R1 Airlines

R1 Airlines Ltd.
IATA ICAO Callsign
- TSH TRANSCANADA
Founded 2003
Fleet size 8[1]
Parent company Regional Express Aviation Ltd.
Headquarters Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Key people John Binder (CEO) and Al Young (Vice President)
Website http://www.r1airlines.ca/

R1 Airlines Ltd., formerly known as Regional 1, is a regional airline based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It was established and started operations in August 2003 and operated scheduled services in Western Canada.[2] On September 11, 2005, the airline ceased providing scheduled operations and focused entirely on providing business charter services, workforce transportation and ACMI operations.

Destinations

Prior to September 11, 2005, the airline served the following five cities in western Canada:

Newly branded R1 Airlines Bombardier Dash 8 used to transport clients and their workforces for business purposes to remote and densely populated regions in the world.
Former Regional 1 Bombardier Dash 8 at Cambridge Bay Airport used daily to carry workers to Hope Bay Aerodrome. Aircraft now operated by Provincial Airlines Limited of Newfoundland and Labrador

It used to operate one aircraft in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, flying for the World Food Programme, under the auspices of United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The company also operated two Dash 8 and two DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft for Flamingo Air in Haiti, until operations were halted after the fall of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Police fleeing insurgents in Cap-Haïtien hijacked one Dash 8 on the ramp and forced the crew to fly them to Port-au-Prince, and during the takeoff roll the aircraft came under fire but was not damaged.


R1 offers fleet and services to the oil and gas industry, mining, peacekeeping and humanitarian missions, the construction industry, energy and utilities and forestry.

Fleet

According to Transport Canada the R1 Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of March 2014):[1]

AircraftVariantsCountNotes
De Havilland Dash 8Series 100, Series 300537 passengers (100), 50 passengers (300)
Bombardier CRJCRJ100, CRJ200350 passengers
Beechcraft 1900D 118 passengers

On the R1 website at least one Beechcraft 1900 is listed.[3]

Joint venture with Air Georgian

On November 15, 2013, Regional 1 and Air Georgian completed a joint venture through the creation of a parent company, Regional Express Aviation Ltd. (REAL), based in Calgary, Alberta and then rebranded under the name of R1 Airlines Ltd.[4] Its new ownership structure gives the subsidiary additional clout in both the domestic and international aircraft, crew, maintenance and insurance (ACMI) business charter markets. One of the immediate benefits delivered through the launch of REAL was Air Georgian’s 15-strong fleet of Beech 1900D turboprops, which are now being offered by R1 on both new and existing ACMI contracts in addition to its regular scheduled work for Air Canada. Through its links with Air Georgian and Avmax, R1 Airlines now has access to the world’s largest private fleet of Dash 8 and CRJs, while the addition of the 18-seat Beech 1900Ds mean it can now serve far smaller markets that hasd been inaccessible to its larger types.

The arrangement also provides more than $100 million in spare parts and domestic maintenance bases in Halifax, Montreal, Kingston, Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver. International deployments are supported through Avmax facilities in Great Falls, Montana, Jacksonville, Florida, Nairobi, Kenya and N’djamena, Chad.

References

  1. 1 2 Transport Canada: Canadian Civil Aircraft Register, enter Regional 1 in the "Owner name" box. Retrieved on 08 March 2014
  2. Flight International 12–18 April 2005
  3. Fleet
  4. Georgian and Regional 1 Complete Joint Venture

External links

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