Jump to content

Air Foyle HeavyLift

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Air Foyle)

Air Foyle HeavyLift
A Heavylift CL-44-O ("Conroy Skymonster") at Paris-Charles de Gaulle
IATA ICAO Call sign
UPA[1] FOYLE[1]
Founded1 February 2001 (2001-02-01)
Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire, England
Commenced operations1 October 2001 (2001-10-01)
Ceased operations1 July 2006 (2006-07-01)
Parent companyAir Foyle, HeavyLift Cargo Airlines
HeadquartersBishop's Stortford, United Kingdom
Key peopleChristopher Foyle CEO

Air Foyle HeavyLift was a joint venture airline based in Bishop's Stortford, England. It specialised in heavy air cargo services. It was the worldwide sales agent for Antonov Airlines of Kyiv, Ukraine.

History

[edit]

The company's Chairman and joint CEO was Christopher Foyle, also Chairman of Foyle's bookshop.[2][3]

Air Foyle

[edit]

Air Foyle started operations as an executive air charter company with one Piper Aztec aircraft in 1978. It grew its fleet of Aztec, Navajo and Chieftain aircraft by carrying passenger, cargo and aerial survey flights. In 1979 it pioneered the overnight carriage of courier traffic between the UK and Europe operating a nightly return flight between Luton and Brussels for Skypak (later a TNT company), and later between Aberdeen and East Midlands Airport (also for TNT). In 1985 it started providing larger cargo aircraft to TNT, by then its principal cargo customer, using wet leased Handley Page Dart Herald aircraft operating nightly from Birmingham to Nuremberg and Hannover and these were later replaced by a BAC One-Eleven jet cargo aircraft and then by a Boeing 737-200QC aircraft wet leased from Aer Lingus. When TNT announced that it would order 72 British Aerospace 146 aircraft converted to freighters, Air Foyle won the contract to operate these aircraft on behalf of TNT, then an Australian company. This operation commenced in May 1987 with one BAe 146 aircraft and rapidly expanded to ten such aircraft which Air Foyle then operated for thirteen years for TNT on a nightly schedule from various airports in the UK and mainland Europe into TNT's hub in Cologne and later Liège.

In 1985 Air Foyle took delivery of the first production Edgley EA-7 Optica aerial observation aircraft. Subsequently, while being operated by Hampshire Police this aircraft was destroyed in a fatal accident.

In 1989, following two years of negotiations with the Soviets, Air Foyle became the worldwide General Sales Agent of the Antonov Design Bureau of Kyiv and became responsible for the marketing and sales and commercial and operational management of Antonov's fleet of AN-124 heavy cargo aircraft.[4][5]

Between 1998 and 2000 Air Foyle bid an AN-124 solution for the Ministry of Defence Short-Term Strategic Airlift (STSA) procurement. After a protracted procurement process, Ministers in the Ministry of Defence chose a very much more expensive Boeing C-17 solution.[6] Air Foyle believed it had been misled during the procurement process about the basis for decision on the procurement.[7] The Comptroller and Auditor General later concluded that the procurement process was "that the Department has not fully followed its own preferred practice in evaluating the Short Term Strategic Airlift proposals, but there is no evidence of illegality."[8]

PK-PLR, a HeavyLift Lockheed Hercules L100-30 loading oil spill boom equipment

In 1994 Air Foyle won a contract to operate one Lockheed L-100 Hercules and one Ilyushin Il-76 aircraft on permanent 24/7 standby for Oil Spill Response, to provide immediate response on a worldwide basis in the event of a major oil spillage.

Adopting the TNT aircraft management principle, Air Foyle and then its sister passenger airline Air Foyle Passenger Airlines operated a variety of aircraft including Boeing 707-300F, 737-200, 737-300, 727-200, Airbus A320 and A300 for a number of airline and virtual airline customers including EasyJet, Sunseeker, Sabre, Virgin Express, Debonair, Color Air, and Air Scandic from 1993 until 2000.

HeavyLift

[edit]

In 1977 the Trafalgar House Group bought 90% of Transmeridian Air Cargo and on 15 August 1979 merged it with IAS Cargo Airlines to form British Cargo Airlines.[9] In 1978 the HeavyLift division of the carrier acquired five ex-Royal Air Force Shorts Belfast freighters to operate outsized cargo and spent £4 million on the civil certification programme for the aircraft with Marshall Aerospace. British Cargo Airlines collapsed in March 1980, although TAC HeavyLift survived, owned two-thirds by Cunard and one-third by Eurolatin Aviation Ltd.[10][11] The managing director was P.J. McGoldrick who was later CEO of Ryanair and founder of both TransAer and EU-Jet.[12] The first load carried by a civil Belfast at HeavyLift was containerised agricultural machinery from Amsterdam to Libya.[10] The company later founded Prime Airlines as a passenger charter operation in 2001.[13]

Air Foyle / Antonov Airlines AN-124

In the early 1990s HeavyLift joined with the Russian Volga-Dnepr airlines to become the worldwide general sale agent for its outsized cargo operations with AN-124 aircraft. This was similar to UK rival Air Foyle which was the general sales agent for the Ukrainian AN-124 operator Antonov Airlines. Volga-Denpr terminated the agreement in 2001 after ten years of cooperation.[13]

G-HLFT, a HeavyLift Cargo Shorts Belfast at Manchester Airport, 1993

HeavyLift collapsed in 2002 with the closure of HeavyLift Cargo Airlines, Prime Airlines, and HeavyLift Aircraft Engineering. The joint venture Air Foyle HeavyLift was unaffected and continued to operate until 2006.[14] The HeavyLift name continued with two new and independent airlines, HeavyLift Cargo Airlines in Australia and HeavyLift International in the UAE, founded by former employees and investors.[15]

Joint Venture

[edit]

In 2001, following Volga-Dnepr's termination of its deal with HeavyLift, the British rivals Air Foyle and HeavyLift agreed to form a joint venture responsible for the sales and marketing of charters and leases of Antonov Airline's fleet of Antonov An-124, Antonov An-225 and Antonov An-22 cargo aircraft. The venture was originally to be named Antonov Airlines (UK) but this was changed to Air Foyle HeavyLift.

The new joint venture, Air Foyle HeavyLift, became the worldwide General Sales Agent of the Antonov Design Bureau of Kyiv, a function previously held from July 1989 by Air Foyle independently.[16]

Antonov terminated the joint venture on 30 June 2006 to allow it to pursue a joint marketing venture with its erstwhile Russian competitor Volga-Dnepr under the name Ruslan International[3][17]

Air Foyle and Air Foyle HeavyLift ceased trading in July 2006, AFH closed for business on 31 July 2006.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "AIRFRAMES.ORG - Aircraft Database - Login". www.airframes.org.
  2. ^ "2007 Hall of Fame Award Recipient". Archived from the original on 3 March 2013.
  3. ^ a b Flight International 27 March 2007
  4. ^ Shipper-41, Canadian (29 October 2001). "Air Foyle and HeavyLift Cargo in joint venture".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Business booms for Air Foyle HeavyLift's An-124". Flight Global.
  6. ^ "Annex: Short Term Strategic Airlift", Ministry of Defence: Major Projects Report 2000 - The Role of the Equipment Capability Customer, House of Commons, Public Accounts Committee, 14 November 2001, retrieved 20 February 2011
  7. ^ Bruce Bird (23 January 2001), "Copy of a letter from Air Foyle Ltd to the Chief of Defence Procurement", Ministry of Defence: Major Projects Report 2000 - The Role of the Equipment Capability Customer, House of Commons, retrieved 20 February 2011
  8. ^ Sir John Bourn (10 October 2001), "Copy of a letter from the Comptroller and Auditor General to the Director of Air Foyle Ltd", Ministry of Defence: Major Projects Report 2000 - The Role of the Equipment Capability Customer, House of Commons, retrieved 20 February 2011
  9. ^ "Aid for flood victims". Herts and Essex Observer. 20 September 1979. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b "TAC Heavy Lift: take off". Cunarder: Journal of the Cunard Shipping Companies: 1. Spring 1980.
  11. ^ "One-plane firm arrives at Stansted". Cambridge Daily News. 7 March 1980. p. 19.
  12. ^ "PJ McGoldrick". Irish Independent. 27 September 2003. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  13. ^ a b 2001-02-06T00:00:00+00:00. "HeavyLift plans passenger flights". Flight Global. Retrieved 10 June 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ 2002-09-24T00:00:00+01:00. "HeavyLift closes down after restructuring fails". Flight Global. Retrieved 10 June 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ "Australia's HeavyLift seeks to serve China, Europe and USA". FlightGlobal. 26 October 2001.
  16. ^ Jeffrey, Rebecca (2 August 2023). "1993-2002: Time for technology". Air Cargo News. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  17. ^ 2006-07-18T00:00:00+01:00. "Volga-Dnepr and Antonov join forces for heavylift". Flight Global. Retrieved 10 June 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)