ICELANDIC ACMI (aircraft, crew maintenance and insurance) leasing and airfreight company bluebird Nordic will lease three Boeing 777-300ER aircraft in an effort to expand its widebody cargo ACMI operations.
Avia Solutions Group-owned Bluebird Nordic concluded the lease agreements at the end of December. At present, the aircraft are in passenger configuration but will be converted into cargo aircraft in 2024, reports London's Air Cargo News.
The Boeing 777-300ER is the world's largest twinjet aircraft. As a freighter, it is capable of carrying approximately one hundred tonnes of cargo and is generally considered the most economical long-haul freighter available.
'Through combined efforts, we have managed to secure widebody aircraft for cargo haulage from 2024. Until then, Bluebird will operate the aircraft listed in our AOC as 'preighters' and vip/corporate pax,' said Sigurour Agustsson, chief executive of Bluebird Nordic.
Two of the three aircraft can carry 60 tonnes of cargo as belly freight, but once converted will carry approximately 100 tonnes.
'If this goes as planned, we will likely add more widebodies to the Bluebird fleet,' says Gediminas Ziemelis, founder and chairman of the board of Avia Solutions Group. 'With this investment, we are firmly placing ourselves in the widebody cargo ACMI.'
At present, Bluebird has seven B737-400s, one B737-300 and one B737-800 cargo aircraft in operation.
Last year, Bluebird announced it planned to add 25 x B737-800 aircraft to the company's existing fleet by the end of 2024.
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Avia Solutions Group-owned Bluebird Nordic concluded the lease agreements at the end of December. At present, the aircraft are in passenger configuration but will be converted into cargo aircraft in 2024, reports London's Air Cargo News.
The Boeing 777-300ER is the world's largest twinjet aircraft. As a freighter, it is capable of carrying approximately one hundred tonnes of cargo and is generally considered the most economical long-haul freighter available.
'Through combined efforts, we have managed to secure widebody aircraft for cargo haulage from 2024. Until then, Bluebird will operate the aircraft listed in our AOC as 'preighters' and vip/corporate pax,' said Sigurour Agustsson, chief executive of Bluebird Nordic.
Two of the three aircraft can carry 60 tonnes of cargo as belly freight, but once converted will carry approximately 100 tonnes.
'If this goes as planned, we will likely add more widebodies to the Bluebird fleet,' says Gediminas Ziemelis, founder and chairman of the board of Avia Solutions Group. 'With this investment, we are firmly placing ourselves in the widebody cargo ACMI.'
At present, Bluebird has seven B737-400s, one B737-300 and one B737-800 cargo aircraft in operation.
Last year, Bluebird announced it planned to add 25 x B737-800 aircraft to the company's existing fleet by the end of 2024.
SeaNews Turkey