Braathens Regional Aviation
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Founded | 1981 Parent company Braganza | | |||||
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Headquarters | Malmö, Sweden | ||||||
Key people |
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Website | flygbra.se |
Braathens Regional Aviation was
Previously it was known under the name Malmö Aviation and operated domestic routes in Sweden from its hub at
History
The company was established in 1981, operating as a flight training school and air charter company.[citation needed] In the late 1980s it began operating cargo services on behalf of TNT with BAe 146-200QT jet aircraft; and examples of the turboprop Fokker F27 Friendship and its derivatives the Fairchild F-27 and Fairchild Hiller FH-227.[5]
The company was sold to City Air Scandinavia on 11 February 1992. A new company Malmö Aviation Schedule was formed on 16 April 1993 under the ownership of Wiklund Inter Trade.
In September 2014, Malmö Aviation stated that it would no longer be the
In March 2016, the operational part of Malmö Aviation was merged into
In March 2017, Braathens Regional Aviation announced the postponement all of its orders for the Airbus A220, then known as Bombardier C-Series, indefinitely after a new Swedish ticket tax will be introduced which is expected to reduce passenger numbers.[8] In May 2019, Braathens announced the cancellation of their A220-order which consisted of five -100 and five -300 series aircraft.[9]
In 2020, the airline ceased all operations.[2] Its similar named sister companies Braathens Regional Airlines and Braathens Regional Airways continue to operate.
Destinations
Braathens Regional Aviation did not operate flights under its own name. Instead the aircraft were used to operate flights for sister airline
Fleet
As of March 2020, the Braathens Regional Aviation fleet consisted of the following aircraft, which were all operated for
Aircraft | In fleet | Orders | Passengers | Notes |
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Embraer 190
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3 | 2 | 106 | Operated for BRA Braathens Regional Airlines, wet-leased from German Regional Airlines[10] and returned in April 2020[11]
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Total | 12 |
See also
- Airlines
- Transport in Sweden
References
Citations
- ^ "History". Malmö Aviation. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
- ^ a b c ch-aviation.com - Braathens Regional Aviation retrieved 4 September 2022
- ^ "Inrikesflyget blir BRA – det innebär nya satsningen". Allt om Resor (in Swedish). Retrieved 7 March 2016.
- ^ "Malmö Aviation och Sverigeflyg blir BRA - Allt om Resor". Allt om Resor.
- ^ World Airline Directory (1989), p.103 retrieved 19 July 2016
- Aviation Week.
- ^ Idag lyfter Sveriges nya inrikesflyg – det är BRA för Malmö Archived 21 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine, 29 February 2016, BRA
- ^ aerotelegraph.com - BRA puts C-Series order on hold" (German) 2 March 2017
- ^ aerotelegraph.com - Braathens cancels A220 order" (German) 27 May 2019
- ^ "German Airways signed a long-term wet lease agreement with BRA (Sweden)". BoardingPass.news. 20 November 2019. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
- ^ airliners.de 6 April 2020
Bibliography
- Williams, George (1 April 1989). "World Airline Directory". Flight International. Vol. 135, no. 4158. London: Reed Business Publishing. pp. 30–133. ISSN 0015-3710.
External links
Media related to Braathens Regional Aviation at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (in Swedish)