LAM Mozambique Airlines Embraer 190 crash in Namibia

LAM LogoOn November 29th, 2013, a LAM Mozambique Airlines Embraer 190 crashed in Namibia near the Bwabwata National Park in northern Namibia, halfway between its departure and scheduled arrival airport. All 29 passengers and six crew onboard were killed.

LAM flight TM470 was a scheduled service from Maputo to Luanda and was operated by an Embraer 190, registration C9-EMC, and named “Chaimite”. The aircraft was built in 2012 and entered service with LAM on November 17, 2012. The aircraft had logged 2,905 flight hours in 1877 flight cycles in total at the time of the accident.

Weather was reported to be poor at the time of the accident with heavy rainfalls in the vicinity of the flight path. It was the first fatal accident for the airline since 1970 and the deadliest for a Mozambican airline since the Mozambican presidential Tupolev Tu-134A-3 aircraft carrying President Samora Machel crashed in 1986.

According to reports, the aircraft was cruising at an altitude of 38,000 feet over Botswanan airspace about halfway between Maputo and Luanda when it began to lose altitude abruptly. The aircraft descended rapidly at a rate of about 100 feet per second and was being tracked on radar. The aircraft’s track was lost at 3,000 feet above sea level, the last contact with air traffic control was made at 13:30 CAT over northern Namibia during heavy rainfall.

The investigation of the accident is ongoing.

BA CityFlyer orders one Embraer 190

BACityflyer LogoOn November 26th, 2013, Embraer announced that BA CityFlyer placed a firm order for one Embraer 190 aircraft. The airline plans to operate the aircraft from London City Airport. The airline initially placed an order for six Embraer 170s and five Embraer 190s with options for three further aircraft. With this order the airline has on order or taken delivery of nine aircraft.

Abu Dhabi Aviation signs LOI for two Q400 NextGen aircraft

Abu Dhabi Aviation LogoOn November 19th, 2013, Bombardier announced that Abu Dhabi Aviation signed a Letter of Intent for two Q400 NextGen aircraft. The airline is a longtime operator of Q-Series aircraft.

Abu Dhabi Aviation operates a fleet that includes one Q400 aircraft, one Dash 8/Q300 aircraft and two Dash 8/Q200 turboprops. The carrier’s main activities relate to the support of offshore oil, engineering and construction companies.

Bombardier aircraft in the Middle East and Africa include more than 200 Dash 8/Q-Series aircraft, CRJ regional jets and CSeries aircraft in service or on firm order.

Nok Air signs agreement for up to eight Q400 NextGens in extra capacity seating configuration

Nok Air LogoOn November 19th, 2013, Bombardier announced that Nok Air placed a firm order for two Q400 NextGen aircraft with options on an additional two aircraft and rights for another four aircraft. Nok Air will also be the launch customer for a new extra capacity seating option for the Q400 which will allow the aircraft to carry up to 86 passengers.

Nok Air will be the first airline to operate the Q400 NextGen aircraft in the Southeast Asia region.

Worldwide, Q400 and Q400 NextGen aircraft have logged over 4.7 million flight hours. The Q400 and Q400 NextGen program includes 50 customers and operators in over 30 countries on five continents around the world.