Arkia Israel Airlines

Arkia
ארקיע
IATA
IZ
ICAO
AIZ
Callsign
ARKIA
Founded 1949
Hubs Ben Gurion International Airport
Focus cities Sde Dov Airport,
Eilat Airport,
Ovda International Airport
Fleet size 11 (+6 orders)
Destinations 6 Scheduled
Charter Varies
Parent company Kanaf-Arkia Airlines
Jordache Enterprises
Headquarters Tel Aviv, Israel
Key people Avi Nakash-Owner
Website: http://www.arkia.com
Arkia Boeing 757-300 4X-BAW
Arkia ATR 72-500 parked at Eilat Airport
Arkia ATR on the ground at Eilat Airport
Arkia de Havilland Canada DHC-7 parked at Eilat Airport
An Arkia ATR being loaded at Ben Gurion Airport

Arkia Israeli Airlines (Hebrew: ארקיע‎, I will soar), usually referred to as Arkia is an airline based in Tel Aviv, Israel. It is Israel's second largest airline operating scheduled domestic and international services as well as charter flights to Western Europe and the Mediterranean. Its main base is Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv, whilst it also operates significant numbers of flights out of Sde Dov Airport in Tel Aviv, Eilat Airport, and Ovda International Airport.[1]

Contents

History

Arkia was founded in 1949 as Israel Inland Airlines when it became clear that there was demand for a local airline to connect the north of Israel (especially Tel Aviv) with the southern region of the Negev, as a subsidiary of El Al, Israel's national airline.[2] Flights starting the following year with the airline unsing De Havilland DH.89 aircraft, followed by Douglas DC-3s, to connect Rosh Pina in the north to the port of Eilat in the south.[2] El Al held a 50% stake in the airline at this time with Histadrut, Israel's labour federation, being the other shareholder.[3] The airline later evolved to become Eilata Airlines, Aviron, and then to Arkia Israel Airlines. In its first year of service, Israel Inland carried 13,485 passengers on their twice weekly flight, operated by a Curtis Commando.[2]

During the 1950s the airline continued to grow, upgrading their fleet to the larger DC-3, and flying two flights daily.[2] This allowed them to have annual passenger figures of over 70,000.[2] As Eilat continued to grow during the 1960s, so did Arkia, introducing the Handley Page Dart Herald series 200 jet propeller aircraft to its fleet between 1967–1968, enabling Arkia to expand with new routes to Jerusalem, Sharm-el-Sheikh, and Santa Caterina.[2] A subsidiary, Kanaf Arkia Airline and Aviation Services was founded as the airline acquired 50% of the stock of Kanaf Airlines and Aviation Services, and by the end of the 1960s, scheduled flights were flown across Israel, from Rosh Pina in the north, to Ofira in the south.[2]

In March 1980, Kanaf Arkia acquired the remaining stock of Arkia and merged the two operations. The airline grew quickly during the 1980s, moving into the international charter market, and airline maintenance. The airline is now owned by Kanaf-Arkia Airlines (75%) and airline employees (25%). In 2006, the Nakash brothers of Jordache Enterprises, bought Knafaim's 75% share.[2]

In February 2007, the Israeli Tourism Ministry awarded Arkia scheduled operator license for flights to Larnaca, Cyprus (which El Al recently dropped) and Dublin, Ireland.[4] In July 2007 it emerged that the airline planned to file for further scheduled carrier status on routes to New York and Bangkok which it currently operates under a charter status.[5] Furthermore, in early 2008, after the Israeli Tourism Ministry opened up the airline market, the airline applied for scheduled carrier status for routes to Barcelona, Berlin, Moscow, and Paris. The status to Paris was granted in February 2008, and the airline announced that on this route, both economy and business class products would operate. At this time, the airline also announced that it would add two Boeing 737 aircraft to its fleet within two years, in addition to the four Boeing 787 aircraft it already had on order.[6]

Incidents and accidents

On November 28, 2002, approximately 20 minutes before the Kenyan hotel bombing occurred, an Arkia Boeing 757 was narrowly missed by two anti-aircraft missiles shortly after takeoff from Moi International Airport in Kenya. The plane was able to land safely in Tel Aviv.[7][8]

Destinations

Arkia operates scheduled services to the following:

Asia

Europe

Additionally, the airline operates charter services to destinations across Europe.

Fleet

The Arkia Israeli Airlines fleet includes the following aircraft (as of 4 November 2008):[1][9]

Arkia Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers Routes Notes
ATR 72-500 4 72 Domestic, Cyprus, Short-distance European
Boeing 757-300 2 265 Europe, Domestic Will go upon delivery of 2 787s
Boeing 787-9 (5 orders) Europe, North America, Far East Delivery: 2013
Bombardier Dash 7 Series 100 4 50 Domestic, Short-distance European Only 2 active for passenger transport
Embraer E195 1 (1 order) 122 Europe, Domestic Delivery: November 2008[10]

As of 4 November 2008, the average age of the Arkia Israel Airlines fleet is 8.8 years ([1]).

In early 2008, the airline announced that it would purchase two Boeing 737 aircraft within two years.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International (2007-03-27), p. 77. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 "About Arkia". Arkia Israel Airlines. Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
  3. "El Al, the Israeli Airline". US Centennial of Flight. Retrieved on 2007-05-29.
  4. "Arkia gets scheduled status". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
  5. "Arkia to add 2 more Boeing 787s". Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Dalia Tal (2008-02-12). "Arkia named designated carrier on TA-Paris route". Globes. Retrieved on 2008-02-12.
  7. "A History of Terrorism in Israel". Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
  8. "Pilot of Arkia Flight 582 Describes What Happened". CNN. Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
  9. "Arkia Fleet". Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
  10. "Arkia buys two new aircrafts". haaretz. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.

External links