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The China Airlines Group (Chinese: 華航集團) is the organizational designation used by a conglomerate of transportation and associated service companies based in Taiwan, officially the Republic of China. The group is publicly listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange and is partially state-owned.
Its sister airlines include Mandarin Airlines, which operates flights to domestic and low-demand regional destinations, and Tigerair Taiwan, which is a low-cost carrier established by China Airlines and Singaporean airline group Tigerair Holdings but is now wholly owned by the China Airlines Group.
Caribbean Airlines: Trinidad and Tobago: 100% Cathay Pacific: Hong Kong: 6% Cayman Airways: Cayman Islands: 100% CEIBA Intercontinental: Equatorial Guinea [15] [16] China Airlines: Republic of China: 31.05% China Aviation Development Foundation (CADF) 8.64% National Development Fund (NDF) [17] Conviasa: Venezuela: 100% Croatia Airlines: Croatia ...
First, as both Delta and United Airlines have outlined recently, airlines have reduced capacity where necessary in response to overcapacity in the summer. 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks This High ...
China National Aviation Corporation (Group) and China National Aviation Company Limited logo, similar to the defunct company. China National Aviation Corporation was acted as a "window company" in the British Colony since 1984, [citation needed] even after the handover of Hong Kong back to China, and ceased to do business in Hong Kong 10 years later (on 10 August 2007).
Air China Boeing 747SP at Zürich Airport in 1992. Air China was established and commenced operations on 1 July 1988 as a result of the Chinese government's decision in late 1987 to split the operating divisions of Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC Airlines) into six separate airlines: Air China, China Eastern, China Southern, China Northern, China Southwest, and China Northwest.
This is a list of airlines which have a current Air Operator Certificate issued by the Civil Aviation Administration of China (Chinese: 中国民用航空局). All airlines listed below are based in Mainland China. For airlines of Hong Kong, Macau, see List of airlines of Hong Kong and List of airlines of Macau.
Later they were merged to form the People's Aviation Company of China in May 1952, and eventually became part of CAAC Airlines in June 1953. Today the original Convair 240 (with one engine missing) is on display at a Military Aviation Museum in Beijing. Liu left China in 1971 for Australia where he died in May 1973. [13]