Our Airline

Our Airline
Our Airline
IATA
ON
ICAO
RON
Callsign
AIR NAURU
Founded 14 February 1970
Fleet size 2 Boeing 737-300
Destinations Brisbane, Honiara and Tarawa.
Headquarters Nauru International Airport
Yaren District, Nauru
Key people Karam Chand (CEO)
Jim Bradfield
Website http://www.ourairline.com.au

Our Airline (formerly known as Air Nauru) is the national airline of the Republic of Nauru. It operates scheduled international services to other Pacific islands and Australia. Its main base is Nauru International Airport.[1] Its head office is on the property of Nauru International Airport, Yaren District, and its operations office is in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.[2]

Contents

History

Former Air Nauru logo

Our Airline was established as Air Nauru and started operations on 14 February 1970 with an experimental service between Nauru and Brisbane, using a chartered Dassault Falcon 20 registered VH-BIZ.[3][4] Regular scheduled services commenced after the delivery in January 1972 of the airline's first Fokker F28 Fellowship, registered C2-RN1[3] (a second Fellowship, C2-RN2, was subsequently placed into service as well). A Boeing 737-200 (C2-RN3) was added to the fleet in 1975[5] and a Boeing 727-100 (C2-RN4) entered service on June 16, 1976.[6] Later in the 1970s the two Fellowships were sold to Air Niugini and more Boeings were added to the fleet.

Air Nauru Fokker Fellowship "Nauru Chief" at Melbourne's Tullamarine Airport in October 1973

By 1983 the fleet included seven aircraft, two Boeing 727-100s (the second was registered C2-RN7) and five Boeing 737-200s (C2-RN5, 'RN6, 'RN8 and 'RN9 having been added to the fleet);[7] since the entire population of Nauru at this time was about 8,000,[8] the airline was in the extraordinary position of having seating capacity equal to 10% of the Nauruan population. The airline also had a bad reputation for cancelling flights at the whim of its government owners, including using the Boeing 727s for low-level searches for Nauruan fisherman lost at sea while relatives on board were served alcohol by the flight attendants.[9] From this high point (at least in terms of fleet numbers) the airline gradually contracted in size, leasing some aircraft and selling others. Five years later in 1988 the fleet consisted of three Boeing 737-200s with the one remaining 727-100 leased out to Trans Australia Airlines. At this time the airline was badly affected by an industrial dispute with its pilots and was operating without a set timetable, a situation that lasted for several months.[10] In 1993 two of the 737-200s were replaced by Boeing 737-400s (C2-RN10 and 'RN11), leaving the venerable C2-RN3 (kept because it was convertible between passenger and freight configurations) to soldier on for a little while longer.[11] The airline, by now only operating a single 737-400, was corporatised in July 1996 as the Nauru Air Corporation (NAC) headed by a new CEO without ties to the government, enabling it to operate independently in a commercial marketplace, free from most of its government constraints[9]".

Air Nauru Boeing 737-400 at Sydney Airport in 2003.

In 1998 Air Nauru came under the regulatory control of the Civil Aviation Authority of Australia and since then has been a select foreign carrier holding an Australian Air Operator's Certificate (AOC). The island's regular economic troubles have caused the airline to lose large amounts of money, and on some occasions become insolvent. Its operations were also suspended for brief periods in the 1990s because of concerns raised by Australia over the airworthiness and safety record of its aircraft. Airline offices and equipment were also frequently repossessed by the Australian government for Nauru's repeated defaults on foreign loans. The airline has been in dispute with the Export-Import Bank of the United States since 2002, and in December 2005 the High Court of Australia upheld an earlier decision to allow the bank to seize Air Nauru's only aircraft, registered VH-RON, leaving Nauru and the island nation Kiribati without air services.[12] The aircraft was seized by creditors at Melbourne Airport on December 18, 2005.[13] Following the acquisition of a replacement aircraft (a Boeing 737-300) in mid-2006, the airline was rebranded as Our Airline and relaunched on 14 October 2006.[1]

Our Airline is wholly owned by the state and has 144 employees (at March 2007).[1] On November 26, 2007, the airline launched its new website and online booking facility.[1]

Destinations

Australia
  • Brisbane - Brisbane International Airport
Fiji
Kiribati
Nauru
Solomon Islands

Air Nauru once had a remarkably comprehensive network in the Asia-Pacific, with service to Hong Kong, Kagoshima, Taipei, Okinawa, Singapore, Guam, Saipan, Koror, Chuuk, Pohnpei, Kosrae, Majuro, Tarawa, Honolulu, Honiara, Port Vila, Noumea, Apia, Pago Pago, Nadi, Tonga, Kanton Island, Niue, Raratonga, Auckland, Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and Christmas Island.[15] The average load factor throughout the network was around 20%, with many flights carrying no or few passengers.[15] The Nauru government subsidized the airline with profits from phosphate mining. As the phosphate began to run out in the early 1990s, the airline began to stop service to unprofitable destinations.

Today services are provided from Nauru to Brisbane, Honiara, and Tarawa. Our Airline currently operates a once weekly service from Brisbane through Honiara to Nauru, with an extension to Tarawa and Nadi, Fiji. The Tarawa extension was suspended from July 2008 to November 2009 because, along with the high fuel prices, operating the Tarawa flight was not profitable without a connecting destination.[16][17]

Although it was reported in early 2007 that Our Airline would begin services between Nauru and Fiji in the very near future,[18] the airline will instead provide once weekly Tarawa to Nadi service on behalf of Air Kiribati beginning in November 2009.[19]

Air Nauru also provides services on behalf of Norfolk Air from Norfolk Island to Brisbane, Newcastle, Melbourne, and Sydney. A similar service was provided for Norfolk Air's predecessor, Norfolk Jet Express, until Norfolk Jet Express went out of business on 4 June 2005. After urgent discussions, Norfolk Island Administration secretary Peter Maywald announced on 7 June that Qantas and Air Nauru would jointly provide replacement services for at least 12 months. For the first week after liquidation, Alliance Airlines aircraft were used for services, following which it was planned that Qantas would operate the flights from 11 June using Air Nauru's Boeing 737 VH-RON chartered by the Norfolk Island Government.[20] This arrangement naturally ceased later that year when VH-RON was seized. After Ozjet stopped flying on behalf of Norfolk Air, Norfolk Jet Express's successor, in April 2009, Our Airline began operating the service.[21]

Fleet

As of January 2011 the Our Airline fleet consists of two Boeing 737:

Our Airline fleet
Aircraft Registration Seats Destinations Notes
VH-INU.JPG
Boeing 737-300
VH-INU 130 (2 class)[22] Brisbane, Honiara, Nauru, Tarawa, and Nadi The service from Tarawa to Nadi is operated for Air Kiribati
Norfolk Air VH-NLK.jpg
Boeing 737-300
VH-NLK 126 Melbourne, Sydney, Newcastle, Brisbane and Norfolk Island Plane owned and operated by Our Airline on behalf of Norfolk Air

In March 2006, the government of the Republic of China, reportedly as a reward for Nauru's diplomatic recognition of the ROC instead of the People's Republic of China,[23] assisted Air Nauru with the purchase of a second-hand Boeing 737, which was expected to be in operation by mid-2006, after several logistical delays. This purchase was put on hold in May 2006 due to OzJet and Air Pacific having started on the routes formerly operated by Air Nauru.[24] In October 2006 the new Boeing plane came into service.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International: p. 60. 2007-04-10. 
  2. ^ "Contact Us." Our Airline. Retrieved on January 16, 2011. "Head Office Nauru International Airport PO Box 40 Republic of Nauru" "Operations Office Level 3, 99 Creek Street Brisbane QLD 4000 "
  3. ^ a b A brief flying history of Brisbane Airport retrieved 2007-09-22.
  4. ^ Image of VH-BIZ retrieved 2007-09-22.
  5. ^ List of Boeing 737s operated by Air Nauru retrieved 2007-09-22.
  6. ^ History of Boeing 727-77QC c/n 20370 retrieved 2007-09-22.
  7. ^ Australian Aviation magazine 1984 Major Airline Directory. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. ISSN 0813-0876.
  8. ^ Population number derived from figures mentioned on Page 14 of this report retrieved 2007-09-22.
  9. ^ a b "Micronesian Carriers to Stage a Comeback?" Australian Aviation magazine, No. 127, April 1997, p60-61. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. ISSN 0813-0876.
  10. ^ Australian Aviation magazine 1989 Major Airline Directory. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. ISSN 0813-0876.
  11. ^ Australian Aviation magazine 1994 Major Airline Directory. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. ISSN 0813-0876.
  12. ^ "Court ruling grounds Air Nauru". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2005-12-17. http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200512/s1533290.htm. Retrieved 2006-05-24. 
  13. ^ Suit costs Nauru its air link retrieved 2007-09-22.
  14. ^ http://www.ourairline.com.au/content/about-us/about-us/press-releases
  15. ^ a b http://www.airwaysmuseum.com/JL-Air%20Nauru%20story.htm
  16. ^ http://www.ourairline.com.au/MediaRelease001.htm
  17. ^ "Nauru’s airline cooperates with Solomons as fuel price hikes bite". Radio New Zealand International. 25 June 2008. http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read&id=40540. Retrieved 1 November 2011. 
  18. ^ "Air Nauru to serve Fiji route". Fiji Times. 2007-01-26. http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=55931. Retrieved 2007-01-26. 
  19. ^ http://www.ourairline.com.au/MediaRelease002.htm
  20. ^ Air International, July 2005
  21. ^ http://www.aviationrecord.com/Home/ArticlesPages/tabid/58/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/2252/Norfolk-Air-launches-Our-Airline.aspx
  22. ^ http://www.ourairline.com.au/services.htm#aircraft
  23. ^ Taiwan Switch Keeps Air Nauru Flying retrieved 2007-09-22.
  24. ^ "Nauru shelves plans to buy a new plane after losing key air routes". Radio New Zealand. 2006-05-23. http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read&id=24253. Retrieved 2006-05-24. 

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