
Flydubai
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- IATA Code
- FZ
- ICAO Code
- FDB
- Website
- http://www.flydubai.com
- Main hub
- Dubai International Airport
- Country
- United Arab Emirates
- Business model
- Low Cost Carrier
A low cost airline based at Dubai International Airport, flydubai operates passenger services to destinations within the Middle East as well as in Africa, Asia and Europe. Whilst not part of the Emirates Group, flydubai was founded by Emirates Chairman Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum.
Location of Flydubai main hub (Dubai International Airport)
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334 total articles
Flydubai adds Taif as seventh Saudi Arabian destination
Najaf completes Flydubai's Iraq quartet
flyDubai adds Baghdad as third Iraq destination
flydubai Cargo expects to transport 1500 tonnes of cargo per month
Flydubai announces its 50th destination
Flydubai names Taif as seventh destination in Saudi Arabia
Ethiopian Airlines launches third daily Addis Ababa-Dubai service
Saudi Arabia to open domestic market to foreign carriers
flydubai signs payment agreement with Al Ansari Exchange
UAE and Cote D’Ivoire sign bilateral air services agreement
UAE and Ireland sign bilateral air services agreement
flydubai doubles Iraqi network with two new routes
Sudan Airways: Khartoum could become aviation hub
flydubai takes delivery of new 737-800, 7000th 737 delivered by Boeing
Air Asia looking to commence services from Bhubaneswar
6,131 total articles
flydubai relocating to new Dubai mega-airport in 2012
Dubai will see the Al Maktoum International Airport (DWC) finally swing into full operation in 2012, when local LCC flydubai shifts its operations to the new airport next year. The airport is already playing home to a number of cargo carriers and receiving charter and business flights, but the arrival of a scheduled passenger airline will be a major milestone.
Al Maktoum Airport is another example of just how ambitious Dubai’s plans are for its aviation sector. The massive infrastructure project at Al Maktoum was originally envisaged with an eye looking two to three decades into the future. The USD35 billion airport master plan called for the construction of six parallel runways along with passenger terminals with a combined capacity for 160 million passengers p/a and around 12 million tonnes of cargo. An associated free-trade zone, aerospace park, logistics area and even a residential zone complete the project.
Middle East fleet outlook: widebody popularity increases, Airbus to grow market share
The 163 aircraft ordered at last week's Dubai Airshow will keep the Middle East region with almost as many aircraft on order as in service. While the show was marked by Emirates' order for 50 B777s, adding to the carrier's all-widebody fleet, widebody aircraft currently comprise just over half the region's fleet but are set to grow. Widebodies comprise more than 70% of aircraft on order in the region.
Boeing and Airbus will see their market share increase, but Airbus more so, eventually accounting for more than half of all aircraft in the region and Boeing accounting for just over a third. These latest aircraft orders add to an already substantial order backlog by airlines in the region. Most of the orders are concentrated in the hands of the Gulf region’s three largest sixth-freedom airlines: Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways and Emirates. The 163 orders from the show were from airlines and leasing companies and had a combined total value at list prices of just under USD32 billion.
More Middle Eastern airlines poised for profits
Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways and flydubai are majority state-owned – 100% for Etihad and flydubai, 50% for Qatar – and all three have been among the brightest growth stories in a region already noted for its rapid development.
Now the three look set to join the ranks of Middle Eastern airlines that are consistently profitable.
State-owned carriers in the region typically don’t perform well when it comes to their bottom lines. According to IATA, airlines in the Middle East as a group have had just three years of profitability in the last seven.
After airlines across the region reported a combined profit of USD900 million in 2010, regional profitability returned after a four-year absence. The outlook for 2011 and 2012 is strongly positive, even with the impact of the Arab Spring.
Middle Eastern LCCs driving growth into Eastern Europe, Russia and CIS
Russia, the CIS nations and Central and Eastern Europe have been receiving a great deal of attention from Middle East-based carriers in recent months. Full service and low-cost carriers have announced or added a flurry of routes into Eastern European destinations over the past few weeks. Airlines in the Middle East are looking to tap into the underserved region, which is still showing strong economic growth despite troubles in several European markets and strong growth in business and tourism traffic.
Homegrown LCCs Air Arabia and flydubai are leading a push into the regions, but so too is Qatar Airways. Additionally, Oman Air plans to launch services to Moscow. While Middle Eastern carriers have long dominated traffic into western Europe, they now comprise the majority of traffic between the Middle East and central Europe, eastern Europe, Russia and CIS.
Dubai eyeing London Heathrow’s top spot for international traffic
Ten years ago, Dubai International Airport was only the 99th largest airport in the world in terms of passenger traffic, sitting between Shanghai and Mumbai. Last year it was the world’s 13th busiest, behind Madrid Barajas and ahead of New York JFK.
UAE adopts new organisational structure to reform air traffic management
The UAE General Civil Aviation Authority has developed a new organisational structure to transform its management of flight management control operations and safety and security quality standards. GCAA launched its Comprehensive Transformation Programme in 2010 and has already developed new financial and strategic plans.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.




