List of Boeing 767 operators

The following is a list of past and current commercial operators of the Boeing 767, and any of its variants.

A Delta Air Lines 767-400ER in pink Breast Cancer Research Foundation livery. As at July 2016, Delta was the largest operator of the Boeing 767.

Airline operators at July 2016

There were 742 Boeing 767 aircraft in service as of July 2016, comprising 76 767-200s, 629 767-300s and 37 767-400s,[1] as listed by variant in the following table.

Airline 767-200 767-200ER 767-200ERSF 767-200SF 767-300 767-300ER 767-300F 767-400ER Total
21 Air 2 2
ABX Air 16 9 25
Aer Lingus 1 1
Aeronexus 1 1
AeroUnion 2 2
Air Algérie 3 3
Air Astana 3 3
Air Canada 15 15
Air Canada Rouge 17 17
Air Do 2 2 4
Air Japan 8 4 12
Air Niugini 2 2
Air Zimbabwe 2 2
All Nippon Airways 12 25 37
Amazon.com 7 7
American Airlines 40 40
Amerijet International 4 2 6
Asia Atlantic Airlines 2 2
Asiana Airlines 7 1 8
ASL Airlines Belgium 1 1
Atlas Air 5 4 4 13
Austrian Airlines 6 6
Azerbaijan Airlines 2 2
Blue Panorama Airlines 3 3
Boliviana de Aviación 3 3
British Airways 10 10
Camair-Co 1 1
Cargojet 1 3 5 9
Condor Flugdienst 16 16
DHL Air UK 4 4
Eritrean Airlines 1 1
EuroAtlantic Airways 6 1 7
Interair 1 1
Delta Air Lines 12 58 21 91
DHL International Aviation ME 4 4
Dynamic Airways 1 1 2 4
El Al 7 7
ECAir 1 1
Ethiopian Airlines 7 7
Express Freighters Australia 1 1
FedEx Express 35 35
Fly Jamaica Airways 1 1
Hainan Airlines 3 3
Hawaiian Airlines 1 7 8
Icelandair 4 4
Iraqi Airways 2 2
Japan Airlines 8 32 40
Jetairfly 1 1
Jordan Aviation 2 2
Kam Air 1 1
Katekavia 5 5
LATAM Airlines Argentina 3 3
LATAM Airlines Brazil 14 14
LATAM Airlines Chile 17 17
LATAM Airlines Colombia 3 3
LATAM Cargo 1 1
LATAM Cargo Chile 2 2
LATAM Cargo Colombia 1 1
Med-View Airline 1 1
Mega Maldives 4 4
Meridiana 1 3 4
MIAT Mongolian Airlines 3 3
NEOS 3 3
Nordwind Airlines 1 1
Omni Air International 2 6 8
Orient Thai Airlines 5 1 6
Pegas Fly 5 5
Polar Air Cargo 4 4
Privilege Style 1 1
Raya Airways 1 1
Royal Air Maroc 4 4
Royal Flight 2 2
S7 Airlines 2 2
Safi Airways 1 1
SBA Airlines 2 2
SF Airlines 2 2
Shanghai Airlines 4 2 6
Star Air 5 6 11
Sunday Airlines 1 1
TAM Cargo 3 3
Thomas Cook Airlines 3 3
Thomson Airways 3 3
Titan Airways 1 1
TUI Airlines Netherlands 1 1
TUIfly Nordic 2 2
Ukraine International Airlines 4 4
United Airlines 35 16 51
UPS Airlines 59 59
UTair Aviation 3 3
Uzbekistan Airways 6 2 8
VIM Airlines 1 1
Vision Airlines 1 1
West Atlantic 2 2
WestJet 4 4
Total 2 16 16 42 54 441 134 37 742

Data at July 31, 2016.[1]

Former airline operators

Africa

Cameroon
Egypt
Ghana
Mauritius
Mozambique
Namibia
Nigeria
South Africa
Tanzania
Zimbabwe

Americas

Argentina
  • LAPA - ceased operations
Aruba
Bolivia
Brazil
Canada
Colombia
El Salvador
Jamaica
Mexico
Peru
United States of America
Uruguay
  • PLUNA - ceased operations July 5, 2012
Venezuela

Asia

Bahrain
Bangladesh
Brunei
China
India
Israel
Kuwait
Macau
Mongolia
Nepal
Oman
Taiwan
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Turkmenistan
United Arab Emirates
Vietnam

Europe

Austria
Belgium
  • CityBird - ceased operations October, 2001
  • Sobelair - ceased operations January 19, 2004
Bulgaria
France
Germany
Hungary
Italy
Latvia
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Russia
Spain
Sweden
  • Swefly - ceased operations in 2006
  • SAS
Switzerland
Ukraine
United Kingdom

Oceania

Australia
  • Ansett - ceased operations March 4, 2002
  • Australian Airlines - ceased operations July 28, 2006
  • Qantas - Retired Last Flight 27 December 2014 Operated by VH-OGL as QF767 MEL to SYD Qantas had 41 aircraft from lease and owned 7 767-200ERs, 7 767-336ER from British Airways and 27 767-338ER
New Zealand
Samoa

Current government and military operators

Azerbaijan
Bahrain
  • Bahrain Royal Flight - one 767-400ER
Belarus
  • Belarus Government one 767-300ER

Brazil

Brunei
  • Brunei Government - one 767-200ER
Colombia
Chile
Djibouti
  • Djibouti Government - one 767-200ER
Italy
Japan
Turkmenistan
  • Turkmenistan Government - one 767-300ER
Uzbekistan

References

  1. 1 2 Thisdell, Dan; Fafard, Antoine (31 July 2016). "World Airliner Census 2016". Flightglobal Insight. Flight International. Flightglobal (published 9 August 2016).
  2. "C-767 é o novo avião de transporte da FAB". Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  3. Official website Aeronautica Militare Archived 2015-03-25 at the Wayback Machine.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.