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"LA, NY, Chicago Airports to Be Ready for Big Airbus"
Tuesday May 18, 2004
LA, NY, Chicago Airports to Be Ready for Big Airbus
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Major airports in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago plan
to be ready for the mammoth Airbus A380 double decker passenger jet in late
2006, their operators said on Tuesday, playing down concerns raised by
airline Virgin Atlantic a day earlier.
Airports need to prepare double-decker passenger ramps and reinforce roads
and bridges to handle A380 flights that could carry as many as 800
passengers, changes that will cost billions of dollars in some cases.
"We are confident that LAX (Los Angeles International Airport) will be ready
to accommodate the A380 with the highest standards of safety when the first
airline begins using the aircraft at LAX in late 2006," operator Los Angeles
World Airports said in a statement.
That is several months after Singapore Airlines is due to take delivery of
the first A380 in the second quarter of 2006.
On Monday, Virgin Atlantic said it would postpone taking delivery of six
A380s, citing concern that LAX would not be ready and saying it needed time
to modify the all-new aircraft's cabin.
Virgin said on Tuesday, following the statement by the operator of Los
Angeles airport, that there was no change in its statement.
Los Angeles is a key destination for the airlines and lessors which have
ordered the long-haul plane.
Korean Air hopes to use the planes on its Seoul-Los Angeles route, for
example, to serve L.A.'s large Korean-American population.
Other practical routes would connect major cities like Tokyo and London with
New York, Chicago and Miami.
As many as 14 U.S. airports are preparing to accommodate the A380, including
New York's John F. Kennedy International, which has embraced the megajet as
a means to ease congested air traffic and reduce noise pollution with its
quieter engines.
"We need to adjust not by adding flights but by adding bigger aircraft,"
said Pasquale DiFulco, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and
New Jersey.
Last month the agency predicted the A380 would bring 1,040 jobs and $82
million in annual economic activity at JFK.
At Chicago's O'Hare, officials also expect to be ready for the A380, said
spokeswoman Monique Bond.
"We are looking into and making plans to be able to accept the aircraft,"
Bond said.
Airbus Chief Commercial Officer John Leahy told reporters at a forum in
Tokyo on Tuesday that no other airline had asked for a delay.
"Sometimes they ask for a month or two but nothing substantial," Leahy said.
Eleven airlines and lessors have ordered the A380, which seats 555
passengers in its standard configuration, supplanting rival Boeing Co's
long-serving 747 jumbo jet with 416 seats as the world's largest jetliner.
Airbus is owned by EADS, which has an 80 percent stake, and Britain's BAE
Systems, which owns the rest.
Improvements in Los Angeles and other cities have been
delayed by factors ranging from tight budgets to legal and political hurdles
to major new projects as well as security concerns in the wake of the Sept.
11, 2001, hijack attacks.
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