City Star Airlines

City Star Airlines (CSA) was a ticket sales office based in Aberdeen, Scotland. It operated under the Air Operator's Certificate (AOC) of Landsflug in Iceland. Its main service was scheduled services between energy industry centres in Scotland and Norway, as well as charter services. Its main base was Aberdeen Airport.[1]

City Star Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
X9 ISL ISLANDIA
Founded2003
Ceased operations2008
HubsAberdeen Airport
Fleet size0
Destinations7
Parent companyEignarhaldsfélagið City Star Airlines
HeadquartersAberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom
Websitehttp://www.citystarairlines.com

In a press release on 30 January 2008, City Star Airlines announced that it was to immediately cease all operations until further notice.[2]

History

City Star Airlines started operations on 28 March 2005 with one aircraft flying between Aberdeen, Scotland (Aberdeen Airport) and Oslo (Oslo Gardermoen Airport) in cooperation with and on the AOC of domestic airline Landsflug in Iceland. CSA's owners acquired a controlling share in Landsflug in 2005[1] in order to acquire JAR-OPS 1 licensed operator for its operation.

CSA announced on 1 September 2007 that its holding company had purchased Caledonian Airborne Engineering who provide engineering, maintenance and ground handling facilities at Aberdeen and Newcastle Airports. The purchase increased the companies employee base by an additional 60.

On 22 December. 2007 CSA's holding company stated that it would form a new subsidiary, "City Star Executive" that would commence the first long haul, business class only flights from Aberdeen Airport to Houston, Texas starting in 2008.[3] Those statements were merely a mistake as the aircraft, which was a Boeing 757, planned to fly the route didn't have sufficient range and the flights never saw the light of day.

Destinations

City Star Airlines operated scheduled services to the following destinations[4]

Europe

Norway

United Kingdom

The Netherlands

Fleet

As City Star Airlines wasn't a licensed airline it never had any aircraft registered. The aircraft it operated were dry leased from sister company (airline) Landsflug which fleet consisted of the following aircraft (as of September 2007)

Incidents and accidents

  • At 2100 BST on 22 June 2006, a City Star Airlines Dornier 328 (TF-CSB) operating a passenger flight from Stavanger, Norway, overshot the end of the runway at Aberdeen Airport by several hundred yards as it came in to land. None of the 16 passengers and 3 crew members on board were injured. The incident caused the airline to announce a suspension of all flight operations on 23 June 2006. However, the airline resumed services 2 days later.
  • UK Air Accidents Investigation Branch have recommended a safety audit of the airline after a serious incident in which a Dornier 328 crew flew close to cliffs and failed to respond correctly to terrain warnings on approach to Sumburgh Airport after a flight from Aberdeen. The aircraft landed safely. The captain involved was suspended and asked to resign after an investigation.[5]

The 32 seater aircraft were also used for private charters.

gollark: > Doesn't CC store on/off flag directly in block state? It should survive crashes. Yep, it needs chunk with computer loaded into memory and after server restart this computer will be restarted, but it should work.On SC, sometimes computers are NOT correctly powered on after crashes.
gollark: Or use a wireless-capable OC system with wake-on-WLAN.
gollark: > It's fine if you enclose computer with passwords into cage of bedrock and use remote terminals + network to loginBut you need to open it sometimes to power on the computer in case of server crash.
gollark: `pcall`
gollark: Well, there's no reason to use it over the pickaxe version, and the pickaxe version is more multipurpose.

References

  1. "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 3 April 2007. p. 66.
  2. www.citystarairlines.com - Home Archived 25 March 2004 at the Wayback Machine
  3. www.citystarairlines.com - NEWS RELEASE
  4. Star website Archived 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Flight International 20–26 March 2007
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