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  2. Asiana Airlines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asiana_Airlines

    On 28 January 2003, the airline became a full Star Alliance member, expanding its worldwide network and global brand. In 2004, the airline added Airbus A330s and the Boeing 777-200ERs to its fleet and expanded its routes into mainland China.

  3. Merger of Korean Air and Asiana Airlines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merger_of_Korean_Air_and...

    The merger of Korean Air and Asiana Airlines was a policy announced by the Government of South Korea in November 2020, which resulted in Korean Air absorbing Asiana Airlines creating a dominant carrier in South Korea. [1] The merger was completed on December 12, 2024 following approval from fair-competition authorities globally. [2]

  4. US Airways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Airways

    All Nippon Airways (ended with US Airways' withdrawal from Star Alliance) American Airlines (Merger partner) [120] Asiana Airlines (ended with US Airways' withdrawal from Star Alliance) Avianca (ended with US Airways' withdrawal from Star Alliance) Big Sky Airlines [121]: 5 (ceased operations March 8, 2008) [122] British Airways [123]

  5. Star Alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Alliance

    Star Alliance is an airline alliance headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany. [5] Founded on 14 May 1997, it was the world's first global airline alliance. [1] As of April 2024, it is also the world's largest airline alliance by market share, holding 17.4%, compared to 13.7% for SkyTeam and 11.9% for Oneworld.

  6. List of airlines of South Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airlines_of_South...

    Asiana Airlines subsidiary Asiana Airlines: AAR: OZ: ASIANA: Gimpo International Airport Incheon International Airport: 1988: Star Alliance: Merged with Korean Air in 2024 Eastar Jet: ESR: ZE: EASTARJET: Gimpo International Airport: 2009: U-FLY Alliance: Jeju Air: JJA: 7C: JEJU AIR: Jeju International Airport Incheon International Airport: 2005 ...

  7. Airline alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airline_alliance

    In 2015, Star Alliance was the largest with 23% of total scheduled traffic in revenue passenger kilometres (RPKs)/revenue passenger miles (RPMs), followed by SkyTeam with 20.4% and Oneworld with 17.8%, leaving 38.8% for others. [2]

  8. Air Busan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Busan

    The airline began its operation in 2007 as Busan International Airlines Company (Korean: 부산국제항공; Hanja: 釜山國際航空); it launched service in October 2008. [3] Air Busan is South Korea's third-largest low-cost airline, carrying 4.5 million domestic and 3.6 million international passengers in 2018.

  9. Juneyao Air - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juneyao_Air

    The Juneyao Airlines flight refused to abort, despite Qatar Airways flight QR888 declaring a Mayday due to low fuel. Although there was still 5,200 kg of fuel left aboard QR888 after landing, an amount sufficient for another 18 minutes of regular flight plus 30 minutes of reserve, the CAAC indicated that QR888 did not breach any regulations.