National carrier Air Tanzania Company Ltd continued on its
decade-long path to revival with the delivery last week of the first of
two Airbus A220 aircraft. A sister aircraft is expected in January 2019.
The Tanzanian flag carrier has been trying to regroup since 2008, but its network has been mainly domestic.
In
addition to about a dozen domestic destinations, ATCL has recently
added Bujumbura, Entebbe and Comoros to its destinations, with further
plans to fly to Mumbai, India.
Chief executive Ladislaus Matindi says that the A220 is a growth aircraft that will be used to open new routes within Africa.
“With
the addition of the A220 to our fleet, we are confident that we will
expand our footprint in the growing African market and beyond, as we
unlock additional routes,” he said during a ceremony to receive the
aircraft from the manufacturer last week.
Growing frequency
Executives from the Tanzania Government Flight Agency and Air
Tanzania received the aircraft from the manufacturer’s final assembly
line in Mirabel, Canada, on December 21, with the ferry flight touching
down in Dar es Salaam on December 23.
The delivery
brought Tanzania’s active fleet to six aircraft, comprising four
propeller-driven Bombardier Dash-8s, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner and now the
A220.
With a range just over 5,000km, the A220 will
bring many points in Central and West Africa within range of Air
Tanzania’s Dar es Salaam base, while giving the carrier a low-risk
option to venture into the Middle East or grow frequency on existing
domestic and international routes.
ATCL now expects
another two aircraft, one Dash-8-Q400 and an additional A220. While the
A220 comes in two versions, ATCL opted for the bigger A220-300, which
seats 130-150 passengers.
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