The collapse

Published: 26 May 2004 y., Wednesday
Air France is counting the future financial cost of Sunday's collapse of a passenger terminal at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris .. The building, Terminal 2E, along with an adjacent satellite terminal that is still under construction, was intended to be used for the arrival and departure of planes including the airline's Airbus A380 super jumbo jets. Air France has invested 50 million euros in Terminal 2E. It has space for 19 planes to dock with two of the gates being able to accomodate the double-decker Airbus A380. Ten million passengers per year were due to pass through the terminal which was central to Air France's introduction of the super jumbos. Air France said it is too early to say how the collapse would affect the readiness of the airport to handle the A380. Depending on what building investigators find the whole terminal may have to be demolished, but Air France said even if that happens it would not delay its plans to bring the A380 into service in March 2007. Airbus said that other terminals at Charles de Gaulle will be able to accommodate the giant plane.
Šaltinis: euronews.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Hong Kong rated least bureaucratic in Asia

Hong Kong has surpassed Singapore to become the least bureaucratic region in Asia more »

Poland's interest rates raised

The Polish central bank raised its key interest rates by a quarter percentage point, a statement said more »

Slovakia hikes GDP growth forecast

The Slovakian finance ministry has raised its 2004 forecast for economic growth to 4.7%, from 4.1%, officials said more »

Romania sees 7 percent economic growth

Romanian Prime Minister Adrian Nastase has said he expects the economy to grow by 7 percent year-on-year in 2004 more »

Yukos Given a Month to Pay

Staff Writer Court marshals have given Yukos a month to pay off its $3.4 billion tax bill, raising faint hopes that the company may stave off bankruptcy more »

The New Record

Global oil prices were down slightly as of late in the day on 29 July after the Russian Justice Ministry backed away from efforts to force embattled oil giant Yukos to stop selling oil more »

Ryanair introduces low-cost routes to Latvia

The Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair, in its first foray into the expanded European Union, has introduced three new routes between Rīga and the United Kingdom, Finland and Germany more »

Czech Police Collar 10 Drunk Bus Drivers

A police crackdown on bus traffic in the Czech capital caught 10 drunk bus drivers in a single day, police said Wednesday more »

Court upholds ruling to freeze Swiss banks accounts

The Moscow City Court on Tuesday upheld the Basmanny court's ruling to freeze the Swiss bank accounts of the Yukos oil company's main trader Petroval and remove the trader's documents more »

Russia and EU sign steel accord

The European Union and Russia have signed an agreement on steel supplies that introduces amendments to the 2002 accord more »