Lufthansa’s 747-8i To Debut On The Frankurt – Washington Dulles Route

I’ve been away from internet connectivity most of the day, so I haven’t had a chance to share the news that you probably have heard of by now.

Lufthansa’s first 747-8i will enter service on their Frankfurt-Washington Dulles route. I’m personally a little disappointed that they did not put it to on the JFK route first as a tribute to their first ever 747 that flew over 40 years ago. I was convinced that would be the case since both of these milestone 747’s share the same registration, D-ABYA and the fact that the first 747 flew from Frankfurt to New York City.

Being that Washington DC will be the only airport in the US served by all 3 major Mideast Carriers, I wonder if that factored into Lufthansa’s decision. They have been vocal in the past about the expansion of Mid East carriers so it would not be surprising if this was a small gesture towards the Middle Eastern Airlines…..

But the good news is that it is finally entering service and we’ll see several more enter service in the coming months and years. It’s expected that Lufthansa will get “the keys” to D-ABYA on April 23 and I would expect the plane to start flying the FRA-IAD route sometime in late May or early June.

Lufthansa May Exit Air Freight Business

In news over the weekend, Lufthansa’s head of cargo, Karl Urich Garnadt suggested that Lufthansa may cease air freight operations if a court in Leipzig rules in favor of a ban on night freighter flight operations in Frankfurt. I had written about the legal actions being taken recently. It looks like Lufthansa is ready to stop their freighter flights since it would make no economic sense to maintain the fleet while at the same time it could not operate. Obviously this would also entail substantial job losses should Lufthansa find it necessary to do this in light of the court’s ruling. I always find the unintended consequences to be more interesting than the actual issue at hand. Here we have a legal complaint filed by residents who leave near Frankfurt’s airport and a court seemingly ready to side with them. If the court rules in favor of the people, the people themselves will be ones with the most to lose. Additional details can be found in the Reuters article below:

(Reuters) – The air freight arm of Germany’s Lufthansa may give up on its freighter fleet should a recently imposed ban on night flights at Frankfurt airport be confirmed by a court in Leipzig on April 4, the unit’s chief executive told a German magazine.

The current solution of scheduling take-offs and landings only before 2200 CET and after 0500 CET was “just a stopgap. It costs money and does not pay,” Karl Ulrich Garnadt told Focus, according to an excerpt of an article to be published on Monday.

If necessary Lufthansa Cargo may have to part ways with its freighter fleet in the long-term, consisting of 18 McDonell Douglas MD 11 planes, Focus quoted Garnadt as saying.

The magazine said around half of Lufthansa Cargo’s freight is transported via passenger planes.

Previously, Garnadt said the night flight ban at Frankfurt, imposed in October, would hurt earnings by around 40 million euros ($53 million) a year and sales by over 100 million euros if it were made permanent.

Lufthansa Cargo made an operating profit of 249 million euros in 2011, but said it would be unable to replicate this in 2012 due to overcapacity, a weak Chinese market and the night flight ban at its Frankfurt hub.

($1 = 0.7540 euros) (Reporting by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Mark Potter)

Strikes To Affect Frankfurt, Munich, Cologne, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart On March 27

The German union “Verdi” has called for a warning strike by its members who are ground workers at German airports. In an ongoing battle with airport operators, the ground handlers at these airports will stage limited strikes during the day tomorrow. According to Verdi, the strike schedule is as follows:

Frankfurt – 05:00 to 14:30 local time
Munich – 06:00 to 14:00 local time
Dusseldorf – 08:00 to 14:00 local time
Cologne – 04:00 to 12:00 local time
Stuttgart – 06:00 to 11:00 local time

Lufthansa has cancelled over 400 flights and you can find specific flight status on Lufthansa’s Update Page.

For today March 26, Lufthansa has canceled most of it’s flights from the USA to Frankfurt, however it appears that only Boston is affected on March 27. Most of the March 27 cancellations affect Intra-Germany and Intra-European routes.