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Opened on April 27, 1966, the airport serves as a hub for Philippine Airlines, and as an operating base for Cebu Pacific, Philippines AirAsia, and Sunlight Air. The airport is managed by the Mactan–Cebu International Airport Authority and operated by the GMR–Megawide Cebu Airport Corporation.
The airline resumed its Manila–Singapore flights on August 31, 2006, [20] and launched a direct flight from Cebu to Singapore on October 23. It was the first low-cost airline to serve the Cebu-Singapore-Cebu sector, [21] and competing directly with Singapore Airlines subsidiary SilkAir, the only Philippine carrier serving the route for years until Philippine Airlines resumed direct service ...
Aviation Partnership (Philippines) Corporation is Cebu Pacific third-line maintenance. It was a former joint venture of SIA Engineering Company (51%) and Cebu Pacific Air (49%) until November 2020 when Cebu Pacific decide to take 100% ownership of the company. It provides line maintenance, light aircraft checks, technical ramp handling, and ...
Cebu: Mactan–Cebu International Airport: Base [1] Dumaguete: Sibulan Airport [1] Tagbilaran: Bohol–Panglao International Airport [1] Tagbilaran Airport: Airport closed: Philippines (Davao Region) Davao: Francisco Bangoy International Airport: Base [1] Philippines (Eastern Visayas) Calbayog: Calbayog Airport: Terminated [a] Catarman ...
On December 18, 2008, Cathay Pacific launched its mobile Check-in service, including the delivery of the barcode to the mobile phone. [24] On February 24, 2009, Austrian Airlines begun offering paperless boarding passes to customers on selected routes. [25] On April 16, 2009, SAS joined the mobile boarding pass bandwagon. [26]
The MARS-1 train ticket reservation system was designed and planned in the 1950s by the Japanese National Railways' R&D Institute, now the Railway Technical Research Institute, with the system eventually being produced by Hitachi in 1958. [6]
Cebgo, Inc., operating as Cebgo or Cebu Pacific Cargo (stylized in all lowercase as cebgo), is the regional brand cargo airline of Cebu Pacific. It is the successor company to SEAIR, Inc. , which previously operated as South East Asian Airlines and Tigerair Philippines . [ 4 ]
On October 20, 2017, Cebu Pacific launched the airport as its seventh hub, with its regional subsidiary Cebgo adding flights to Caticlan and Dumaguete from the airport. [ 18 ] [ 19 ] Philippine Airlines opened a Mabuhay Lounge at the airport in January 2018, but has been closed since March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic .