s another milestone in EGME’s strategy of growth in the global market as a leading MRO in Africa and the Middle East region,” said Mostafa Ali El-Din, chairman and CEO of EGME. “We are pleased to be part of Boeing’s global network, which reflects a great trust in our capabilities and personnel experience. EGME will utilize its wide-scope capabilities to provide the best technical services to customers who aspire for well-maintained fleet in service.”

In Boeing’s Services Market Outlook, the company forecasts rapid growth in the Middle East region’s commercial and government aviation services market, doubling the growth rate in North America.

First Egypt Air A220-300 Makes Maiden Flight

The first A220-300 for EgyptAir has successfully completed its inaugural test flight from the Mirabel assembly line. The first of 12 aircraft EgyptAir has on order is due to be delivered to the Cairo-based airline in the coming weeks.

The A220 for EgyptAir will provide passengers with superior comfort, its innovative cabin design featuring the widest economy seats of any single-aisle aircraft, and panoramic windows for more natural light. The aircraft, which is outfitted with a brand new cabin layout of 134 seats, will now enter its final phase of completion before delivery.

The A220 delivers unbeatable fuel efficiency and true wide-body comfort in a single-aisle aircraft. The A220 brings together state-of-the-art aerodynamics, advanced materials and Pratt & Whitney’s latest-generation PW1500G geared turbofan engines to offer at least 20% lower fuel burn per seat compared to previous generation aircraft. With a range of up to 3,400 nm (6,300 km), the A220 offers the performance of larger single-aisle aircraft.

More than 80 A220 aircraft are flying with five operators on regional and transcontinental routes in Asia, America, Europe and Africa, proving the great versatility of Airbus’ latest addition.

Hijacked EgyptAir plane lands in Cyprus

A Hijacked EgyptAir plane has now landed in Cyprus after a passenger claiming to be wearing a bomb belt seized control of the aircraft. The plane was on its way to Cairo from Alexandria in Egypt. The motive for the hijacking is currently unclear, but at this point it has not been confirmed to be related to any organized terrorist group. The man in control of the Hijacked EgyptAir plane has not been identified. The hijacker has reportedly requested that an envelope he was carrying be delivered to a woman who lives in Cyprus. There are also conflicting accounts of the number of passengers and crew that were aboard the airplane, but it is believed to be somewhere between 62 and 86 people. Around 56 passengers were later released from the Airbus A320 aircraft.

Hijacked EgyptAir plane still holding 7 people

Many hours after the plane arrived in Cyprus, three passengers and four crew members are reportedly still being held on the aircraft. Sky News Europe has stated that the flight departed at 8 o’clock in the morning from Alexandria, Egypt. About 30 minutes after takeoff, the hijacker managed to seize control of the plane. The hijacker then contacted the control tower in Lanarka, Cyprus, and requested permission to land. The Israeli military  scrambled several fighter jet aircraft to protect the nations airspace as a precautionary response.

This hijacking comes just five months after a Russian airplane crashed over the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt, killing all 224 passengers on board the plane. The cause of that crash has been linked to a terrorist group that claims to have brought down the plane with an explosive device. This incident also comes just one week after terrorists struck the airport and a Metro station in Brussels, Belgium.

Update: The man who hijacked an EgyptAir flight from Alexandria to Cairo has released the remaining passengers and crew. He has left the aircraft and surrendered to police. He has been identified as Eldin Mustafa, and reportedly hijacked the plane to visit a woman in Cyrpus.

 Hijacked EgyptAir plane

Image from www.egyptair.com