SVG_Air

SVG Air

SVG Air

Flag carrier of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines


SVG AIR[1] is an airline company located at the Argyle International Airport, Argyle, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines that operates both scheduled and charter flight services within the Eastern Caribbean islands as far north as Jamaica and as far south as Guyana.

Quick Facts IATA, ICAO ...

St. Vincent and the Grenadines Air or SVG AIR, is a national airline of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, along with Mustique Airways. SVG Air and Mustique Airways have combined to form a SVG Air / Grenadine Alliance, operating 17 Aircraft, with bases in St. Vincent, Antigua and Grenada.[2] Offering visitors and residents a wider choice of International Gateways in and out of St. Vincent & the Grenadines.

SVG AIR's main operating base is in St. Vincent but has a maintenance hangar on the island of Bequia and other bases in Barbados, Grenada, Carriacou, Antigua and Barbuda, Montserrat and the Grenadine islands of: Bequia, Canouan and Union Island.

Destinations

SVG AIR have regular scheduled flights from the Argyle International Airport to locations across the caribbean.[3]

History

The airline was founded in 1990. It began operations with a single leased Britten-Norman Islander. The company is largely owned (75%) by St Vincent Grenada Air and operated by the Gravel and Barnard families.

Fleet

The SVG Air fleet comprises the following aircraft (as of August 2018):[4][5]

More information Aircraft, In Service ...

The SVG Air fleet previously included the following aircraft (as of March 2007):[6]

They have been leasing another Cessna Citation II 550 privately registered J8-JTS,[7] and their own Cessna CE-525B Citation Jet 3 has been registered J8-JET used for charter flights.[8]

Incidents and accidents

  • 19 November 2006 - SVG Air Aero Commander 500S, disappeared on final approach to Saint Vincent, presumably killing both the pilot and sole passenger. The aircraft's Wreckage was later found in the sea.[9]
  • 22 October 2007 - SVG Cessna 402, registered J8-VBL, with six passengers and a pilot suffered extensive damage when it overran the runway and crashed into the Union Island Airport fence.[10]
  • 5 August 2010 - SVG Cessna 402C Aircraft (J8-SXY) on a flight from Saint Vincent to Canouan crashed off Canouan with only the pilot on board - not found.[11][12]
  • 29 September 2021—SVG Air Flight 207—a Britten-Norman BN-2B-26 Islander aircraft, operated by SVG Air between, overran the runway at John A. Osborne Airport while on a domestic flight between Antigua and Barbuda and Montserrat.[13] Two of the seven occupants sustained injuries and the airplane was severely damaged.[14][15]

References

  1. "SVG AIR". SVG AIR. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  2. Ben Harrison - International Correspondent (17 February 2017). "SVG Air / Grenadine Air Alliance: Bridging the gap". The Vencentian Newspaper.
  3. "Global Airline Guide 2016 (Part Two)". Airliner World (November 2016): 33.
  4. "Cessna 550". flysvgair.com. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  5. "Cessna Citation CJ3". flysvgair.com. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  6. Searchlight Newspaper 22 November 2006
  7. "Search still On For Missing St Vincent Pilot". Jamaica-Gleaner.com. 10 August 2010. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
  8. "Accident Cessna 402C J8-SXY". aviation-safety.net.



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