Azur Air

Azur Air
IATA ICAO Callsign
ZF KTK AZUR AIR
Founded 1992 (as Katekavia)
17 Dec 2014 (re-branded to Azur Air)
Hubs Vnukovo International Airport
Subsidiaries Azur Air Ukraine
Fleet size 20
Company slogan Fly to rest!
Parent company Anex Tourism Group
Headquarters Moscow, Russia, Russia
Key people Alexander Zosymov, General Director
Website azurair.com

Azur Air (Russian: Азур Эйр), formerly Katekavia, is a charter airline and former regional airline in Russia. Initially it was based out of Krasnoyarsk Cheremshanka Airport, the domestic airport serving Krasnoyarsk, and its destinations were all within the Krasnoyarsk Krai.[1] Nowadays it mainly serves leisure and some domestic destinations.

History

Katekavia

The airline started operations in 1995 and operates regional flights out of Krasnoyarsk Cheremshanka Airport and Krasnoyarsk-Yemelyanovo Airport.[2][3] The airline also operates charter services to Siberia and Yakutia. It carried around 122,000 passengers in 2009,[4] and in 2010 started to acquire larger aircraft, mainly the Tupolev Tu-134. As of 3 April 2014, it had three Tupolev Tu-134s.[3]

In April 2014 the airline commenced scheduled flights between larger Krasnoyarsk-Yemelyanovo Airport and further cities in Siberia: Surgut and Tomsk. The airline received international media and social media attention in 2014, when a video emerged of passengers on a scheduled flight from Igarka to Krasnoyarsk disembarking pre-departure to push their plane in temperatures of minus 52 degrees Celsius after its chassis froze.[5]

Azur Air

In 2015, Katekavia was rebranded as a leisure carrier and renamed Azur Air.[6] In December 2015, it has been confirmed that former owner UTair Aviation sold Azur Air to Turkish tourism company Anex Tourism Group[7] which also bought Azur Air Ukraine, the former UTair-Ukraine, a few weeks earlier.[7]

In February 2018, the Russian aviation authority Rosaviatsia announced that Azur Air faces a suspension of its operational licence by 20 March 2018 if the carrier does not resolve alleged safety violations by then. As this would lead to the shut down of all flight operations, Russian tourism agency Rozturizm advised tour operators to not sell tickets on Azur Air for the time being.[8] All restrictions by RosAviatsiya and RosTourism were lifted on 20 March 2018 as a result of controls on technical and documental details.

Destinations

Katekavia Antonov An-24RV

As of July 2018, Azur Air operates to the following destinations:[9][10]

City Country Airport Notes
AgadirMoroccoAgadir–Al Massira AirportSeasonal charter
AntalyaTurkeyAntalya AirportSeasonal charter
ArkhangelskRussiaTalagi AirportSeasonal charter
BangkokThailandSuvarnabhumi AirportSeasonal charter
BarcelonaSpainBarcelona–El Prat AirportSeasonal charter
BarnaulRussiaBarnaul AirportSeasonal charter
BelgorodRussiaBelgorod International AirportSeasonal charter
BodrumTurkeyMilas–Bodrum AirportSeasonal charter
BurgasBulgariaBurgas AirportSeasonal charter
Cam RanhVietnamCam Ranh International AirportSeasonal
CancúnMexicoCancún International AirportSeasonal charter
ChelyabinskRussiaChelyabinsk AirportSeasonal charter
ColomboSri LankaBandaranaike International AirportSeasonal charter
DalamanTurkeyDalaman AirportSeasonal
DjerbaTunisiaDjerba–Zarzis International AirportSeasonal charter
DubaiUnited Arab EmiratesAl Maktoum International AirportSeasonal charter
DubaiUnited Arab EmiratesDubai International Airport
EnfidhaTunisiaEnfidha-Hammamet International AirportSeasonal charter
GoaIndiaGoa International AirportSeasonal charter
HeraklionGreeceHeraklion International AirportSeasonal charter
IrkutskRussiaInternational Airport IrkutskSeasonal charter
KaliningradRussiaKhrabrovo AirportSeasonal charter
KalugaRussiaKaluga (Grabtsevo) AirportSeasonal charter
KazanRussiaKazan International AirportSeasonal charter
KemerovoRussiaKemerovo International AirportSeasonal charter
KrabiThailandKrabi International AirportSeasonal charter
KrasnodarRussiaKrasnodar International AirportSeasonal charter
KrasnoyarskRussiaYemelyanovo International AirportSeasonal charter
LarnacaCyprusLarnaca International AirportSeasonal
Mineralnye VodyRussiaMineralnye Vody AirportSeasonal charter
MonastirTunisiaMonastir Habib Bourguiba International AirportSeasonal charter
MoscowRussiaVnukovo International AirportBase
MurmanskRussiaMurmansk AirportSeasonal charter
Nha TrangVietnamCam Ranh International Airport
NizhnekamskRussiaBegishevo AirportSeasonal charter
NizhnevartovskRussiaNizhnevartovsk AirportSeasonal charter
Nizhny NovgorodRussiaStrigino International AirportSeasonal charter
NovokuznetskRussiaSpichenkovo AirportSeasonal charter
NovosibirskRussiaTolmachevo AirportBase
OrenburgRussiaOrenburg International AirportSeasonal charter
OmskRussiaOmsk Tsentralny AirportSeasonal charter
Palma de MallorcaSpainPalma de Mallorca AirportSeasonal charter
PattayaThailandU-Tapao International AirportSeasonal charter
PermRussiaPerm International AirportBase
PhuketThailandPhuket AirportSeasonal charter
Phu QuocVietnamPhu Quoc International AirportSeasonal charter
Puerto PlataDominican RepublicGregorio Luperón International AirportSeasonal charter
Punta CanaDominican RepublicPunta Cana International Airport
RhodesGreeceRhodes International AirportSeasonal charter
Rostov-on-DonRussiaPlatov International AirportSeasonal charter
Saint PetersburgRussiaPulkovo AirportBase
SamaraRussiaKurumoch International AirportSeasonal charter
SanyaChinaSanya Phoenix International AirportSeasonal[11]
SurgutRussiaSurgut International AirportSeasonal charter
SyktyvkarRussiaSyktyvkar AirportSeasonal charter
TenerifeSpainTenerife South AirportSeasonal charter
TivatMontenegroTivat AirportSeasonal charter
TomskRussiaBogashevo AirportSeasonal charter
TyumenRussiaRoshchino International AirportSeasonal charter
UfaRussiaUfa International AirportSeasonal charter
UlyanovskRussiaUlyanovsk Vostochny AirportSeasonal charter
VaraderoCubaJuan Gualberto Gómez Airport
VolgogradRussiaVolgograd International AirportSeasonal charter
VoronezhRussiaVoronezh International AirportSeasonal charter
YekaterinburgRussiaKoltsovo AirportBase

Fleet

Azur Air Boeing 777-300ER in special livery

The Azur Air fleet consists of the following aircraft as of July 2018:[12]

Azur Air fleet
Aircraft In Service Orders Passengers Notes
C Y Total
Boeing 737-800 6 189 189
Boeing 757-200 8 238 238
Boeing 767-300ER 7 336 336
Boeing 777-300ER 1 3[13] 42 386 428 3 more to be leased from Emirates by 2019.
Total 22 3

Accidents and incidents

Crash site of Katekavia Flight 9357
  • On 3 August 2010, a Katekavia Antonov An-24 crashed on approach to Igarka Airport, killing twelve people. The crash was caused by pilot error. As a result of the crash, the Russian government started to investigate how Katekavia operated their flights.[14]

See also

References

  1. "Авиакомпания «КАТЭКАВИА»: регулярные и чартерные перевозки по России, доставка грузов, самолёты в аренду". Katekavia.ru. 4 July 2012. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
  2. "Katekavia". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
  3. 1 2 "russianplanes.net ✈ наша авиация". russianplanes.net. 3 April 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  4. Death toll in Russia's East Siberia passenger jet crash rises to 12 (Update-4), RIAN, 2010-08-02
  5. "Passengers forced to push their frozen plane in Siberia". Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  6. "Siberian Sun". Airliner World: 8. July 2015.
  7. 1 2 ch-aviation.com - Russia's UTair Group offloads Azur Air unit to Turkey's ATG 7 December 2015
  8. ch-aviation.com - Russia's tourism body warns against selling Azur Air tickets 27 February 2018
  9. "Fight map". azurair.com. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  10. "Flights". anextour.com. 14 July 2018.
  11. "Russian charter Azur Air to start flights to China". atwonline. 27 July 2016.
  12. "Fleet". azurair.com. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  13. https://www.ch-aviation.com/portal/news/67875-russias-azur-air-adds-first-of-four-b777-300ers
  14. "Crash: Katekavia AN24 at Igarka on Aug 3rd 2010, impacted ground short of runway". Aviation Herald. 2010-08-02. Retrieved 2010-08-02.

Media related to Azur Air at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.