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  2. Volaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volaris

    In April 2009, Volaris announced the start of U.S.-bound flights out of Toluca and Guadalajara (initially to Los Angeles and Oakland) to feed into the hubs of Southwest Airlines. After Mexicana de Aviación's shutdown, Volaris took over many of Mexicana's international destinations and flights from its focus city, Guadalajara. The airline began ...

  3. List of airlines of Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airlines_of_Mexico

    The airline industry in Mexico began in 1921 with Compañía Mexicana de Transportación Aérea in Mexico City. Later known as Mexicana de Aviación, it was the world's 4th oldest airline, and ceased operations on August 28, 2010. And is set to resume operations late 2023. Aeroméxico is currently Mexico's largest airline.

  4. Mexicana de Aviación (2023–present) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexicana_de_Aviación_(2023...

    Mexicana de Aviación (legally Aerolínea del Estado Mexicano, S.A. de C.V.) [3] is a Mexican state owned airline established on 15 June 2023. It operates under the historical commercial name Mexicana de Aviación after the government acquired the former airline's brands and assets on 9 August 2023.

  5. Aeroméxico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeroméxico

    In 1996, Cintra was created to prevent the two main carriers from going bankrupt. Some Boeing 757s of Aeroméxico's original renovation program were transferred to Mexicana and Aeroperú. The market and the airline recovered between 1996 and 1998; eight McDonnell Douglas MD80s were leased back along with two Boeing 767-200ERs.

  6. Mexicana de Aviación (1921–2010) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexicana_de_Aviación_(1921...

    Compañía Mexicana de Aviación S.A. de C.V., usually shortened to Mexicana de Aviación, was Mexico's oldest airline and one of the oldest continuously single-branded airlines, inaugurated in 1921. It was Mexico's biggest airline and flag carrier before ceasing operations on August 28, 2010, leaving competitor Aeroméxico as a de facto monopoly.

  7. Viva (airline) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viva_(airline)

    Viva Aerobus fares were intended to undercut traditional Mexican carriers by up to 50 percent, in a change of the industry that started with the arrival of the country's second generation of low-cost airlines (Avolar, MexicanaClick, Interjet, Volaris) and the privatization of Mexicana de Aviación, one of the

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