Eurofly
IATA ICAO Callsign
GJ EEZ E-FLY
Founded26 May 1989 (1989-05-26)
Ceased operations28 February 2010 (2010-02-28)
(merged with Meridiana to form Meridiana Fly)
Operating bases
Fleet size41
Destinations41 (combined figure for Meridiana and Eurofly)
HeadquartersMilan, Italy
A Eurofly Douglas DC-9 in the original livery at Dublin Airport.
A Eurofly Airbus A319 seen in 2006.

Eurofly was a privately owned airline based in Milan, Italy.[1] Listed on MTA Stock Exchange and controlled by Meridiana, it was Italy's leading carrier in the leisure flights market and mainly operated international, medium to long haul, point-to-point flights.

The medium-haul activity was centered mainly on operations to Egypt and the Red Sea Riviera, Spain and Greece. The long haul included some of Italians’ preferred tropical destinations like the Maldives and Sri Lanka or Africa. Furthermore, during the summer season, Eurofly operated non-stop scheduled flights to New York City, exploiting the reverse seasonality of if compared to tropical destinations and focusing on incoming traffic to Italy. The company slogan was The Italian [air]way of life.

In 2010, the airline merged with Meridiana to form Meridiana Fly.

History

The airline was established on 26 May 1989 with the aim of selling medium-haul flights to tour operators. Eurofly started its operations on 26 February 1990. It was set up with a 45% shareholding by Alitalia in response to the needs of the flag carrier to develop the leisure travel market. The original shareholding was divided between Alitalia (45%), Olivetti (45%) and San Paolo Finance (10%).[2]

In 2003, Alitalia sold an 80% stake in the airline for $10.8m to Luxembourg based private equity fund Spinnaker, controlled by Italian bank Banco Profilo.[3]

In January 2004, Eurofly was acquired wholly by the Spinnker fund, managed by Sandro Capotosti (CEO and Founder of Banca Prolilo) and Paolo G. Alberoni. The fund listed Eurofly on the Milan Stock Exchange in December 2005.[4] At the end of 2006, Spinnaker sold the residual 29.95% stake in Eurofly to Meridiana and Mr Giovanni Rossi (CEO of Meridiana) took over as CEO of Eurofly.

In January 2008, two capital increases took place and Meridiana participation in Eurofly's capital grew to 46.1%. On 28 February 2010, Meridiana and Eurofly merged to create Italy's second-biggest airline, Meridiana fly.[5]

Destinations

Before eurofly was acquired by Meridiana, the airline had 2 codeshare agreements with Air One and British Airways.[6]

Fleet

Throughout its existence, Eurofly had operated the following aircraft:

Eurofly Historical Fleet
AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredRemark
Airbus A319-100(LR)120062007I-ECJA on lease[7]
Airbus A320-2001620012010on lease[8]
Airbus A330-200520022010on lease[7]
Boeing 737-400120002000TC-AFM
leased from Pegasus Airlines[7]
Boeing 767-300ER319982003[9]
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32219921993I-RIFP, I-RIZW
leased from Alitalia[7]
McDonnell Douglas MD-82819952005leased or transferred from Alitalia[7]
McDonnell Douglas MD-83519942004on lease[7]

See also

References

  1. "Contacts." Eurofly. Retrieved on 29 November 2010. "Eurofly S.p.a. Via Ettore Bugatti, 15 20142 Milano."
  2. "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. pp. 78–79.
  3. "Aviation Strategy - The future of Alitalia and its domestic competitors: Air One, Meridiana, Eurofly and Blue Panorama". aviationstrategy.aero. Retrieved 2023-07-06.
  4. "Tutte le Ipo per Piazza Affari: Chiude Guala Closures, pronte Safilo e Eurotech". 16 November 2005.
  5. Derber2009-11-20T14:17:00+00:00, Alex. "Meridiana-Eurofly tie-up creates new carrier Meridiana Fly". Flight Global. Retrieved 2023-07-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. "voli diretti eurofly - le vacanze decollano" (in Italian). 2007-02-19. Archived from the original on 2007-02-19. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Eurofly Fleet". Planespotters. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  8. "Airbus A320 Eurofly". Airfleets.net. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  9. "Boeing 767 Eurofly". Airfleets.net. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.