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cigar
9th Feb 2006, 17:21
Delta's official press release. Awesome news!!!

FOR IMMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION

CONTACT: Corporate Communications
404-715-2554

Delta Air Lines Announces Service between Atlanta and Africa

Customers will enjoy service to Johannesburg, South Africa; Dakar, Senegal
this December, given required government approvals

Delta to be only U.S. airline to operate scheduled service
between the United States and Africa

ATLANTA, Feb. 9, 2006 – Delta Air Lines – the United States’ fastest growing international carrier – today announced that it is seeking the necessary government approvals to become the only U.S. airline to operate scheduled service between the United States and Africa. In a filing with the U.S. Department of Transportation, Delta is requesting government approvals to begin the first ever Delta-operated service between the world’s largest airline hub in Atlanta and the burgeoning South African city of Johannesburg, with an intermediate stop in Dakar, Senegal, effective in December 2006.
In a press conference held today at The Jimmy Carter Library and Museum in Atlanta, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young joined other Georgia business and civic leaders to applaud Delta’s efforts to connect Atlanta – the seventh-largest home to South African-born residents of the United States – the business capital of South Africa.
“I am proud that Delta has decided to initiate service to South Africa and become the only U.S. carrier to serve the continent,” Young said. “Delta’s service between Atlanta and South Africa promises to be one of the most successful routes on the planet due to the reach and convenience of Delta’s Atlanta hub. I look forward to flying Atlanta’s hometown airline non-stop to Africa.”
Added Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, "For many years, Delta Air Lines has been a faithful supporter of the city's efforts to raise its stature as a best in class, global city. Through the strategic partnerships and direct flight routes to international destinations in Asia, Europe, North, South and Central America originating from the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Delta has helped foster the city's international, economic and cultural ties and has expanded Atlanta's access to the world."

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With the new service, Delta will enter a new continent for the first time since its historic expansion into South America in 1997 and will grow to offer customers more than 60 international destinations from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport by December – up more than 50 from the number of destinations offered just 10 years ago. Delta customers traveling to or from Africa via Atlanta will have convenient connecting opportunities to more than 140 North American cities.
“Delta’s new service to Africa will mark many firsts for our hometown of Atlanta and for our customers, including the first non-stop service between Atlanta and Senegal on the West African coast, and the first Delta-operated service from Atlanta to Johannesburg,” said Jim Whitehurst, Delta’s chief operating officer. “We encourage our customers to make their support for Delta’s first service to Africa known to help ensure a speedy approval from the U.S. Department of Transportation for this historic new route.”
Delta’s proposed service between Atlanta and Johannesburg via Dakar will be available for sale to customers as soon as Delta receives required approvals from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Delta plans to offer daily service to Africa with the Boeing 777 aircraft featuring 50 Business Class and 218 Economy Class seats. Customers flying to or from Africa in Delta’s award-winning BusinessElite cabin would enjoy access to the airline’s personalized dining service, which allows them to enjoy award-winning wines and cuisine at anytime during the flight when it’s most convenient for them. Additionally, beginning later this year, Delta will provide customers with a more comfortable and entertaining international BusinessElite experience offering all-leather seats and state-of-the-art digital technology.
“As evidenced by our recent growth in most every corner of the globe, Delta is making decisive moves to establish itself not only as the U.S. airline of choice but as a global leader,” Whitehurst said. “We intend to offer customers service to more worldwide destinations than any other airline and to distinguish our service with a mix of style and hospitality that is being defined by our enhanced product and network offerings. We look forward to introducing our customers to a series of product enhancements this year such refreshed BusinessElite seats, refurbished Economy class cabins, a new domestic long-haul product featuring live TV, and more stylish uniforms that will redefine Delta to our customers around the globe.”
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Delta’s proposed service to Africa is the latest in series of more than 50 new international routes added or announced by Delta in the last year as part of the largest international expansion in the airline’s history. During 2006 Delta will offer more flights between the United States and destinations across Europe, India and Israel than any other airline; will continue to be one of the fastest growing carrier to destinations across Latin America and the Caribbean, with more than 35 destinations added or announced since 2005; and will be the only U.S. carrier to offer customers service to nine unique destinations across the Atlantic: Kiev, Ukraine; Moscow, Russia; Istanbul, Turkey; Budapest, Hungary; Athens, Greece; Nice, France; Stuttgart, Germany; Mumbai, India (via Paris); and Chennai, India (via Paris), in addition to proposed service to Dakar, Senegal and Johannesburg, South Africa.
Separately, Delta also announced today that it has received U.S. Department of Transportation approval to add non-stop flights between Atlanta and a seventh country in South America with new daily service between Atlanta and Quito, Ecuador, with continuing service to Quayaquil. The new service, subject to Ecuadorian government approval, will begin on June 8 and will expand to 14 the number of capital cities served by Delta throughout South and Central America.
For more information about Delta’s new international routes or to book tickets, visit delta.com.
Delta Air Lines (Other OTC: DALRQ) is one of the world’s fastest growing international carriers with more than 50 new international routes added or announced in the last year. Delta offers daily flights to 503 destinations in 94 countries on Delta, Song, Delta Shuttle, the Delta Connection carriers and its worldwide partners. In summer 2006, Delta plans to offer customers more destinations and departures between the U.S., Europe, India and Israel than any global airline, including service on 11 new transatlantic routes from its Atlanta and New York-JFK hubs. Delta also is a major carrier to Mexico, South and Central America and the Caribbean, with more than 35 routes announced, added or applied to serve since Jan. 1, 2005. Delta's marketing alliances also allow customers to earn and redeem SkyMiles on more than 14,000 flights offered by SkyTeam and other partners. Delta is a founding member of SkyTeam, a global airline alliance that provides customers with extensive worldwide destinations, flights and services. Customers can check in for flights, print boarding passes and check flight status at delta.com.
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Sean

Glassos
9th Feb 2006, 17:38
It is good news for us Seffricans living and working in the US. I only wish my employer (Continental) had jumped on this first. My question is this, was SAA expecting this. What of the codeshare with DL? I know SAA recently signed a codeshare with United through Dulles but a lot more traffic transits Atlanta. I don't think ATL handles enough traffic to service two widebodies a day to SA.

Mike

Afriviation
9th Feb 2006, 18:17
damn, those guys will surely need some proper briefing on the intricacies of flying in Africa e.g 126.9 and the like. I hope their pilots don't go on strike protesting against unsafe skies in Africa. SAA should be on the guard for this, this might be the end of a long lucrative monopoly to and from North America. Perhaps this might improve tourism in our shores as some of these Yanks might consider a Safari in SA if their own trusted airline flies there.

cigar
9th Feb 2006, 18:42
SA will be ceasing their ATL ops as soon as they have joined StarAlliance 100% officially - rumour of a switch to ORD instead of ATL (apparently there are massess of Saffas living in and around Chicago). DL used to codeshare with SA on the JNB-ATL route and so should have a pretty good idea of demand, yield etc for the route.

surely not
9th Feb 2006, 21:54
Isn't it amazing what a bankrupt US airline can achieve under Chapter 11:rolleyes: :rolleyes:
No money to pay creditors etc but they can expand and expand! Level playing field I don't think so :mad: :mad:

RobertS975
1st Apr 2006, 23:20
It seems to me that to be really successful with the newly announced routes to DKR and JNB, Delta needs to establish codeshare relationships in both cities to allow onward travel. At DKR, obvious candidates include Kenya Airways, a future SkyTeam associate member, and Air Senegal, a subsidiary of Royal Air Maroc, which has close ties to AF and which already codeshares with DL from JFK to Casablanca.

I could not comment about potential codeshare partners ex-JNB.

MarkD
2nd Apr 2006, 06:20
Well it's easy for DL to be the only US-Africa airline when they, CO and others are blocking VK's DoT application, isn't it?

B200Drvr
2nd Apr 2006, 06:38
If any of you think the onboard service on a long haul flight on SAA is bad, you are in for the shock of your lives when you fly Delta. I flew them on a international every two weeks for two years after connecting from the SAA flight in ATL. They really are close to the worlds worse airline when it comes to service.

Deskjocky
3rd Apr 2006, 08:49
This is the DL reaction to SAA joining STAR- they told SAA of their intentions the day after the official announcement SAA made re STAR. Delta seem to have taken the whole STAR thing very personally with lots of petty "reprisals" like quadrupling SAA handling charges at JFK and ATL overnight, increasing the price (doubling) they charge SAA for add-ons to other US cities. Whilst I understand their feelings the way in which they have conducted themselves is more akin pouty teenagers. Its just business guys.

Word is that ORD will come on line later this year as SAA needs the connectivity UA has over this gateway- then its going to be an interesting to see who gets more traffic over their respective hub. Bearing in mind SAA also operates into JFK and IAD and with Delta only operating a B767, SAA will have a lot more capacity into the US. I guess it will all boil down to who has better feed at the best price. Time will tell.

cigar
3rd Apr 2006, 19:07
...and with Delta only operating a B767, SAA will have a lot more capacity into the US.
DL will operate a B772ER on the route, not a B763ER as initially stated in the press release.
I agree about their (DL's) 'childish behavior' though....

B Sousa
3rd Apr 2006, 21:46
DL/SAA have been partners in the past. I have done the Delta to ATL, then SAA to Africa. Got screwed by Delta and flight on SAA was OK, go figure. As some have said the Delta pilots will get some serious eye-openers.....
Not sure that I need to stop in Dakar.........

Deskjocky
4th Apr 2006, 07:28
The stop in Dakar is probably nessesary for their business case for the route as Im sure they are concerned with SAA's response- at least they can serve a secondary market if the JNB route gets very competitive. Interestingly they have also applied for traffic rights for Dakar Joburg- not shy they chaps! that should become a nice little political squabble!

The one good spin off is that the whole DL thing as got old airways park into gear, the whole US stratergy has been reviewed- all sorts of analysis being done, MIA, ORD, even LAX. SAA has 3 gateways of its choosing into the US, the only one that will definitely stay is JFK, IAD may survive the chop initially in an attempt not to change everything at the same time.

AF022
5th Apr 2006, 03:07
Is there a consideration of dumping IAD?

Deskjocky
5th Apr 2006, 06:42
There has been a lot of work done on the route, but the possibilty is definitely there, essentially its future depends on what is decided re a new hub.