TAP Portugal

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TAP Portugal
IATA
TP
ICAO
TAP
Callsign
AIR PORTUGAL
Founded 1945
Hubs Portela Airport
Focus cities Faro Airport
Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport
Madeira Airport
Frequent flyer program Victoria
Member lounge Top Executive Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance
Fleet size 53 (69 with Portugalia)
Destinations 61
Parent company TAP Portugal
Company slogan Fly higher. (Voa mais alto.)
Headquarters Lisbon, Portugal
Key people Fernando Pinto (CEO)
Website: http://www.flytap.com
Boeing 727 with classic livery 1950s-1980
Boeing 727 with classic livery 1950s-1980
Airbus A321-200 with former livery 1980-2005
Airbus A321-200 with former livery 1980-2005
Airbus A320-200 taking off
Airbus A320-200 taking off

TAP Portugal (former known as Transportes Aéreos Portugueses – Portuguese Air Transportations) is the national airline of Portugal, based in Lisbon (Portela Airport) and is a member of the Star Alliance. It operates to destinations in Europe, Africa and North, Central and South America. Its current Chief Executive Officer is Fernando Pinto.

Contents

[edit] History

The airline was founded on 14 March 1945, beginning commercial service on 19 September 1946 from Lisbon to Madrid with a Douglas DC-3 under the name Transportes Aéreos Portugueses (TAP). On 31 December of that year, it began its Linha Aérea Imperial, a twelve-stop service including Luanda, Angola and Lourenço Marques (now Maputo), Mozambique.

1947 saw the inauguration of its domestic service from Lisbon to Porto. Service to São Tomé and London began In 1953, the airline became a private company and began service to Tangier and Casablanca.in 1949.


The one millionth passenger flew on TAP on 19 June 1964, 18 years after the airline began operations. In 1969 service to New York via Santa Maria Island in the Azores began. Boston was added to the New York service the following year. In 1975, TAP was nationalized, becoming a public corporation (Empresa Pública).

TAP purchased the Boeing 747 during the 1970s, replacing their Boeing 707s; but the 747s were eventually sold due to lack of demand. They were replaced by Lockheed TriStars and Airbus A310s on long haul routes. By the late 1990s TAP had expanded its fleet by selling its older Boeing 727s and Boeing 737s and had replaced them with Airbus A319, A320 and A321. The TriStars were sold to Air Luxor and were replaced by more capable Airbus A340s giving TAP a large fleet of Airbus only aircraft.

In 1975, TAP was nationalized and changed its name to TAP Air Portugal in March 1979.

In 1989 service to Newark, New Jersey was introduced and in 1991, service to Berlin. Also in 1989 TAP became a publicly-traded company (Sociedade Anónima). In 1993, TAP began flying to Tel Aviv. In 1994, TAP began a code sharing arrangement with Delta Air Lines for north Atlantic service. This agreement was ended in 2005.

1996 saw the introduction of service to Boston via Terceira Island in the Azores, the inauguration of service to Macau and the launch of TAP's Website. In 1997, service began to Punta Cana and Bangkok. Flights to Bangkok and Macau were discontinued in 1998.

In 2005 TAP Portugal became the sixteenth member of the Star Alliance. TAP Air Portugal was rebranded as TAP Portugal in February 2005. It employs 9750 staff. TAP also ended its code sharing agreement with Delta Air Lines and began a new agreement with United Airlines as part of its membership in Star Alliance. Under this agreement United's code (UA) is placed on TAP Portugal's trans-atlantic flights and some African flights, and TAP Portugal's code (TP) is placed on United flights.

In 2006, it started a codesharing agreement with US Airways on all routes between Portugal and the USA and connection services out of Newark and Philadelphia.

On November 6, 2006, TAP Portugal, a member of Star Alliance, signed a contract with Espírito Santo International for the acquisition of 99.81 percent of the regional airline Portugália. Whether Portugália will join Star Alliance as a regional member or merge its operations with TAP is still unclear.

TAP inaugurated five times weekly A330-200 service between Lisbon and Belo Horizonte (Tancredo Neves Intl/SBCF) on 11 February 2008.

2007 Results

Passengers transported: 7,8 million

Financial Results: € 32,8 million

Cargo: (not announced yet)

[edit] Subsidiaries

The current subsidiaries of TAP Portugal are:

Former subsidiaries include:

In the future, subsidiaries may include:

[edit] Destinations

Further information: TAP Portugal destinations

[edit] TAP Cargo

TAP Cargo has four all-cargo routes. Besides these routes, TAP Cargo uses all TAP Portugal flights. The four all-cargo routes are:

TAP Cargo has Lisbon-Luanda all-cargo non-regular flights, in Avient Aviation DC-10F, Girjet 747-200F, or other leased airplanes.

[edit] Fleet

The TAP Portugal fleet consists of the following aircraft as of June 2008 :[2]

TAP Portugal Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers
(Executive/Economy)
Routes Notes
Airbus A310-300 1 194 (18/176) Natal and Newark Exit from service: July 2008
Airbus A319-100 19 132 Domestic and European
Airbus A320-200 15
(6 orders leased)
(8 options)
156 Domestic and European Deliveries: 6 in 2009, 6 in 2011, 2 in 2012
One in Star Alliance livery
Airbus A321-200 3 194 Domestic and European
Airbus A330-200 12 259 (24/235)
230 (48/182)
North and South American
One in Star Alliance livery
Airbus A340-300 4 274 (36/238) African, North and South American
Airbus A350-800 (8 orders)
(3 options)
International Entry in service: 2014
Deliveries: 2014-2017
Airbus A350-900 (4 orders) 314 International Entry in service: 2014
Deliveries: 2014-2017
Embraer ERJ 145 EP 8 45 Domestic and European Portugália
Fokker 100 6 97 Domestic and European Portugália
Beechcraft 1900 2 19 Spain PGA Express

[edit] Retired

The following is a list of aircraft that TAP Portugal has operated since 1945, and are now no longer in the fleet.

[edit] Codeshare agreements

Note: This list includes Star Alliance (SA) partners.

[edit] Incidents and accidents

[edit] References

[edit] External links