C.A.I._First

C.A.I. First

C.A.I. First

Defunct regional airline of Italy (1997–2015)


C.A.I. First S.p.A. was[2] an Italian airline operating flights for its parent company, Alitalia, to preserve slots at Milan Linate Airport. For this reason Alitalia when merged with Air One didn't close C.A.I. First, which at that time still operated as Alitalia Express. It used to have bases at Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in Rome and Malpensa Airport in Milan.[3] C.A.I. First was dissolved and merged into Alitalia mainline by February 2015.[2]

Quick Facts IATA, ICAO ...

The name C.A.I. First was only a legal name and wasn't used in public, all of its flights were branded as Alitalia.

History

Early years

Alitalia Express Embraer 170

The airline was established as a subsidiary of Alitalia and started operations on 1 October 1997. It was founded from the defunct Avianova. It was announced that Minerva Airlines would be acquired by Alitalia in March 2003 and that Alitalia Express's fleet would be transferred, but the plan did not go through.[citation needed]

Air One and Alitalia merger

In December 2008, Compagnia Aerea Italiana (C.A.I.) took over Alitalia - Linee Aeree Italiane and Air One, merging the two companies together to create the "new Alitalia". With the take over, CAI also received Alitalia Express and Air One CityLiner. The Alitalia Express brand has been phased out and the regional arm of Alitalia is now Alitalia CityLiner by rebranding Air One CityLiner.[citation needed]

The last fleet of Alitalia Express, 10 Embraer 170, was completely phased out by March 2013. Only one Airbus A320-200 (EI-DSC) from mainline Alitalia was moved in the fleet to preserve the slots. The same solution had been used with C.A.I. Second which used to be Volareweb.com.

On 6 February 2015, the airline was dissolved and its operations integrated into Alitalia mainline.[2][4]

Fleet

Prior to its shutdown in February 2015, the fleet consisted of the following aircraft:

More information Aircraft, In Fleet ...

Fleet history

Over the years, Alitalia Express has operated the following aircraft types:[5]

More information Aircraft, Image ...

See also


References

  1. "IATA - Codes - Airline and Airport Code Search". iata.org. IATA. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  2. "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 27 March 2007. p. 73.
  3. "Enac - Compagnie aeree". Archived from the original on 22 March 2009.
  4. "Minerva Airlines". Planespotters. Retrieved 19 May 2020.

Media related to Alitalia Express at Wikimedia Commons


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