XiamenAir

XiamenAir, formerly known as Xiamen Airlines, is a Chinese passenger airline based in Xiamen, Fujian Province.[4] The airline operates scheduled passenger flights out of Xiamen Gaoqi International Airport and, to a lesser extent, Fuzhou Changle International Airport and Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport. The airline is owned by China Southern Airlines (55%), Xiamen Construction and Development Group (34%), and Fujian Investment & Development Group (11%). Xiamen Airlines holds a 99.47% stake in Hebei Airlines and a 60% stake in Jiangxi Airlines.

XiamenAir
Simplified Chinese厦门航空
Traditional Chinese廈門航空
Hanyu PinyinXiàmén Hángkōng
Literal meaningXiamen Airlines
XiamenAir
厦门航空
Xiàmén Hángkōng
IATA ICAO Callsign
MF CXA XIAMEN AIR
FoundedJuly 25, 1984 (1984-07-25)
Hubs
Secondary hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programEgret Miles
AllianceSkyTeam[2]
Subsidiaries
Fleet size167
Destinations70
Parent companyChina Southern Airlines (55%)
Headquarters22 Dailiao Road, Xiamen, Fujian[3]
Key peopleChe Shanglun (Director, President)
Websitexiamenair.com

History

The airline was established as a domestic carrier on July 25, 1984, primarily to connect the province of Fujian to the rest of China. As China's aviation sector developed the airline expanded to regional Asian destinations while the delivery of wide-body Boeing 787 Dreamliners permitted the airline to offer long-distance services. The airline's first inter-continental expansion was to Europe which commenced with an Amsterdam service from July 26, 2015.[5] Services to Sydney followed from November 30, 2015,[6] and Melbourne a year later. The airline's first North American service, to Vancouver was launched on July 26, 2016.[7] XiamenAir's first US service was to Seattle followed by Los Angeles and then New York. By early 2014, the airlines had set up bases at Fuzhou Changle International Airport, Nanchang Changbei International Airport, Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport, Tianjin Binhai International Airport, Changsha Huanghua International Airport and Beijing Capital International Airport.

XiamenAir was honoured with the title of "The Best Airline In Mainland China" for 19 consecutive quarters in the "Airlines Service Survey" made by CARNOC.com. The survey consists of comprehensive questionnaires answered by the passengers and analyzed by experts.

Xiamen Airlines concluded 2015 with passenger numbers of 22.77 million and a profit of 1800 million CNY. It was the 28th consecutive year of profit for the airline. By early 2016, the airline operated 230 domestic routes along with 60 international routes. Xiamen Air is also recognized as the operator of Fuzhou Changle International Airport's first direct North American route, which commenced in February 2017, to New York-JFK.

Destinations

A Boeing 757-200 in Xiamen Airlines' first generation livery landing at Xiamen Gaoqi International Airport
A Xiamen Airlines Boeing 737-800 in a second generation livery
A XiamenAir Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner in the airline's current livery
A XiamenAir Boeing 737–800 in SkyTeam livery
A XiamenAir Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner in a special United Nations Sustainable Living livery

Alliance

On 17 November 2011, XiamenAir signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the airline alliance SkyTeam. On 21 November 2012, the airline was officially welcomed as the 19th member of SkyTeam.[8]

Codeshare agreements

XiamenAir has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:[9]

Joint Venture agreements

XiamenAir has joint venture agreements with the following airlines

Fleet

As of June 2020, XiamenAir operates an all-Boeing fleet consisting of the following aircraft:[13][14]

XiamenAir fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
F B E Total
Boeing 737-700 7 8 120 128
Boeing 737-800 138 3 8 162 170
8 156 164
184 184
Boeing 737 MAX 8 10 10 184 184
Boeing 737 MAX 10 10 TBA
Boeing 787-8 6 4 18 215 237
Boeing 787-9 6 30 260 290
Total 167 23

Fleet history

XiamenAir has previously operated the following aircraft:

Accidents and incidents


gollark: I'm just going to add a hard cap of 20... somethings... executing at once.
gollark: Fun fact: the new version does *not* handle it better.
gollark: I spammed it with a few thousand requests in a few seconds, and:- in the old version it just ignored two increments at once (node.js has a weird single-threaded event loop model...) (the ignoring did come with extra disk/CPU load though)- the version I took down would basically just spin for ages as all the transactions were queued- the new version should have a longer delay and work less badly
gollark: Good enough. Turning it back on.
gollark: It's under maintenence.

References

  1. 厦门航空有限公司 (in Chinese). Xiamen Air. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  2. SkyTeam (17 November 2011). "Xiamen Airlines Joins SkyTeam". Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  3. "Airline Membership". IATA. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015.
  4. "Contact Us Archived October 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine." Xiamen Airlines. Retrieved on October 29, 2012. "Mailing Address: 22 Dailiao Road, Xiamen 361006, China" - Address in Chinese Archived July 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine: "公司地址:中国厦门市埭辽路22号"
  5. "Xiamen Air Celebrates First Intercontinental Service to Amsterdam". China Aviation Daily. July 27, 2015.
  6. "Xiamen Airlines to land in Sydney on November 30". Australian Aviation. August 5, 2015.
  7. "Airline Review - XiamenAir". Destination Travel. May 4, 2018.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 22, 2013. Retrieved November 21, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Profile on Xiamen Airlines". CAPA. Centre for Aviation. Archived from the original on 2016-10-31. Retrieved 2016-10-31.
  10. "Alitalia and Xiamen Airlines begins codeshare partnership in late-Sep 2019". Routesonline.
  11. "AF-KLM, China Southern, Xiamen Air to form a single JV". Ch-Aviation. 19 July 2018.
  12. https://www.vietnamairlines.com/my/en/about-us/subsidiaries-partners/airline-partners
  13. "Global Airline Guide 2019 (Part One)". Airliner World. October 2019: 11.
  14. "Orders & Deliveries". Boeing. Retrieved 2017-10-31.
  15. "Hijacking Description, Xiamen Airlines Boeing 737-247 B-2510". Aviation Safety Network. Flight Safety Foundation. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  16. "Chinese Boeing 737 crash-lands at Manila airport". Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  17. Flightradar24. "Flightradar24.com - Live flight tracker!". Flightradar24. Retrieved 8 September 2018.

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