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By April 1934 (), Berlin, Hamburg and Liverpool were already part of the European route network. [8] In May that year, KLM became the first airline that linked Continental Europe with the North of England, when the Amsterdam–Hull route was inaugurated; [9] the Amsterdam–Liverpool service was re-routed via Doncaster in mid-1936. [10]
KLM is the first airline to offer self-service transfer kiosks on its European and intercontinental routes for passengers connecting through Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. [206] The kiosks enable connecting passengers to view flight details of connecting flights, to change seat assignments or upgrade to a more comfortable seat.
On 5 May 2004, Air France-KLM was created by the mutually agreed merger between Air France and Netherlands-based KLM. As a result of the deal, the French government's share of Air France was reduced from 54.4% (of the former Air France) to 44% (of the combined airline). Its share was subsequently reduced to 25%, and later to 17.6%.
In March 2016, KLM Cityhopper became the largest European operator of the Embraer E-Jet family, with 30 Embraer 190s in service as of December 2015 and an order for 17 Embraer 175 jets. KLM Cityhopper now operates one of the youngest regional jet fleets in the world after the Fokker 70 was retired from operation.
This is a list of airlines currently operating in the Netherlands. Scheduled airlines ... KLM: 1919 KLM Cityhopper: WA: ... List of defunct airlines of Europe; List ...
The following is a list of the largest airlines in Europe by total scheduled and chartered passengers, in millions. The list includes companies classified as European by the IATA. The order of the chart and its completion goes only up to the year 2023.
The airline is now to be positioned as Air France-KLM's low-cost brand for the Netherlands and France. [7] In February 2017, Transavia announced that it would shut down its base at Munich Airport by late October 2017 after only a year of service due to a change in their business strategy and negative economic outlook. [8]
KLM UK (styled as KLM uk) was the brand name of a British airline subsidiary of the Dutch KLM, which operated services within the UK and between the UK and the Netherlands using ATR-72, Fokker 50 and Fokker 100 aircraft. KLM UK had its headquarters in the Stansted House on the grounds of London Stansted Airport in Stansted Mountfitchet, Essex. [1]