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

Focus on Energy and Finance in the Meeting of Nordic and Baltic Prime Ministers

In Brussels, Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas participated in the meeting of Nordic and Baltic (NB6) Prime Ministers which focused on the pressing topics on the agenda of the European Council: global finance crisis, energy, climate change, EU-Russia relations, and financial situation in Iceland. more »

The European Commission Will Develop an Electricity Grid Interconnection Plan between the Baltic States

Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas attended the working dinner with President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Latvian, Polish Prime Ministers – Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Andrus Ansip, Matti Vanhanen, Ivars Godmanis, Donald Tusk – and Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt. more »

Commission sets out proposal to increase minimum protection for bank deposits to €100,000

The European Commission has put forward a revision of EU rules on deposit guarantee schemes that puts into action the commitments made by EU Finance Ministers on 7 October. more »

Bush vows action for econ crisis

The United States began releasing long-awaited details of its $700 billion rescue plan. more »

Australia guarantees deposits

Australia's Prime Minister announces plans for the government to guarantee bank deposits for the next three years. more »

Savers move to ethical banking?

Ethical bank, Triodos, says it is offering customers an alternative way to invest their funds. more »

G. Kirkilas: Latvia Supports Lithuanian Energy Security Initiatives

Energy security was the dominant theme during the meeting between Lithuanian Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas and Latvian Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis. more »

Opening up energy markets

The draft law would require utilities to separate – or unbundle – the distribution of electricity and gas from production. more »

MEPs advocate a holistic approach to eradicating poverty and a target minimum wage for all Member States

A holistic approach to eradicating poverty, which seeks to ensure adequate incomes, quality jobs and better access to social services, is advocated by the EP in an own-initiative report. more »

Property show defies credit crunch

Dubai showcases multi-billion dollar development projects at the annual Cityscape exhibition. more »