Closer trade ties between UAE and China boost air cargo demand
Freighter capacity on routes between the UAE and China is being ramped up, following initiatives ...
So pre-Christmas press reports are true: James Hogan, the authoritarian chief of Etihad, is set to leave in the second half of 2017. He takes CFO James Rigney with him to an unnamed investment company.
The move comes following concern over the carrier’s strategy and investments in Europe, in particular at Air Berlin and Alitalia. Job losses are expected at the Abu Dhabi carrier. You can read the carrier’s press statement here.
Etail by air – here to stay or on a short shelf life?
Hong Kong drops out of world's top 10 busiest container ports
HMM sees opportunities in Hapag-Lloyd’s exit from THE Alliance
How crazy is this: DSV goes hostile on Expeditors or CH Robinson?
Capture of MSC Aries will further drive up Indian export costs
Carriers look to short-term gains over blanking, as Red Sea crisis props up rates
Cargo flows through Dubai delayed by flooding, with 300 flights cancelled
Liners unveil Asia-Europe FAK price hikes to arrest steady rate decline
Alex Lennane
email: [email protected]
mobile: +44 7879 334 389
During August 2023, please contact
Alex Whiteman
email: [email protected]
Alessandro Pasetti
email: [email protected]
mobile: +44 7402 255 512
Comment on this article
KEVIN MONTEATH
January 24, 2017 at 4:00 pmWhen you have the cash flow in abundance to acquire, stop to think what will be the repercussion backlash? Should have done more for the carrier with what’s available.
It was a wrong move from inception! Time to move on.