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New ash inspection routines approved by the authorities

Direct News Source

21-Apr-2010 Norwegian is pleased that the authorities are now opening the airspace to normal flight operations and is committed to operating a normal schedule as soon as possible.

The airline has put in place stringent technical aircraft inspection routines for detecting volcanic ash. These procedures were approved by the Civil Aviation Authority - Norway on Tuesday evening. During a brief period, production will be below normal after which all flights will depart as previously scheduled, domestic flights within Scandinavia as well as to European destinations, provided that the airspace is kept open. At the same time, Norwegian will continue to fly home passengers stranded far from Scandinavia. Safety always comes first

"Safety is Norwegians number-one priority, and we will never operate flights at the expense of safety. I am pleased that the aviation authorities have decided to lift the restrictions so we can now operate normally," said Bjørn Kjos, CEO of Norwegian. "Just as we never fly in areas of heavy turbulence or icing, we will, of course, never fly in areas of volcanic ash." Approved inspection routines

Norwegian had new inspection routines approved by the Civil Aviation Authority - Norway on Tuesday evening. "We are monitoring the situation closely and already have in place very strict routines for technical inspection and maintenance to detect potential volcanic ash," said Kjos. Stranded passengers brought home

"The closure of the airspace has been a heavy strain on our passengers. Thousands of passengers were, and still are, stranded abroad. I am happy that we are now able to fly them home," said Kjos. In recent days Norwegian has brought home over two thousand passengers from Malaga, Las Palmas, Alicante, Turkey, Crete, Cyprus and Lanzarote. The airline is continuing its effort to bring even more stranded passengers back to Scandinavia. Press contact numbers: +46 7352222242 and +47 48994440 Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, commercially branded "Norwegian," is a public low-cost airline noted on the Oslo Stock Exchange. The company is the second largest airline in Scandinavia, and has a route portfolio that stretches across Europe into North Africa and the Middle East. With competitive prices and customer friendly solutions and service, the company has experienced significant growth over the previous years. With more than 10.7 million passengers in 2009, Norwegian is the 4th largest low-cost airline in Europe. The turnover in 2009 was in excess of NOK 7.3 billion. Norwegian currently operates 52 aircraft on 230 routes to 91 destinations and employes approximately 2 000 people.