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Wikipedia

ALMA de México

Aerolíneas Mesoamericanas, S.A. de C.V., operating as ALMA de Mexico, was a low-cost airline based in Guadalajara, Mexico. It suspended all service on November 7, 2008. The airline once operated flights to more than 18 domestic destinations, with plans for international service to the United States. Its main base was Don Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla International Airport, Guadalajara.[1]

Aerolíneas Mesoamericanas
ALMA
IATA ICAO Callsign
C4 MSO ALMA
Founded2005
Commenced operationsJune 12, 2006 (2006-06-12)
Ceased operationsNovember 7, 2008 (2008-11-07)
HubsMiguel Hidalgo y Costilla Int'l Airport
Fleet size12
Destinations28
HeadquartersGuadalajara, Mexico
Key peoplePablo Peralta (CEO)
Websitewww.alma.com.mx

History

The airline was established in 2005 by former Aeroméxico COO Guillermo Heredia and received its air operator's certificate in September of the same year.[1]

On June 12, 2006, ALMA launched operations with its first flight from Guadalajara to Puebla. It had already signed lease agreements with GE Commercial Aviation Services (GECAS) for further Bombardier CRJ-200 aircraft.

ALMA was awarded its (IATA Operational Safety Audit) security and safety certification on March 2, 2007.

ALMA successfully combined air travel with bus services in what it called a Multimodal service. This service was offered on the following routes:

By the end of 2007, ALMA had grown its fleet to 18 aircraft and had announced plans to expand to 30 aircraft within the coming year, including two new CRJ900 aircraft on order directly from Bombardier. ALMA was then considered one of the fastest growing regional airlines in Mexico. This turned out to be the high point in the airline's history. Within months ALMA was feeling the effects of soaring fuel prices and increased competition. In early 2008 the company indefinitely deferred further aircraft deliveries and then cut capacity. By the end of the summer the fleet had dropped to just 12 aircraft.

On November 7, 2008, ALMA announced on its website that it was ceasing all operations, effective immediately, citing the global economic crisis, the increase in fuel prices and the devaluation of the Mexican peso. The airline had not made any backup plans for its booked passengers. As a result, all such customers had effectively lost their money unless they were willing to make a claim to PROFECO, which stated that any such claim could literally take years to resolve. Aeroméxico offered to reprotect passengers, but it charged 999 pesos per segment subject to G class availability.[2]

 
Passengers disembarking an Alma de Mexico jet at La Paz, Baja California Sur.

Destinations

Fleet

The ALMA de México fleet consisted of the following aircraft (as of 7 November 2008) [2]:

On order

Codeshare agreements

At June 1, 2007, ALMA de México codeshared with the following airlines:

References

  1. ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-03-27. pp. 48–49.
  2. ^ [1][permanent dead link]

External links

    alma, méxico, aerolíneas, mesoamericanas, operating, alma, mexico, cost, airline, based, guadalajara, mexico, suspended, service, november, 2008, airline, once, operated, flights, more, than, domestic, destinations, with, plans, international, service, united,. Aerolineas Mesoamericanas S A de C V operating as ALMA de Mexico was a low cost airline based in Guadalajara Mexico It suspended all service on November 7 2008 The airline once operated flights to more than 18 domestic destinations with plans for international service to the United States Its main base was Don Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla International Airport Guadalajara 1 Aerolineas MesoamericanasALMAIATA ICAO CallsignC4 MSO ALMAFounded2005Commenced operationsJune 12 2006 2006 06 12 Ceased operationsNovember 7 2008 2008 11 07 HubsMiguel Hidalgo y Costilla Int l AirportFleet size12Destinations28HeadquartersGuadalajara MexicoKey peoplePablo Peralta CEO Websitewww alma com mx Contents 1 History 2 Destinations 3 Fleet 3 1 On order 4 Codeshare agreements 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe airline was established in 2005 by former Aeromexico COO Guillermo Heredia and received its air operator s certificate in September of the same year 1 On June 12 2006 ALMA launched operations with its first flight from Guadalajara to Puebla It had already signed lease agreements with GE Commercial Aviation Services GECAS for further Bombardier CRJ 200 aircraft ALMA was awarded its IATA Operational Safety Audit security and safety certification on March 2 2007 ALMA successfully combined air travel with bus services in what it called a Multimodal service This service was offered on the following routes For any passenger flying to La Paz and travelling on to San Jose del Cabo or Cabo San Lucas For any passenger flying to Tijuana and travelling on to Ensenada or Mexicali For any passenger flying to Puebla with a final short trip to its center 4 Poniente and vice versa In this last case there was no extra charge By the end of 2007 ALMA had grown its fleet to 18 aircraft and had announced plans to expand to 30 aircraft within the coming year including two new CRJ900 aircraft on order directly from Bombardier ALMA was then considered one of the fastest growing regional airlines in Mexico This turned out to be the high point in the airline s history Within months ALMA was feeling the effects of soaring fuel prices and increased competition In early 2008 the company indefinitely deferred further aircraft deliveries and then cut capacity By the end of the summer the fleet had dropped to just 12 aircraft On November 7 2008 ALMA announced on its website that it was ceasing all operations effective immediately citing the global economic crisis the increase in fuel prices and the devaluation of the Mexican peso The airline had not made any backup plans for its booked passengers As a result all such customers had effectively lost their money unless they were willing to make a claim to PROFECO which stated that any such claim could literally take years to resolve Aeromexico offered to reprotect passengers but it charged 999 pesos per segment subject to G class availability 2 Passengers disembarking an Alma de Mexico jet at La Paz Baja California Sur Destinations EditMain article List of ALMA de Mexico destinationsFleet EditThe ALMA de Mexico fleet consisted of the following aircraft as of 7 November 2008 2 12 Bombardier CRJ200On order Edit 2 Bombardier CRJ 900 NextGen for delivery in late 2008 the order was cancelled when operations ceasedCodeshare agreements EditAt June 1 2007 ALMA de Mexico codeshared with the following airlines MexicanaReferences Edit a b Directory World Airlines Flight International 2007 03 27 pp 48 49 1 permanent dead link External links EditALMA de Mexico Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ALMA de Mexico amp oldid 1109701448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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