Royal Jordanian: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Flag carrier of Jordan}} |
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{{Refimprove|date=May 2009}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox airline |
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| airline = Royal Jordanian <br />{{nobold|{{script/Arabic|الملكيَّة الأردنيَّة}}}}<br />{{nobold|{{transliteration|ar|Al-Malakiyyah al-'Urduniyyah}}}} |
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|airline = Royal Jordanian <br> الملكية الأردنية |
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| logo = Royal Jordanian Logo.svg |
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|logo = RoyalJordanianLogo.png |
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|logo_size = |
| logo_size = 250 |
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|fleet_size |
| fleet_size = 31 |
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|destinations = |
| destinations = 51 |
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|IATA = RJ |
| IATA = RJ |
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|ICAO = RJA |
| ICAO = RJA |
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|callsign = JORDANIAN |
| callsign = JORDANIAN |
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| founded = {{start date and age|1963|12|09|df=yes}}<br />{{small|(as ''Alia Airlines – Royal Jordanian Airlines'')}} |
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|parent = |
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| headquarters = [[Amman]], [[Jordan]] |
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|founded = 1963 as Alia Airlines |
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| key_people = {{bulleted list| |
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|headquarters = [[Amman]], [[Jordan]] |
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| Samer Majali (Vice Chairman & [[Chief executive officer|CEO]])<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://rj.com/en/meet-rj/our-media-center/news/2021/mar-21/31/samer-majali-designated-to-assume-the-role-of-rjs-president-ceo|title=Samer Majali designated to assume the role of RJS President CEO - Royal Jordanian}}</ref> |
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|key_people = Hussein Dabbas ([[CEO]]) |
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| Saeed Darwazeh ([[Chairman]])<ref name="newceo">{{cite web |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-10-08/royal-jordanian-ceo-pichler-is-said-to-have-resigned-last-month |title=Royal Jordanian CEO Pichler Is Said to Have Resigned Last Month |publisher=Bloomberg |date=8 October 2020 |access-date=11 November 2020}}</ref>}} |
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|hubs = [[Queen Alia International Airport]] |
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| hubs = [[Queen Alia International Airport|Amman–Queen Alia]] |
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| focus_cities = [[King Hussein International Airport|Aqaba–King Hussein]] |
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|frequent_flyer = Royal Plus |
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| frequent_flyer = Royal Club<ref name="arabianaerospace.aero">{{cite web |url=https://www.arabianaerospace.aero/royal-jordanian-launch-all-new-frequent-flyer-programme.html |title=Arabian Aerospace – Royal Jordanian launch all new frequent flyer programme |website=www.arabianaerospace.aero}}</ref> |
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|lounge = Crown Lounge |
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|alliance = [[Oneworld]] |
| alliance = [[Oneworld]] |
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| profit = |
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|tourist program = [[Kawar Travel]] |
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|subsidiaries = |
| subsidiaries = {{ubl|class=nowrap |
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| Jordan Airports Company (90%)<ref>{{cite web |title=RJ owns of 90% of Jordan Airports Company |url=https://www.jordannews.jo/Section-109/News/RJ-owns-of-90-of-Jordan-Airports-Company-29610 |website=Jordan News |date=7 July 2023 |access-date=29 January 2024}}</ref> |
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<div> |
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| Royal Jordanian Cargo |
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| Royal Jordanian Ground Handling |
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*[[Royal Wings]] |
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| Royal Tours<ref>{{cite web |title=Royal Tours |url=https://rtabooking.com |website=Royal Tours Travel & Tourism |publisher=Royal Tours |access-date=29 January 2024}}</ref> |
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*Royal Jordanian Cargo |
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| Tikram<ref>{{cite web |title=Tikram For Airport Services |url=https://www.tikram.jo |website=Tikram |access-date=29 January 2024}}</ref>}} |
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*Royal Jordanian Ground Handling |
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| website = {{URL|www.rj.com}} |
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<div> |
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| image = |
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|company_slogan = "You're there" |
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| aoc = |
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|website = http://www.rj.com |
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| parent = |
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| num_employees = |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Royal Jordanian Airlines''' <!--Please refrain from adding the Arabic name to this section, as it have already been clearly specified in the Infobox. Reiterating the native name in the Lede is unnecessary and redundant.-->(formerly known as '''Alia''' '''Royal Jordanian Airlines''') is the [[flag carrier]] of [[Jordan]] with its head office in the capital, [[Amman]].<ref>"[http://www.rj.com/en/tabid/136/Default.aspx RJ Phone numbers in Jordan]." Royal Jordanian. Retrieved on 21 June 2010. "Office Address: Building 37 -Mohammad Ali Janah St. -Abdoun near the 5th circle P.O. Box: 302 Amman 11118"</ref> The airline operates scheduled international services over four continents from its main base at [[Queen Alia International Airport]], with over 500 flights per week and at least 110 daily departures. It joined the [[Oneworld]] [[airline alliance]] in 2007.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Royal Jordanian - oneworld Member Airline |url=https://www.oneworld.com/members/royal-jordanian |access-date=2023-01-20 |website=www.oneworld.com |language=en}}</ref> |
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'''Royal Jordanian Airlines''' ({{lang-ar|الملكية الأردنية}}; [[Arabic transliteration|transliterated]]: al-Malakiyah al-Orduniyah) is an [[airline]] based in [[Amman]] [[Jordan]],<ref>"[http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/locale/en-US/default.aspx Company Overview]." Royal Jordanian. Retrieved on 30 May 2009.</ref> operating scheduled international services over four continents from its main base at [[Queen Alia International Airport]] at [[Amman]] (AMM) [[Jordan]]. Royal Jordanian (RJ) is a member of the [[Arab Air Carriers Organization]] and of [[Oneworld]], the global airline alliance. RJ won the 'Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation' award for "Airline Turnaround of the Year 2006" on 9 November 2006.<ref>[http://www.rj.com/about_rj/article_091106.asp Royal Jordanian website]</ref> The airline operates over 500 flights per week, with at least 110 daily departures. In 2005 the company was able to buy its Acronym and IATA code "RJ" as an Internet Address, the famous [http://rj.com RJ.com]. It is one of only 4 Airlines (AA.com, BA.com, LH.com and RJ.com) to be in the VB.com Internet Hall of Fame owning a Two Letter .com domain name.<ref>[http://www.vb.com/fame.htm VB.com Internet Hall of Fame - List of Large Companies that own a Two Letter Domain]</ref> Royal Jordanian was voted 'Airline of the Year 2007' by Air Finance Journal. [http://www.ameinfo.com/161325.html] |
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==History== |
== History == |
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=== 1960s to 1990s === |
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The airline was established on 9 December 1963 and started operations on 15 December 1963 after a royal decree by the late [[King Hussein]]. It was named Alia—or Aalya—after King Hussein's first child, Princess Alia. It is a common misconception that the airline was named after the King's third wife, Queen Alya. The airline was founded with capital from private shareholders but the Jordanian government later took over the company. |
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[[File:Boeing 707-3D3C JY-ADO Alia LHR 22.08.71 edited-2.jpg|thumb|right|Alia [[Boeing 707]]-300 at [[London Heathrow Airport]] in 1971. This aircraft was later destroyed in the [[Kano air disaster]].]] |
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The airline was established on 9 December 1963 and started operations on 15 December 1963 after a royal decree by the late [[King Hussein]]. It was named ''Alia'' (or ''Aalya'') after King Hussein's eldest child, [[Princess Alia bint Hussein|Princess Alia bint Al Hussein]] of Jordan (born on 13 February 1956). It is a common misconception that the airline was named after the King's third wife, [[Alia al-Hussein|Queen Alia]], whom King Hussein did not marry until 1972. The airline was founded with capital from private shareholders but the [[Politics of Jordan|Jordanian government]] later took over the company.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://trofamspotting.weebly.com/royal-jordanian-airlines.html |title=Royal Jordanian Airlines |website=Trofam Spotting |access-date=2019-05-24}}</ref> |
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Alia, the Royal Jordanian Airline started operations with two [[Handley Page]] [[Dart Herald]] and a [[Douglas DC-7]] aircraft, serving [[Kuwait City]] (Kuwait), [[Beirut]] (Lebanon) and [[Cairo]] (Egypt) from [[Amman]]. In 1964, another DC-7 was added and service began to [[Jeddah]] (Saudi Arabia). In 1965, Alia initiated service to [[Rome]] (Italy), its first destination in [[Europe]]. The progress made by the airline was threatened by an Israeli air raid during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, when the DC-7 aircraft were destroyed. They were replaced by two [[Fokker F-27]] airliners. |
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Alia (the Royal Jordanian Airline) started operations with two [[Handley Page Dart Herald]]s and a [[Douglas DC-7]] aircraft, serving [[Kuwait City]], [[Beirut]] and [[Cairo]] from Amman. In 1964, another DC-7 was added and service began to [[Jeddah]]. In 1965, Alia initiated service to [[Rome]], its first destination in [[Europe]]. The progress made by the airline was threatened by an [[Israel]]i air raid during the 1967 [[Six-Day War]] when the DC-7 aircraft were destroyed. They were replaced by two [[Fokker F27 Friendship]] airliners. |
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In 1968, the airline expanded its route pattern to [[Nicosia]] (Cyprus), [[Benghazi]] (Libya), [[Dhahran]] (Saudi Arabia) and [[Doha]] (Qatar). 1969 saw the addition of service to [[Munich]] (Germany), [[Istanbul]] (Turkey) and [[Tehran]] (Iran). |
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[[Image:Royal Jordanian Airlines L-1011 in Geneva.jpg|thumb|left|[[Lockheed L-1011|Lockheed L-1011 TriStar]] of Alia in the short-lived early 1980s livery]] |
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In 1968, the airline joined the jet age when it introduced the [[Sud Aviation Caravelle]], and expanded the route network to [[Nicosia]], [[Benghazi]], [[Dhahran]] and [[Doha]]. 1969 saw the addition of service to [[Munich]], [[Istanbul]] and [[Tehran]]. |
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In 1970, Alia joined the jet age when they phased out the F-27s and ordered [[Boeing 707]] aircraft. [[Frankfurt]] (Germany) and [[Abu Dhabi]] (UAE) were added to the network. The 707s were delivered in 1971. In that year, service was initiated to [[Madrid]] (Spain), [[Copenhagen]] (Denmark) and [[Karachi]] (Pakistan). During the rest of the decade, [[Boeing 720]]s, [[Boeing 727]]s and [[Boeing 747]]s were added to the fleet. A catering department was established, and 'duty free' shops were opened at [[Amman]] airport. Services were added to destinations including : [[Manama]] (Bahrain), [[Dubai]] (UAE), [[Muscat, Oman|Muscat]] (Oman), [[Rabat]] (Morocco), [[Geneva]] (Switzerland), [[Amsterdam]] (Netherlands), [[Baghdad]] (Iraq), [[Bangkok]] (Thailand), [[Vienna]] (Austria), [[Larnaca]] (Cyprus) replacing Nicosia, [[Damascus]] (Syria), [[New York City]], Houston (USA), and [[Ras al-Khaimah]] (UAE). In 1979, Alia became a founding member of the Arab Airlines Technical Consortium (AATC). |
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[[File:Royal Jordanian Airlines L-1011 in Geneva.jpg|thumb|[[Lockheed L-1011]] TriStar of Alia in the short-lived, experimental early-1980s livery]] |
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In the |
In 1970, Alia phased out the F27s and ordered [[Boeing 707]] aircraft. [[Frankfurt]] and [[Abu Dhabi]] were added to the network. The 707s were delivered in 1971. In that year, service was initiated to [[Madrid]], [[Copenhagen]] and [[Karachi]]. During the rest of the decade, [[Boeing 720]]s, [[Boeing 727]]s, and [[Boeing 747]]s were added to the fleet. A catering department was established, and [[duty-free shop]]s were opened at Amman airport. Services were added to destinations including [[Bahrain]], [[Dubai]], [[Muscat]], [[Rabat]], [[Geneva]], [[Amsterdam]], [[Baghdad]], [[Bangkok]], [[Vienna]], [[Damascus]], [[New York City]], [[Houston]], and [[Ras al-Khaimah]]. In 1979, Alia became a founding member of the [[Arab Airlines Technical Consortium]] (AATC). |
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[[File:Aqaba BW 4.JPG|thumb|250px|A Royal Jordanian A310 at [[King Hussein International Airport]] in Aqaba]] |
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In the 1980s, [[Tunis]] and [[Tripoli, Libya|Tripoli]] joined the route map, and Alia's [[IBM]] computer center was inaugurated. [[Lockheed L-1011 Tristar]]s, [[Airbus A310]]s and [[Airbus A320 family|Airbus A320s]] joined the fleet. In December 1986, Alia changed its name to Royal Jordanian Airlines, when Princess Alia was nearing her divorce. The airline's first woman pilot flew one of their aircraft during this decade. Service was added to [[Belgrade]], [[Chicago]], [[Los Angeles]], [[Miami]], [[Bucharest]], [[Singapore]], [[Riyadh]], [[Kuala Lumpur]] – in cooperation with [[Malaysia Airlines|MAS]], [[Sana'a]], [[Moscow]]. [[Montreal]], [[Delhi]], [[Calcutta]] and [[Ankara]]. This decade also saw the introduction of the Gabriel Automated Ticket System – (GATS). |
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The 1990s saw further expansion. Royal Jordanian and nine other Arab air carriers signed up for the Galileo Reservations System. The IMCS maintenance and engineering system was added, a new Amman city air terminal was opened at the [[7th Circle]] of the Jordanian capital, and service to [[Rafah]], (Palestine) was started, since then halted. The cities of [[Toronto]] (Canada), [[Colombo]] (Sri Lanka), [[Jakarta]] (Indonesia), [[Berlin]] (Germany), [[Mumbai]] (India), [[Milan]] (Italy) and [[Tel Aviv]] (Israel) were added to the network. Royal Jordanian became a code-sharing partner with the US carrier [[TWA]]. |
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[[File:Alia Boeing 747-200 Gilliand.jpg|thumb|A [[Boeing 747]]-200 of the airline as seen in 1978]] |
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In 2000, the Federal Aviation Administration renewed the airline's maintenance and engineering department's license. The duty free shop was among the services to be privatised. A holding company, RJI, wholly owned by the government, was incorporated as a public limited company in February 2001 to hold all the airline's and associated investments. The airline's name was changed on 5 February 2001 to Alia - The Royal Jordanian Airlines Company, although travellers still use the popular name of Royal Jordanian. |
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The 1990s saw further expansion. Royal Jordanian and nine other Arab air carriers signed up for the [[Galileo CRS]]. The IMCS maintenance and engineering system was added, a new Amman city air terminal was opened at the [[7th Circle]] of the Jordanian capital, and services to Rafah started, since then halted. The cities of [[Toronto]], [[Colombo]], [[Jakarta]], [[Berlin]], [[Mumbai]], [[Milan]] and [[Tel Aviv]] were added to the network. In November 1997, Royal Jordanian became a code-sharing partner with the US carrier [[Trans World Airlines]] and moved operations into the [[TWA Flight Center]] (Terminal 5) at the [[John F. Kennedy International Airport]] in New York.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.twa.com/pressrelease/document.html?iReleaseID=142 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19990913043943/http://www.twa.com/pressrelease/document.html?iReleaseID=142 |url-status=dead |archive-date=1999-09-13 |title=TWA Press Releases |access-date=2018-05-30}}</ref> |
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On 10 February 1996, the flag carrier's subsidiary [[Royal Wings]] started its first domestic service to [[Aqaba]], the seaport on the Gulf of Aqaba, using a [[Fokker F-27]]. Royal Wings now operates an [[Airbus A320-212]] aircraft on both scheduled and charter services to destinations in [[Egypt]], [[Cyprus]] and [[Israel]]. |
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=== 2000 and beyond, and privatization === |
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On 20 December 2006, Royal Jordanian announced that they would replace two [[Airbus A321]] aircraft with two new units, and order of four new [[Airbus A319]]s to enter service in early 2008. With that order, Royal Jordanian would be the first Middle-Eastern airline to operate three aircraft from the [[Airbus A320]] family. |
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In 2000, the U.S. [[Federal Aviation Administration]] (FAA) renewed the airline's maintenance and engineering department's license. The duty-free shop was among the services to be privatised. A holding company, RJI, wholly owned by the government, was incorporated as a public limited company in February 2001 to hold all the airlines and associated investments. The airline's name was changed on 5 February 2001 to ''Alia – The Royal Jordanian Airlines Company'', although travellers still use the popular name of Royal Jordanian. |
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The [[flag carrier]]'s subsidiary [[Royal Wings]] operated an [[Airbus A320 family|Airbus A320-212]] aircraft on both scheduled and charter services to destinations in Egypt, Cyprus, and Israel. |
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In April 2007, Royal Jordanian became part of the [[Oneworld]] alliance, thus becoming the first Arab airline to join such a global alliance system. The following month, the airline announced an order for a total of 10 [[Boeing 787]]s, for service entry in 2010. This is the first order Royal Jordanian has placed with [[Boeing]].[http://www.ameinfo.com/120713.html?rsslink]. |
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[[Image:royal.jordanian.a321-200.jy-ayg.arp.jpg|thumb|left|[[Airbus A321-200]]]] |
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On 20 December 2006, Royal Jordanian announced that they would replace two [[Airbus A321]]s with two new units, and order four new [[Airbus A319]]s to enter service in early 2008. |
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[[Montreal]], [[Canada]] rejoined the network on 25 May 2007, after the route was cancelled in 1997. Also during May, Royal Jordanian was the sponsor of the World Economic Forum, which was held at the [[Dead Sea]], Jordan. |
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In April 2007, Royal Jordanian became part of [[Oneworld]], thus becoming the first Arab airline to join such a global [[Airline alliance|alliance system]]. The following month, the airline announced an order for a total of 10 [[Boeing 787 Dreamliner]]s, for service entry in 2010. This is the first order Royal Jordanian has placed with [[Boeing]].<ref name="AME-787s">Golden, Lara Lynn (20 May 2007). Press release [http://www.ameinfo.com/120713.html "Royal Jordanian negotiating for 12 787s through direct purchase and lease contracts"]. AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited.</ref> |
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On 11 July 2007, Royal Jordanian celebrated thirty years of non-stop service between Amman and [[New York City]], making it the longest serving Arab airline to this gateway to the USA. RJ won the "Airline Strategy Award" in the technology category at the sixth annual 'Airline Strategy Awards' on 16 July 2007. On 23 July, RJ saw the introduction of cargo flights, Damascus (Syria) being the first destination served from Amman, using a [[Boeing 737]] aircraft. |
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[[File:Royal Jordanian Airbus A319 Oneworld livery KvW.jpg|thumb|An [[Airbus A319]] in [[oneworld]] livery]] |
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Royal Jordanian made its first flight to [[Budapest]], the capital of [[Hungary]], on 28 July, using an [[Embraer 195]]. In October, RJ announced the switch of two Embraer 195 jets of its original order to two Embraer 175 jets. Royal Jordanian opened a new lounge at Aqaba Airport. |
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Montreal was re-added to the network on 25 May 2007, after the route was cancelled in 1997. Also during May, Royal Jordanian was the sponsor of the [[World Economic Forum]], which was held at the [[Dead Sea]], Jordan. |
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RJ will be the first Middle East airline to provide its passengers with OnAir’s in-flight internet and mobile phone services, including e-mail, SMS and voice calls. [http://www.onair.aero/] Royal Jordanian has upgraded its three Airbus A310s at a cost of over 10 million Jordanian dinars. |
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On 11 July 2007, Royal Jordanian celebrated thirty years of non-stop service between Amman and New York City, making it the longest-serving Arab airline to this gateway to the U.S. RJ won the "Airline Strategy Award" in the technology category at the sixth annual Airline Strategy Awards on 16 July 2007. On 23 July, RJ saw the introduction of cargo flights, Damascus being the first destination served from Amman, using a [[Boeing 737]]. |
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Royal Jordanian was privatised at the end of 2007, resulting in 71% of its assets sold. The market capitalisation of the company stands at 260 million JOD, and share-trading commenced on 17 December 2007. |
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Royal Jordanian made its first flight to [[Budapest]], on 28 July, using an [[Embraer 195]]. In October, RJ announced the switch of two Embraer 195 jets of its original order to two Embraer 175 jets. Royal Jordanian opened a new lounge at [[King Hussein International Airport]] in [[Aqaba]]. |
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On 24 December 2007, Royal Jordanian confirmed [[Baku]] (Azerbaijan) as one of its new destinations for 2008, using an Embraer 195 twice weekly from Amman. In early 2008, however, RJ officials decided against the new route, citing that high fuel prices and a new market were a risk too large to take at that time. Royal Jordanian plans to operate the Amman-Baku route in late 2009 or early 2010. On 22 January 2008, RJ launched flights to [[Hong Kong]] via Bangkok (Thailand), with three flights/week during winter, and five flights/week during summer, making it the airline's first route to [[China]]. [http://www.ameinfo.com/144431.html] |
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RJ will be the first Middle East airline to provide its passengers with OnAir's in-flight Internet and mobile phone services, including e-mail, SMS and voice calls.<ref>[http://www.onair.aero/ Home | OnAir]. Onair.aero. Retrieved on 2010-11-13.</ref> Royal Jordanian has upgraded its three Airbus A310s at a cost of over 10 million [[Jordanian dinar]]s (JOD). |
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The [[Airbus A319]] entered service on 13 March 2008, making RJ the first Middle East airline to operate three aircraft of the [[Airbus A320]] family. [http://www.rj.com/tabid/59/locale/en-US/default.aspx?itemid=113] On 17 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened a new route to [[Kiev]] (Ukraine), using Embraer 195 jets for this twice weekly service. On 24 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge at [[Queen Alia International Airport]] [[Amman]], replacing the 'Petra' and 'Jerash' lounges. The new lounge is located on the second floor of the South Terminal and is the second largest airport lounge in the Middle East, being able to handle over 340 passengers. [http://www.rj.com/PlanBook/PressReleases/tabid/59/Default.aspx?itemID=144] |
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Royal Jordanian was privatized at the end of 2007, resulting in 71% of its assets being sold. The market capitalization of the company stands at 260 million JOD, and share-trading commenced on 17 December 2007. |
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The airline recorded an 18% increase in passenger numbers in July 2008. With the airline transporting 278,000 passengers, the seat factor grew by 5% in that month to reach 81%.[http://www.ameinfo.com/167140.html] As part of Royal Jordanian's commitment to its airline alliance [[Oneworld]], an announcement was made at the alliance's 10th birthday celebrations on 3 February 2009 that RJ would paint its new A319 — due for delivery in late March — in a scheme that would be based around the [[Oneworld]] name and logo. This is the first special colour scheme Royal Jordanian will have used. [http://www.oneworld.com/ow/news/details?objectID=16589] |
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On 24 December 2007, Royal Jordanian confirmed [[Baku]] as one of its new destinations for 2008, using an Embraer 195 twice weekly from Amman. In early 2008, however, RJ officials decided against the new route, citing that high fuel prices and a new market were a risk too large to take at that time. Royal Jordanian plans to operate the Amman-Baku route in late 2009 or early 2010. On 22 January 2008, RJ launched flights to [[Hong Kong]] via Bangkok, with three flights/week during winter, and five flights/week during summer, making it the airline's first route to China.<ref name="AME-HK">Manibo, Medilyn (22 January 2008). Press release [http://www.ameinfo.com/144431.html "RJ starts operating flights between Amman and Hong Kong today"]. AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited.</ref> |
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Royal Jordanian resumed service to [[Brussels]] on April 1 2009, six years after the route was discontinued by the airline, flying twice weekly from [[Amman]] with the airline planning to add a further two flights per week later in 2009. |
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The [[Airbus A319]] entered service on 13 March 2008, making RJ the first Middle East airline to operate three aircraft of the [[Airbus A320 family]].<ref>[http://www.rj.com/tabid/59/locale/en-US/default.aspx?itemid=113] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120218160052/http://www.rj.com/tabid/59/locale/en-US/default.aspx?itemid=113|date=February 18, 2012}}</ref> On 17 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened a new route to [[Kyiv]], using Embraer 195 jets for this twice-weekly service. On 24 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge at [[Queen Alia International Airport]] Amman, replacing the "Petra" and "Jerash" lounges. The new lounge is located on the second floor of the South Terminal and is the second-largest airport lounge in the Middle East, being able to handle over 340 passengers.<ref>[http://www.rj.com/PlanBook/PressReleases/tabid/59/Default.aspx?itemID=144] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120218160153/http://www.rj.com/PlanBook/PressReleases/tabid/59/Default.aspx?itemID=144|date=February 18, 2012}}</ref> |
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Dec. 15, 2009 marks the 46th anniversary of Royal Jordanian, a company established by a decree issued by His Majesty King Hussein in 1963 to be the national carrier, with the aim of contributing to developing and promoting services, creating better ties with the world, promoting interaction with other cultures and establishing relations with other nations. |
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On March 28 2010, Royal Jordanian will inaugurate regular direct flights to Madinah Munawwarh, Saudi Arabia, with four weekly flights. On the 23rd of March, Royal Jordanian confirmed that it had ordered 2 A330-200's and 1 Emb-175, and that it would recommence operatiions to Kuala Lumpur, after they were suspended in the late 90's. |
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The airline recorded an 18% increase in passenger numbers in July 2008. With the airline transporting 278,000 passengers, the seat factor grew by 5% in that month to reach 81%.<ref name="AME-18%">{{cite web |url=http://www.ameinfo.com/167140.html |title=RJ reports 18% increase in passenger numbers last month | Royal Jordanian | AMEinfo.com |access-date=2018-11-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130801121452/http://www.ameinfo.com/167140.html |archive-date=2013-08-01 |url-status=dead}}</ref> As part of Royal Jordanian's commitment to its airline alliance Oneworld, an announcement was made at the alliance's 10th birthday celebrations on 3 February 2009 that RJ would paint its new A319 (due for delivery in late March) in a scheme that would be based around the Oneworld name and logo. This is the first special colour scheme Royal Jordanian will have used.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.oneworld.com/ow/news/details?objectID=16589 |title=oneworld news |website=www.oneworld.com}}</ref> |
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==Slogans== |
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[http://www.ameinfo.com/179041.html] |
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<center> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+ Royal Jordanian Slogans |
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! Slogan !! Year commenced !! Year finished |
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|- |
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! "From Jordan to the world" |
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| 1963 || 1968 |
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|- |
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! "Excellence in air" |
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| 1968 || 1974 |
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|- |
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! "Journey in Royalty" and "The way you want to fly" |
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| 1974 || 2005 |
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|- |
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! "Change is in the air" |
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| 2006 || 2008 |
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|- |
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! "You're there" |
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| 2008 || ''Current'' |
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|} |
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</center> |
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Royal Jordanian resumed service to [[Brussels]] on 1 April 2009, six years after the route was discontinued by the airline, flying twice weekly from Amman with the airline planning to add a further two flights per week later in 2009. |
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==Statistics== |
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The following information can be found in the 2009 Royal Jordanian Annual Report[http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/MediaCenter/AnnualReports/tabid/159/Default.aspx] |
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On 28 March 2010, Royal Jordanian inaugurated regular direct flights to [[Medina|Madinah Munawwarah]], Saudi Arabia, with four weekly flights. On the 23 March, Royal Jordanian confirmed that it had ordered two A330-200s and one Embraer 175. Royal Jordanian recommenced operations to Malaysia's capital [[Kuala Lumpur]] on June 2, 2010, after it had suspended this route in 2004. Aircraft used on this route is the new Airbus A330-200 and later switched to Boeing 787 Dreamliner. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
In May 2011, Royal Jordanian announced that they will retire the [[Airbus A310]] aircraft in December 2011, and January 2012. Royal Jordanian uses an Airbus A330 and an Airbus A321 for non-stop flights to London (Heathrow Terminal 3). |
|||
<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rj.com |title=Royal Jordanian |access-date=24 April 2015}}</ref> |
|||
In June 2014, Royal Jordanian announced that it had suspended services to [[Mosul]] in [[Iraq|northern Iraq]] due to the capture of the airport by the [[Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant|Islamic State]]. |
|||
The first of Royal Jordanian's [[Boeing 787 Dreamliner]] aircraft (267-seat, two-class configuration) entered service in September 2014, initially linking Amman with [[Jeddah]], [[Saudi Arabia]].<ref>''Airliner World''. March 2014 p.15</ref> The 787 Dreamliner is Royal Jordanian's first Boeing aircraft since the 707s and 747s, and replaced the Airbus A340-200s which had reached the end of their lives. The Dreamliners have replaced the Airbus A330-200s as leases on those aircraft have expired. The Dreamliners are generally used on Royal Jordanian's Far East destinations, to London and North America. |
|||
In May 2017, Royal Jordanian announced the appointment of [[Stefan Pichler]], the ex CEO of Air Berlin, Fiji Airways, Jazeera Airways, Virgin Australia and Thomas Cook as the new president and CEO.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jordantimes.com/news/local/rj-appoints-veteran-executive-ceo |title=RJ appoints veteran executive as CEO |date=28 May 2017}}</ref> |
|||
Pichler developed a turnaround plan which helped moving Royal Jordanian back into profitability by the end of 2017.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://aaco.org/media-center/news/aaco-members/royal-jordanian-returns-to-profitability |title=AACO – Royal Jordanian returns to profitability}}</ref> In this context, the airline cancelled the order of the 8th Dreamliner and also withdrew the A330F from its Cargo fleet for similar reasons. The CEO also stated that the strategy of Royal Jordanian would lead to a single type narrow-body fleet, not mentioning whether it will be Airbus, Boeing, Bombardier, or Embraer. In September 2020, Pichler resigned from his duties which were taken over by Chairman Saeed Samih Darwazah.<ref name="newceo"/> |
|||
== Corporate affairs == |
|||
=== Head office === |
|||
{{As of|2009}}, Haddadinco Engineering Company for Contracting is building the new Royal Jordanian head office in Amman.<ref>[http://www.rj.com/tabid/59/locale/en-US/default.aspx?itemid=210 "RJ News"]. Royal Jordanian. 24 November 2009. Retrieved on 13 December 2009.</ref> The building was designed by [[Niels Torp]].<ref>[http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-158911370.html "Niels Torp: airline headquarters, Amman, Jordan.(Work)(Royal Jordanian Airlines has new corporate headquarters)"]. ''[[Architectural Review]]''. 1 January 2007. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.</ref> The new building was completed in late 2011, and RJ employees began work in the building on January 3, 2012. In the 1960s, Alia's head office was in the Mango Building in Amman.<ref>[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1964/1964%20-%200889.html?search=%22British%20Eagle%22%20%22head%20office%22 498 "World Airline Directory"]. ''[[Flight International]]''. 2 April 1964.</ref> |
|||
=== Employment === |
|||
Royal Jordanian has invested heavily in its crew training facility at its headquarters in Amman. {{As of|2015}}, Royal Jordanian employed 4,394 people, according to the most recent annual report. |
|||
=== Rivalry === |
|||
Royal Jordanian began to put into place a new strategy at the end of 2002 which saw the airline concentrate on its neighboring nations, with increased frequencies. In a plan to establish itself as the Middle East's "regional airline" it began to add smaller routes such as [[Alexandria]] in [[Egypt]] to [[Aleppo]] in [[Syria]] which the bigger airlines, such as [[Emirates (airline)|Emirates]], would not undertake with the larger aircraft compared to Royal Jordanian's [[regional jets]]. As of the end of 2008, the plan had proven successful for the airline, with its main rivals being [[Middle East Airlines]] and [[Egypt Air]].<ref name="FG-Samer">Sobie, Brendan (22 January 2008). [http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/01/22/220922/going-the-distance-samer-majali-steers-royal-jordanian-into.html "Going the distance: Samer Majali steers Royal Jordanian into privatisation"].</ref> |
|||
Since 2008, Royal Jordanian has faced increased competition within the Middle East. The arrival of many new low-cost airlines such as [[Air Arabia]], [[Jazeera Airways]], and [[flydubai]] have caused problems for the Jordanian airline. With the arrival of these new airlines, Royal Jordanian has focused upon improving its onboard and ground services in order to retain market share. |
|||
=== Business figures === |
|||
The key trends for Royal Jordanian are (as at the financial year ending December 31):<ref>{{Cite web |title=Annual Report Financial Statement - Royal Jordanian |url=https://www.rj.com/en/meet-rj/investors-relations/annual-report-financial-statement |access-date=2023-12-02 |website=www.rj.com}}</ref> |
|||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:1em auto;text-align:center" |
|||
|+ Financial and operational statistics |
|+ Financial and operational statistics |
||
|- |
|||
! Year !! Aircraft kilometers !! Departures !! Flying hours !! Passengers !! Seat factor !! Employees !! Profit/loss |
|||
! Year !! Profit/loss (JOD m)!! Employees !! Passengers (m) !! Seat factor !! Fleet size |
|||
!Sources |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2002 |
! 2002 |
||
| |
| 3.0|| 3,008 || 1.3 || 66% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2003 |
! 2003 |
||
| |
| 9.7|| 3,162 || 1.4 || 68% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2004 |
! 2004 |
||
| |
| 15.3|| 3,313 || 1.7 || 71% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2005 |
! 2005 |
||
| |
| 20.5|| 3,557 || 1.8 || 69% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2006 |
! 2006 |
||
| |
| 6.1|| 3,799 || 2.0 || 66% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2007 |
! 2007 |
||
| |
| 24.1|| 4,275 || 2.2 || 71% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2008 |
! 2008 |
||
| 23.4|| 4,507 || 2.7 || 72% || |
|||
| '''64,379,058''' || '''34,285''' || '''101,381''' || '''2,701,000''' || '''72%''' || '''4,507''' || Loss 23,400,000 JD |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2009 |
! 2009 |
||
| |
| 28.6|| 4,399 || 2.6 || 68% || |
||
| |
| |
||
</center> |
|||
*Aircraft kilometers 2008: 64,379,058 ({{increase}} 14.48%) |
|||
*Number of departures 2008: 34,285 ({{increase}} 4041) |
|||
*Flying hours 2008: 101,381 ({{increase}} 14.71%) |
|||
*Total number of passengers 2008: 2,701,000 ({{increase}} 18.05%) |
|||
*Seat factor 2008: 72%. ({{increase}} 1%) |
|||
*Employees 2008: 4,507 ({{increase}} 232) |
|||
*Profit/loss 2008: Loss 23,400,000 JD |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|+ Scheduled services |
|||
! Year !! Passengers !! Cargo !! Excess baggage !! Airmail |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! |
! 2010 |
||
| |
| 9.6|| 4,700|| 3.0 || 71% || |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2011 |
|||
| <span style="color:red;">−57.9</span>|| 4,545 || 3.1 || 69% || |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2012 |
|||
| 1.1|| 4,541 || 3.3 || 73% || 29 |
|||
|<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=RJ AR 2013 |url=https://rj.com/-/media/RJ/PDFs/Annual-Reports/2013.pdf |website=RJ}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2013 |
|||
| <span style="color:red;">−38.8</span>|| 4,643|| 3.3 || 70% || 32 |
|||
|<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2014 |
|||
| <span style="color:red;">−39.6</span>|| 4,543 || 3.2 ||70% || 28 |
|||
|<ref>{{Cite web |title=RJ AR 2014 |url=https://rj.com/-/media/RJ/PDFs/Annual-Reports/2014.pdf |website=RJ}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2015 |
|||
| 16.0|| 4,394 || 2.9 || 67% || 27 |
|||
|<ref>{{Cite web |title=RJ Annual Report 2015 |url=https://rj.com/-/media/RJ/PDFs/Annual-Reports/2015.pdf |website=RJ}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2016 |
|||
| <span style="color:red;">−24.5</span>|| 4,185 || 3.0 || 65% || 26 |
|||
|<ref>{{Cite web |title=RJ Annual Report 2016 |url=https://rj.com/-/media/RJ/PDFs/Annual-Reports/2015.pdf |website=RJ}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2017 |
|||
| 0.27|| 4,135 || 3.1 || 71% || 26 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
! 2018 |
|||
| <span style="color:red;">−5.8</span>|| 4,054 || 3.2 || 73.8% || 26 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
!2019 |
|||
|10.3 |
|||
|4,018 |
|||
|3.3 |
|||
|74.2% |
|||
|27 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
!2020 |
|||
|<span style="color:red;">−161</span> |
|||
|3,599 |
|||
|0.75 |
|||
|65.4% |
|||
|23 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
!2021 |
|||
|<span style="color:red;">−74.2</span> |
|||
|3,437 |
|||
|1.6 |
|||
|67.9% |
|||
|24 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
!2022 |
|||
|<span style="color:red;">−78.8</span> |
|||
|3,913 |
|||
|3.0 |
|||
|77% |
|||
|27 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
!2023 |
|||
|<span style="color:red;">−8.5</span> |
|||
|3,913 |
|||
|3.6 |
|||
|78% |
|||
|30 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! 2006 |
|||
| 294,237 || 43,326 || 4,891 || 2,851 |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
</center> |
|||
*Scheduled passenger flights 2006: 294,237 ({{increase}} 2.83%) |
|||
*Scheduled cargo flights 2006: 43,326 ({{decrease}} 5.70%) |
|||
*Scheduled excess baggage flights 2006: 4,891 ({{increase}} 9.77%) |
|||
*Scheduled airmail flights 2006: 2,851 ({{increase}} 17.08%) |
|||
==Subsidiaries== |
|||
Royal Jordanian has stakes in the following: |
|||
* Royal Jordanian Cargo 100% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
*[[Royal Wings]] 100% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
* Jordan Airline Training and Simulation Limited (JATS) 20% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
* Jordan Aircraft Maintenance Limited (JorAMCo) 20% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
* Alpha (Flight catering services company) 30% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
* Royal Jordanian Air Academy 6% [http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/CompanyOverview/tabid/158/Default.aspx] |
|||
== Destinations == |
|||
The following changes will stay until January 2009. [http://airlineroute.blogspot.com/search/label/Royal%20Jordanian] |
|||
{{main|List of Royal Jordanian destinations}} |
|||
=== Codeshare agreements === |
|||
==Destinations== |
|||
Royal Jordanian [[Codeshare agreement|codeshares]] with the following airlines:<ref>{{Cite web|title=Codeshare Flights - Royal Jordanian|url=https://rj.com/en/plan-and-book/codeshare-flights|access-date=2022-01-30|website=rj.com}}</ref> |
|||
{{main|Royal Jordanian destinations}} |
|||
{{div col|colwidth=20em}} |
|||
* [[American Airlines]] |
|||
* [[British Airways]] |
|||
* [[Etihad Airways]] |
|||
* [[Gulf Air]] |
|||
* [[ITA Airways]] |
|||
* [[Malaysia Airlines]] |
|||
* [[Oman Air]] |
|||
* [[Qatar Airways]] |
|||
* [[TAROM]] |
|||
* [[Turkish Airlines]] |
|||
{{div col end}} |
|||
== Fleet == |
|||
;Planned destinations |
|||
=== Current fleet === |
|||
Services to several new destinations are being considered by the Royal Jordanian board, these include<ref>http://www.ameinfo.com/178596.html</ref>: Algiers, Ankara, Berlin, Casablanca, Izmir, Johannesburg, Lagos, Luxor, Sydney, Tehran and Tokyo. |
|||
[[File:royal.jordanian.a321-200.jy-ayg.arp.jpg|thumb|Royal Jordanian [[Airbus A320 family|Airbus A321-200]]]] |
|||
[[File:JY-BAB 170105 LHR 5597 (35388632922).jpg|thumb|Royal Jordanian [[Boeing 787-8]]]] |
|||
[[File:JY-AYV Airbus A321-231 Ryal Jordanian Airlines LHR 17.1.22.jpg|thumb|Royal Jordanian Airbus A321-200 in the retro livery]] |
|||
{{As of|2024|10}}, the Royal Jordanian fleet consists of the following aircraft:<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.rj.com/en/fly-rj/our-fleet/boeing-787|title=Our fleet|website=rj.com|publisher=Royal Jordanian Airlines}}</ref> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;" |
|||
==Fleet== |
|||
|+ Royal Jordanian fleet |
|||
The Royal Jordanian fleet consists of the following aircraft as of January 2010:<ref>[http://www.rja.com.jo/AboutRJ/OurFleet/tabid/114/Default.aspx Fleet Information]</ref> |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" |
|||
|+ '''Royal Jordanian fleet''' |
|||
|- bgcolor=#D4AF37 |
|||
!<font color=white>Aircraft |
|||
!<font color=white>In service |
|||
!<font color=white>Orders |
|||
!<font color=white>[[Option (aircraft purchasing)|Options]] |
|||
!<font color=white>Passengers <br> <small>(Crown/economy)</small> |
|||
!<font color=white>Notes |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
!rowspan="2"|Aircraft |
|||
|[[Airbus A310|Airbus A310-300]] |
|||
!rowspan="2"|In service |
|||
|3 |
|||
!rowspan="2"|Orders |
|||
|— |
|||
!colspan="3"|Passengers |
|||
|— |
|||
!rowspan="2"|Notes |
|||
|201 (18/183) |
|||
|New [[IFE]] and color scheme <br> Replacement aircraft: [[Boeing 787-8]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
!<abbr title="Crown class">C</abbr> |
|||
|[[Airbus A320|Airbus A319-100]] |
|||
!<abbr title="Economy class">Y</abbr> |
|||
|4 |
|||
!Total |
|||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
|110 (14/96) [http://www.rj.com/FlightTools/PressReleases/tabid/59/Default.aspx?itemID=113] |
|||
|New seats with AVOD <br> Fitted with on-air mobile services |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[Airbus A320-200]] |
||
| |
|9 |
||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
| |
|12 |
||
|138 |
|||
|136 (16/120) |
|||
|150 |
|||
|New seats with AVOD <br> To be fitted with on-air mobile services <br> Will be replaced with new aircraft between 2011 and 2012 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Airbus |
|[[Airbus A320neo]] |
||
|— |
|||
|1 |
|||
| |
|13 |
||
|colspan="3"|<abbr title="To Be Announced">TBA</abbr> |
|||
|— |
|||
|Deliveries from 2025{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} |
|||
|168 (0/168)[http://royalwings.com.jo/fleet.shtm] |
|||
|Operated By Royal Wings |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[Airbus A321-200]] |
||
|4 |
|||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
|168 (20/148) |
|||
|New seats with AVOD <br> To be fiited with on-air mobile services <br> 2 Will be replaced with new aircraft between 2011 and 2012 |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[Airbus A330|Airbus A330-200]] |
|||
|2 |
|2 |
||
|— |
|||
|20 |
|||
|142 |
|||
|162 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Airbus A321neo]] |
|||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
|283 (24/259) [http://www.tradearabia.com/news/newsdetails.asp?Sn=TTN&artid=176842] |
|||
|3 |
|||
|Entering Service 2010 <br> To be used on London and South East Asia Routes[http://www.rj.com/PressReleases/tabid/59/Default.aspx?itemID=217] |
|||
|colspan="3"|<abbr title="To Be Announced">TBA</abbr> |
|||
|Deliveries from 2025{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Boeing 787-8]] |
|||
|[[Airbus A340#A340-200|Airbus A340-200]] |
|||
| |
|7 |
||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
| |
|24 |
||
|246 |
|||
|254 (24/230) |
|||
|270<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rj.com/en/Boeing787.html |title=Boeing 787 Dreamliner |website=rj.com |publisher=Royal Jordanian Airlines |access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref> |
|||
|New colour scheme <br> Will be refited with new seats and in-seat in-flight entertainment <br> Replacement aircraft: [[Boeing 787-8]] |
|||
|One painted in [[Petra|Discover Petra]] livery (JY-BAH). |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Boeing 787-9]] |
|||
|[[Airbus A340#A340-600|Airbus A340-600 Prestige]] |
|||
|— |
|||
|1 |
|||
|6<ref>{{cite web|url=https://boeing.mediaroom.com/2023-11-13-Royal-Jordanian-Grows-its-Long-Haul-Fleet-With-Order-for-Boeing-787-9-Dreamliners|title=Royal Jordanian Grows its Long-Haul Fleet With Order for Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners|publisher=Boeing Media Room|date=13 November 2023}}</ref> |
|||
|— |
|||
|colspan="3"|<abbr title="To Be Announced">TBA</abbr> |
|||
|— |
|||
| |
|||
|VIP configuration |
|||
|Operated for The [[King of Jordan]]. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[Embraer E-Jet family|Embraer E175]] |
||
|— |
|||
|8 |
|||
|4 |
|||
|TBD |
|||
|Entry into service: 2012-2014 <br> Replacing: [[Airbus A310]] and [[Airbus A340|Airbus A340 Family]] <br> Middle-Eastern launch customer<br>Order includes 4 leases |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[Embraer E-Jets|Embraer E-175]] |
|||
|2 |
|2 |
||
|— |
|||
|12 |
|||
|60 |
|||
|72<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rj.com/en/embraer_175.html |title=Embraer 175 |website=rj.com |publisher=Royal Jordanian Airlines |access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref> |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[Embraer E-Jet family|Embraer E195]] |
|||
|1 |
|1 |
||
|— |
|||
|— |
|||
|12 |
|||
|70 (10/60) |
|||
|92 |
|||
|104<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.rj.com/en/fly-rj/our-fleet/embraer-195|title=Embraer 195 |website=rj.com |publisher=Royal Jordanian Airlines |access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref> |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Embraer E- |
|[[Embraer E-Jet E2 family|Embraer E190-E2]] |
||
| |
|3 |
||
| |
|1 |
||
|12 |
|12 |
||
|80 |
|||
|100 (12/88) |
|||
|92 |
|||
|First Middle-Eastern Airline to operate aircraft |
|||
|rowspan="2"|Deliveries begin Q4 2023.<ref>{{cite web|date=May 18, 2023 |title=Embraer and Azorra Seal Deal with Royal Jordanian Airlines for Eight New E2 Jets|url= https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/embraer-and-azorra-seal-deal-with-royal-jordanian-airlines-for-eight-new-e2-jets-301828677.html|access-date=May 18, 2023 |website=PRNewswire}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Embraer E-Jet E2 family|Embraer E195-E2]] |
|||
|'''Total''' |
|||
|2 |
|||
|'''28''' |
|||
|2 |
|||
|'''11''' |
|||
|12 |
|||
|'''16''' |
|||
| |
|110 |
||
| |
|122 |
||
|- |
|||
! scope="row" colspan="7" |{{anchor|Cargo_fleet}}Royal Jordanian Cargo fleet |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[Airbus A321-200|Airbus A321-200/P2F]] |
|||
|1 |
|||
|— |
|||
| colspan="3" |<abbr title="No Seats, Cargo Configuration">Cargo</abbr> |
|||
|Deliveries from 2023.<ref>{{cite web|date=27 March 2024|title=Royal Jordanian adds first A321 freighter|url=https://www.ch-aviation.com/news/138468-royal-jordanian-adds-first-a321-freighter|website=ch-aviation.com}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
!Total |
|||
!28 |
|||
!25 |
|||
! colspan="3" | |
|||
! |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
</center> |
|||
=== Former fleet === |
|||
As of January 2010, the average age of the Royal Jordanian fleet is 8.5 years. [http://www.airfleets.net/ageflotte/Royal%20Jordanian%20Airlines.htm] |
|||
Royal Jordanian previously operated the following aircraft types:<ref>Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al.: ''jp airline-fleets international''. Zürich-Airport 1967–2007.</ref> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;" |
|||
In early 2009, Royal Jordanian returned both [[Fokker F28]] Mk4000s to [[AirQuarius Aviation]] as it decided to use more efficient aircraft to Iraq, due to the high fuel prices. Since that decision was made RJ is using its Embraer fleet to operate Iraqi routes. |
|||
|+ Royal Jordanian retired fleet |
|||
|- |
|||
===Cargo=== |
|||
'''Royal Jordanian Cargo''' (Royal Jordanian Airlines Cargo) is the company's freight division operating to Africa, Europe, North America and Middle East. The airline also offers worldwide cargo charter services. Royal Jordanian Cargo flies to over 50 destinations including Baghdad, Tel Aviv, London, New York, Cairo, Saudi Arabia, Chicago, Delhi, and Bangkok. |
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<center> |
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{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" |
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|+ '''Royal Jordanian Cargo Fleet''' |
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|- bgcolor=lightgrey |
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!Aircraft |
!Aircraft |
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!Total |
!Total |
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!Introduced |
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!Capacity<br>(Weight) |
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!Retired |
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!Routes |
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!Notes |
!Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Airbus A310-200]] |
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|[[Airbus A310|Airbus A310-300F]][http://intern-edfh-spotting.de/spotterbrowser/imgview.php?id=382] |
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|2 |
|2 |
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|1999 |
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|35.5 tonnes |
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|2000 |
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|Medium-long haul routes |
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| |
| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Airbus A310-300]] |
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|[[Boeing 737-200F]] [http://www.ameinfo.com/127295.html] |
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| |
|11 |
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|1987 |
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|18 tons |
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|2012 |
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|Short haul routes |
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| |
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|Operated by [[Transworld Aviation]] |
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|} |
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</center> |
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===Retired fleet=== |
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[http://www.rj.com/AboutUs/OurCompany/Timeline/tabid/121/locale/en-US/default.aspx] |
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<center> |
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{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" |
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|+ '''Royal Jordanian Retired Fleet''' |
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|- bgcolor=lightgrey |
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!Aircraft |
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!Total in fleet |
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!Year retired |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Airbus |
|[[Airbus A319|Airbus A319-100]] |
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| |
|7 |
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|2008 |
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|1993 |
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|2024 |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Airbus A330-200]] |
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| |
|3 |
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|2010 |
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|1998 |
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|2017 |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Airbus A340-200]] |
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|4 |
|4 |
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|2002 |
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|1986-1990 |
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|2014 |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Boeing |
|[[Boeing 707-320C]] |
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| |
|14 |
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|1976 |
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|1990-1994 |
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|1996 |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Boeing 720B]] |
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|2 |
|2 |
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|1972 |
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|2009 |
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|1983 |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Boeing 727-200]] |
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| |
|7 |
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|1974 |
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|1970 |
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|1990 |
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| JY-ADU written off as [[Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines Flight 600]] |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Boeing 747-200]] |
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| |
|2 |
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|1977 |
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|1988-1994 |
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|1989 |
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|} |
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| |
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</center> |
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|- |
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|[[Bombardier Dash-8|Bombardier Q400]]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bombardier.com/en/media/newsList/details.237-royal-jordanian-airlines-first-to-operate-bombardier-q400-in-middle-east.bombardiercom.html?filter-bu=aerospace |title=Royal Jordanian Airlines First To Operate Bombardier Q400 In Middle East – Bombardier |website=www.bombardier.com |access-date=25 May 2018}}</ref> |
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==Royal Plus== |
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||2 |
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Royal Plus is Royal Jordanians frequent flyer program. Passengers are awarded points based on the type, class of flight and destination. Royal Plus members can also get points by traveling on other [[Oneworld]] airlines. |
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|2005 |
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|2008 |
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The four tiers in the Royal Plus Program are: |
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| |
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|- |
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* Royal Plus Blue |
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|[[Douglas DC-6]] |
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* Royal Plus Silver |
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|1 |
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* Royal Plus Gold |
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|1966 |
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* Royal Plus Platinum |
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|1972 |
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| |
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Card holders of Royal Jordanian's Royal Plus with either Silver, Gold or Platinum can use any [[Oneworld]] airline lounge/airport services across the world. |
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|- |
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|[[Douglas DC-7]] |
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|21 |
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|1963 |
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==Services== |
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|1967 |
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===Catering=== |
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Food and drinks served on flights leaving [[Amman]] are provided by Alpha Group. Hot meals will be served on a flight of at least one hour length. If the flight is shorter than one hour the cabin crew will provide snacks and drinks throughout the flight. These flights include those to [[Tel Aviv]], [[Beirut]] and [[Aqaba]] from [[Amman]]. |
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Royal Jordanian, remains the only international airline in the world to offer its Economy Class passengers three meal options to choose from beef, fish or poultry on any flight of over two hours duration. [http://www.rj.com/TravelEssentials/WellBeing/InTheAir/MealsOnboard/tabid/189/locale/en-US/default.aspx] |
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===In-flight entertainment=== |
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Royal Jordanians onboard entertainment system is called ''Sky Cinema''. |
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* In Economy Class on A319, A320, and A321 aircraft all passengers are supplied with personal televisions (PTV) in the seat in front of them. This is an audio and video on demand system (AVOD). A310 and A340 aircraft do not feature PTVs and AVOD in Economy Class, instead they feature bulkhead mounted screens, as well as LCD screens located every five rows along the cabin. |
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* In Crown Class, passengers are provided with AVOD and 35 video channels and 25 audio channels on the A319, A320, A321 and A340 aircraft. The portable entertainment devices (IMS) are only available for Crown Class passengers flying on A310 and Embraer aircraft. The IMS service is provided on flights of approximately 3 hours and more of flight time. The IMS library contains movies, short subjects, an audio library and games. |
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Interactive games are available in all classes on all flights, as well as news provided by [[CNN]] on all flights. |
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On very short flights, from [[Amman]] to [[Tel Aviv]], [[Amman]] to [[Beirut]] and [[Amman]] to [[Damascus]], the AVOD system is turned on but there is only the selection of games, [[CNN News]] the "Flight Show" and the comedy channel. This is due to the flights been less than 45 minutes hence movies/shows would not be complete upon arrival. |
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===Newspapers and magazines=== |
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Newspapers and magazines are available to all Crown Class passengers. Free newspapers are also provided to all Economy class passengers. The in-flight magazine, Royal Wings Magazine, is provided to all passengers. |
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===Seating=== |
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Crown Class seats on the A340 are old-style fully flat beds. On the A310, the Recaro manufactured seats are 6' long flat bed seats, with a 175 degree slope. |
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Seat pitch is 83 inches on the A340, 51 inches on the A310 and 46 inches on the short and medium haul aircraft. |
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In Economy Class Royal Jordanian offers 32 inch seat pitch onboard its Embraer aircraft, whilst it offers 33 inch seat pitch onboard its Airbus aircraft. All Royal Jordanian Economy class seats also offer a foot-rest. |
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===Crown Class lounges=== |
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Crown Class passengers can use lounges across the world including all Oneworld member airline lounges. As of August 2008 Royal Jordanian operates two lounges- one in Amman, [[Queen Alia International Airport]] and one at Aqaba, [[King Hussein International Airport]]. In August 2008 Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge, which can handle over 340 passengers. It is located in the South Terminal on the second floor and replaces the previous Jerash and Petra lounges in the airport. The new lounge is the second largest in the Middle East and provides facilities which include: |
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* A business center, with internet-connected computers. |
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* Jordanian and international newspapers and magazines. |
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* Isolated room for relaxing. |
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* Hotel-like bedrooms. |
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* Showers. |
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* Play room for children, with TV. [[File:Queen Alia International Airport.jpg|thumb|[[Airbus A320 family|A320]] taking off from [[Queen Alia International Airport]]]] |
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* Games room for adults. |
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* Praying rooms. |
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* LCD screens are installed in the main hall of the lounge. |
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* A smoking area with air-conditioning and ventilation. |
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* Food and drinks. |
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* Library. |
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* Views of the tarmac and runways. |
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Since this is the only lounge at Queen Alia International Airport, it is also used by any passenger traveling on business of first class in or out of Amman. Royal Jordanian announced that it was going to open three new lounges in Dubai, New York and London with the lounges set to open in late 2009, or early 2010. [http://www.rj.com/TravelEssentials/AirportInformation/QAIACrownLounge/tabid/365/locale/en-US/default.aspx] |
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===Zuwar stopover=== |
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Transiting passengers in Jordan can use the Zuwar Stopover package and spend a few days in Jordan. |
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===Royal Vacations program=== |
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Royal Jordanians "Royal Vacations Program" sells vacations. Points from staying at Royal Jordanian partner hotels will give points towards the Royal Plus program. |
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==Royal Jordanian charity activities== |
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* Aid to Lebanon , Gaza, Iraq and Pakistan - RJ staff contributed two shipments of goods to the needy in Lebanon and in Gaza, following a campaign among staff to contribute one or two days pay to help those who suffered from the military operations during the summer of 2006. The shipments included heaters, gas ovens, wheelchairs, foodstuff, blankets, school bags and baby milk. The goods were shipped to Lebanon on RJ, and to Gaza through Jordanian charity organizations. In cooperation with the United Nations, RJ ran four air cargo trips from Amman to Islamabad carrying foodstuff, medical supplies and human aid, a donation from Jordan to the victims of natural disasters that hit Pakistan in 2005. RJ also carried 27 tons of aid donated by Japanese charities to the Iraqi people, in addition to running four other trips carrying aid from Japan to Iraq. |
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* Donating free tickets for the Society of Families and Friends of the Disabled - this donation enables disabled people to participate in the first Arab Recreation, Sport, and Cultural Camp in Egypt. |
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* Injaz Program - For three years, RJ has been supporting and sponsoring the Injaz program for providing economic opportunities for Jordanian Youth. |
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* Contributing to Al Aman Fund for the Future of Orphans |
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* Supporting Ladies of Iraq Al-Ameer Cooperative Society |
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* Al-Shajara Cultural Forum |
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* AZM project |
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==Royal Jordanian awards== |
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* 2007 Airline Strategy Award |
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* King Abdullah II Award for Excellence |
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* Best Arab airline website |
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* Air Transport World magazine names RJ Phoenix Award winner |
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* CAPA Airline Turnaround of the Year 2006 |
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* International Star Award for Quality |
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* Best Airline Livery Award 2007 |
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* Airline of the Year "2007" by Air Finance Journal |
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* ‘Intercontinental’ Punctuality Award 2009 by Schiphol Aviation Awards <ref>http://www.estonianfreepress.com/2010/03/estonian-air-wins-punctuality-award-in-schiphol/</ref> |
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==Codeshare agreements== |
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In addition to its [[Oneworld]] partnerships, Royal Jordanian has codeshare agreements with the following airlines: |
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{| |
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|- valign="top" |
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| |
| |
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|- |
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*[[Air India]] |
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|[[Fokker F27 Friendship]] |
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*[[American Airlines]] † |
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|2 |
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*[[Austrian Airlines]] |
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|1967 |
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*[[British Airways]] † |
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|1969 |
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| |
| |
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|- |
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*[[Cyprus Airways]] |
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|[[Fokker F28 Fellowship]] |
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*[[Gulf Air]] |
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|1 |
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*[[Iberia Airlines|Iberia]]† |
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|2000 |
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*[[Malév Hungarian Airlines]] † |
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|2007 |
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| |
| |
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|- |
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*[[Royal Wings]] |
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|[[Handley Page Dart Herald]] |
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|2 |
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*[[Tarom]] |
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|1964 |
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*[[Thai Airways International]] |
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|1965 |
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| |
| |
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|- |
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*[[Transworld Aviation]] |
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|[[Lockheed L-1011 Tristar|Lockheed L-1011-500 Tristar]] |
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*[[UM Airlines]] |
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|5 |
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*[[US Airways]] |
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|1981 |
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*[[Yemen Airways]] |
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|1999 |
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| |
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|- |
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|[[Sud Aviation Caravelle|Sud Aviation Caravelle 10B]] |
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|3 |
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|1965 |
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|1975 |
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| |
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|- |
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|[[Vickers Viscount]] |
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|5 |
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|1961 |
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|1967 |
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| |
| |
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|} |
|} |
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[[S7 Airlines]] |
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<small>† - also members of [[oneworld]].</small> |
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== |
=== Livery === |
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Royal Jordanian has invested heavily in its crew training facility at its headquarters in Amman. As of 2008 Royal Jordanian employed 4,507 people. [http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/01/22/220922/going-the-distance-samer-majali-steers-royal-jordanian-into.html] |
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From 1963 to 1986, the original livery of Royal Jordanian Airlines consisted of a white fuselage with both red and gold cheatlines. |
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==Rivalry== |
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Royal Jordanian is the second largest carrier in the Levant and the only major Arab carrier serving Israel. It began to put into place a new strategy at the end of 2002 which saw the airline concentrate on its neighboring nations, with increased frequencies. In a plan to establish itself as the Middle-East's "regional airline" it began to add smaller routes such as Alexandria in Egypt to Aleppo in Syria which the bigger airlines such as [[Emirates Airline]], would not undertake with the larger aircraft compared to Royal Jordanians regional jets. |
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In December 1986, the airline changed its name from Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines to simply Royal Jordanian Airlines, which coincided the arrival of Airbus A310 and Airbus A320 airliners. The new livery consisted of a charcoal grey fuselage with the same red and gold cheatlines, similar to the earlier version. The tail consists of a golden crown with a red tip on the charcoal grey coloured aircraft tail. |
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As of the end of 2009, this plan had proven successful for the airline, with its main rivals being [[Middle East Airlines]] and [[Egypt Air]]. [http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/01/22/220922/going-the-distance-samer-majali-steers-royal-jordanian-into.html] |
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=== Special color schemes === |
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==Livery== |
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Until 2009, Royal Jordanian had never had an aircraft painted in a special colour scheme. It announced at the 10th birthday celebrations in February 2009 of the airline alliance Oneworld that it would paint its new A319 due for delivery in late March in a special scheme, which would be based around the Oneworld name and logo. The aircraft, registration JY-AYP, has its fuselage painted white, with the tailfin and engines in normal Royal Jordanian colours. "A member of Oneworld" in prominent lettering is located at the front of the aircraft, with the usual title "Royal Jordanian" further back.<ref>[http://www.oneworld.com/ow/news/details?objectID=16589 "oneworld airlines renew their commitment to build on the value the alliance offers customers worldwide – including a standard oneworld livery"]. 3 February 2009.</ref> |
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Royal Jordanians's livery is a dark grey fuselage with the titles in gold both in English and Arabic. Red tips are located on the fins, winglets and engines of the aircraft as well as two strips, one gold and one red, down the fuselage. The fin contains a crown. This livery has been in use since 2006, before then the livery was similar however the engines were not painted, and the fin did not have a curved stripe atop. |
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In October 2021, Royal Jordanian unveiled "Discover [[Petra]]" special livery on one of its Boeing 787 Dreamliners, registered JY-BAH.<ref>{{cite web|title=RJ takes the initiative to project Jordan by placing Petra-inspired livery on its 787 {{!}} TravelDailyNews International|url=https://www.traveldailynews.com/post/rj-takes-the-initiative-to-project-jordan-by-placing-petra-inspired-livery-on-its-787|last=Rokou |first=Tatiana|date=2021-10-19|work=TravelDailyNews|access-date=2021-11-15}}</ref> |
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===Special colour schemes=== |
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Until 2009 Royal Jordanian had never had an aircraft painted in a special colour scheme. It announced at the 10th birthday celebrations in February 2009 of the airline alliance [[Oneworld]] that it would paint its new A319 due for delivery in late March in a special scheme, which would be based around the oneworld name and logo. |
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A month later, in November 2021, the airline revealed an Airbus A321, JY-AYV, in its retro "Alia" livery. The aircraft's first flight in the new paint scheme was to [[London Heathrow]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.timesaerospace.aero/news/air-transport/rj-places-old-alia-livery-on-an-airbus-321-to-mark-centennial|title=RJ places old Alia livery on an Airbus 321 to mark centennial | Times Aerospace}}</ref> |
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The aircraft, registration JY-AYP, has its fuselage painted white, with the tailfin and engines in normal Royal Jordanian colours. "A member of [[Oneworld]]" in prominent lettering is located at the front of the aircraft, with the usual title "Royal Jordanian" further back. [http://www.oneworld.com/ow/news/details?objectID=16589] |
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== |
== Services == |
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{{More citations needed section|date=April 2011}} |
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The operation of private charter flights using aircraft from the Royal Jordanian fleet is uncommon, but may be arranged if aircraft of [[Royal Wings]], the subsidiary company of Royal Jordanian, cannot meet customer requirements. |
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== |
=== Catering === |
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Food and drinks served on flights leaving Amman are provided by [[Dnata]]. Hot meals will be served on a flight of at least three hours in length. If the flight is shorter than one hour, the cabin crew will provide snacks and drinks throughout, or before, the flight. These flights include those to [[Tel Aviv]], [[Cairo]], [[Baghdad]], [[Beirut]] and [[Aqaba]] from Amman. |
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The airline has named its new aircraft after Jordanian cities. The older aircraft such as the Airbus A340 and Airbus A310 are named after members of the Royal Jordanian Family. |
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=== In-flight entertainment === |
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===Names=== |
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Royal Jordanian's onboard entertainment system is called "Sky Cinema". |
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<center> |
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* In Economy Class on board the Airbus and Boeing aircraft all passengers are supplied with personal televisions (PTV), the system is audio- and video-on-demand system (AVOD). The system provides passengers with a selection of movies, television shows, audio and games. |
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{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" |
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* In Crown Class, passengers are provided with AVOD which includes a large library of movies, television shows, audio and games on board the Airbus and Boeing aircraft. Portable entertainment devices (IMS) are only available for Crown Class passengers flying on Embraer aircraft. The IMS service is provided on all international flights. The IMS library contains movies, short subjects, an audio library and games. |
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|+ '''Royal Jordanian Aircraft Names''' |
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|- bgcolor=lightgrey |
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!Aircraft |
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!Names |
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|- |
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|[[Airbus A320|Airbus A320-232]] |
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|Amman, Aqaba, Irbid, Madaba |
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|- |
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|[[Airbus A320|Airbus A319-100]] |
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|Ma'an, Al-Mafraq, Al Shobak, Ajloun |
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|- |
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|[[Airbus A320|Airbus A321-100]] |
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|Al-Karak, As-Salt, Al-Ramtha, Tafileh |
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|- |
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|[[Embraer E-Jets|Embraer E-175]] |
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|Zay, Dana |
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|- |
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|[[Embraer E-Jets|Embraer E-195]] |
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|Petra, Wadi Rum, Maeen, Wadi Musa, Jerash |
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|- |
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|[[Airbus A340|Airbus A340-200]] |
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|Prince Hussein Bin Abdullah, Princess Iman Bint Abdullah |
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Princess Salma Bint Abdullah, Queen Rania Alabdulah |
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|} |
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</center> |
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Interactive games are available in all classes on all flights, as well as news provided by [[CNN]] on all flights. On very short flights (from Amman to Tel Aviv, Beirut or Damascus), the AVOD system is turned on but there is only the selection of games, CNN News, the "Flight Show", and the comedy channel. This is due to the flights being less than 45 minutes hence movies/shows would not be complete upon arrival. |
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[http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=602242&page=2] |
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== |
=== Seating === |
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Crown Class seats on Boeing 787s are fully flat beds. Seat pitch is 83 inches on the Dreamliners and 46 inches on the short and medium haul aircraft. In Economy Class, Royal Jordanian offers 32-inch seat pitch on board its Embraer aircraft, whilst it offers 34-inch seat pitch on board its Airbus aircraft. All Royal Jordanian Economy class seats also offer a foot-rest. |
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As of 2009 Haddadinco Engineering Company for Contracting is building the new Royal Jordanian head office in Amman.<ref>"[http://www.rj.com/tabid/59/locale/en-US/default.aspx?itemid=210 RJ News]." Royal Jordanian. 24 November 2009. Retrieved on 13 December 2009.</ref> The building was designed by [[Niels Torp]].<ref>"[http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-158911370.html Niels Torp: airline headquarters, Amman, Jordan.(Work)(Royal Jordanian Airlines has new corporate headquarters)]." ''[[Architectural Review]]''. 1 January 2007. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.</ref> |
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=== Crown Class lounges === |
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In the 1960s Alia's head office was in the Mango Building in Amman.<ref>"World Airline Directory." ''[[Flight International]]''. 2 April 1964. [http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1964/1964%20-%200889.html?search=%22British%20Eagle%22%20%22head%20office%22 498].</ref> |
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Crown Class passengers can use lounges across the world including all Oneworld member airline lounges. {{As of|2008|08}} Royal Jordanian operates two lounges: one in Amman, at [[Queen Alia International Airport]], and one at Aqaba, at [[King Hussein International Airport]]. In August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge, which can handle over 340 passengers. It is located in the South Terminal on the second floor and replaces the previous Jerash and Petra lounges in the airport. |
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=== Frequent-flyer program === |
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==Incidents and accidents== |
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Royal Club is Royal Jordanian's [[frequent flyer program]].<ref name="arabianaerospace.aero" /> Passengers are awarded miles based on the type, class of flight and destination. Royal Club members can also get miles by traveling on other Oneworld airlines. Card holders of Royal Jordanian's Royal Plus with either Silver, Gold or Platinum can use Oneworld airport services across the world while Gold and Platinum also have lounge access. |
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There have been four major incidents or accidents involving '''Alia Jordanian''' flights: |
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== Accidents and incidents == |
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*On 10 April 1965, an Alia Jordanian [[Handley Page Dart Herald]] en route from [[Beirut]] to [[Amman]] crashed near [[Damascus]] in [[Syria]]. All four crew members and 50 passengers were killed. The aircraft was written-off.<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19650410-0 Aviation Safety Network description of 1965 accident]</ref>. |
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Royal Jordanian has experienced 13 [[Aviation accidents and incidents|aviation occurrences]] and six hijackings throughout its history, four of them fatal. The airline's two worst accidents, both involving [[Air charter|chartered]] [[Boeing 707]]s, happened in [[Nigeria]] in 1973 and [[Morocco]] in 1975, and to date are both the deadliest accidents in those countries and the deadliest worldwide involving the 707. |
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*On 22 January 1973, an Alia Jordanian [[Boeing 707]] crashed on landing at [[Kano]] airport in [[Nigeria]]. Six crew members and 170 passengers were killed. The aircraft was written-off.<ref>[http://www.kanoonline.com/aircrafts_accidents.html Accident in 1973 at Kano]</ref>. |
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*On April 10, 1965, all 54 passengers and crew aboard an ALIA Handley Page HPR-7 Herald 207 died after their plane crashed into a mountain near Damascus, Syria as a result of a structural failure of the fuselage in flight. |
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* On 3 August 1975, an Alia Jordanian [[Boeing 707]] heading for [[Agadir]] airport in [[Morocco]] crashed into high ground. All seven crew members and 181 passengers were killed.<ref>[http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=08031975®=JY-AEE&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines AirDisaster.com database entry for 1975 accident]</ref>. |
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* |
*On January 22, 1973, [[Kano air disaster|176 people were killed]] when an ALIA Boeing 707 was landing at [[Kano (city)|Kano]], [[Nigeria]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=01221973®=JY-ADO&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090107045939/http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=01221973®=JY-ADO&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |archive-date=7 January 2009 |title=Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 01221973 |url-status=usurped |access-date=24 April 2015}}</ref> |
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*On August 3, 1975, [[Agadir air disaster|all 188 people on board were killed]] when an ALIA Boeing 707 struck a mountain ridge while making its approach for a landing in [[Morocco]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=08031975®=JY-AEE&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |title=Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 08031975 |access-date=24 April 2015 |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130523181933/http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=08031975®=JY-AEE&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |archive-date=23 May 2013}}</ref> |
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* On 11 June 1985, Alia Jordanian flight 402, a [[Boeing 727]] headed to [[Beirut]], was stormed shortly before takeoff by a group of five terrorists led by [[Fawaz Younis]]. After flying to [[Larnaca]], [[Cyprus]], and [[Palermo]], [[Italy]], the airplane returned to Beirut; it took off again on 12 June but was only airborne a couple of hours before returning to the Beirut airport, where the hijackers released all the passengers and crew, blew up the plane, and escaped. In 1988 Younis was arrested and became the first person charged under a new federal statute giving the [[United States]] jurisdiction over terrorist acts committed overseas but involving American citizens. |
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*On March 14, 1979, [[Alia Royal Jordanian Flight 600|45 of the 64 persons aboard]] an ALIA Boeing 727 were killed as a result of a windshear on landing at the Doha International Airport in [[Qatar]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=03141979®=JY-ADU&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090103065957/http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi-bin/view_details.cgi?date=03141979®=JY-ADU&airline=Alia+Royal+Jordanian+Airlines |archive-date=3 January 2009 |title=Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 03141979 |url-status=usurped |access-date=24 April 2015}}</ref> |
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*On June 11, 1985, [[Fawaz Younis]] and four [[Amal Movement]] men hijacked Flight 402, a Boeing 727, forcing the plane to and from Beirut and Jordan. 13 hours later, after releasing the passengers, the hijackers blew up the plane. |
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Since the name of the carrier was changed to |
Since the name of the carrier was changed to Royal Jordanian Airlines in 1986, the only fatal incident was when a hijacker, seeking political asylum, was killed by the on-board security agent on 5 July 2000, on board a Royal Jordanian [[Airbus A320 family|Airbus A320]] flying from Amman to Damascus.<ref>[https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bomb-explodes-on-jordanian-jet/ "Bomb Explodes On Jordanian Jet"]. CBS News. 5 July 2000.</ref> |
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==References== |
== References == |
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==External links== |
== External links == |
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*{{Official website|http://www.rj.com}} (Royal Jordanian) |
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*{{Official website|http://www.rj-cargo.com/}} (Royal Jordanian Cargo) |
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Latest revision as of 20:33, 13 December 2024
| |||||||
Founded | 9 December 1963 (as Alia Airlines – Royal Jordanian Airlines) | ||||||
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Hubs | Amman–Queen Alia | ||||||
Focus cities | Aqaba–King Hussein | ||||||
Frequent-flyer program | Royal Club[1] | ||||||
Alliance | Oneworld | ||||||
Subsidiaries | |||||||
Fleet size | 31 | ||||||
Destinations | 51 | ||||||
Headquarters | Amman, Jordan | ||||||
Key people | |||||||
Website | www |
Royal Jordanian Airlines (formerly known as Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines) is the flag carrier of Jordan with its head office in the capital, Amman.[7] The airline operates scheduled international services over four continents from its main base at Queen Alia International Airport, with over 500 flights per week and at least 110 daily departures. It joined the Oneworld airline alliance in 2007.[8]
History
[edit]1960s to 1990s
[edit]The airline was established on 9 December 1963 and started operations on 15 December 1963 after a royal decree by the late King Hussein. It was named Alia (or Aalya) after King Hussein's eldest child, Princess Alia bint Al Hussein of Jordan (born on 13 February 1956). It is a common misconception that the airline was named after the King's third wife, Queen Alia, whom King Hussein did not marry until 1972. The airline was founded with capital from private shareholders but the Jordanian government later took over the company.[9]
Alia (the Royal Jordanian Airline) started operations with two Handley Page Dart Heralds and a Douglas DC-7 aircraft, serving Kuwait City, Beirut and Cairo from Amman. In 1964, another DC-7 was added and service began to Jeddah. In 1965, Alia initiated service to Rome, its first destination in Europe. The progress made by the airline was threatened by an Israeli air raid during the 1967 Six-Day War when the DC-7 aircraft were destroyed. They were replaced by two Fokker F27 Friendship airliners.
In 1968, the airline joined the jet age when it introduced the Sud Aviation Caravelle, and expanded the route network to Nicosia, Benghazi, Dhahran and Doha. 1969 saw the addition of service to Munich, Istanbul and Tehran.
In 1970, Alia phased out the F27s and ordered Boeing 707 aircraft. Frankfurt and Abu Dhabi were added to the network. The 707s were delivered in 1971. In that year, service was initiated to Madrid, Copenhagen and Karachi. During the rest of the decade, Boeing 720s, Boeing 727s, and Boeing 747s were added to the fleet. A catering department was established, and duty-free shops were opened at Amman airport. Services were added to destinations including Bahrain, Dubai, Muscat, Rabat, Geneva, Amsterdam, Baghdad, Bangkok, Vienna, Damascus, New York City, Houston, and Ras al-Khaimah. In 1979, Alia became a founding member of the Arab Airlines Technical Consortium (AATC).
In the 1980s, Tunis and Tripoli joined the route map, and Alia's IBM computer center was inaugurated. Lockheed L-1011 Tristars, Airbus A310s and Airbus A320s joined the fleet. In December 1986, Alia changed its name to Royal Jordanian Airlines, when Princess Alia was nearing her divorce. The airline's first woman pilot flew one of their aircraft during this decade. Service was added to Belgrade, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Bucharest, Singapore, Riyadh, Kuala Lumpur – in cooperation with MAS, Sana'a, Moscow. Montreal, Delhi, Calcutta and Ankara. This decade also saw the introduction of the Gabriel Automated Ticket System – (GATS).
The 1990s saw further expansion. Royal Jordanian and nine other Arab air carriers signed up for the Galileo CRS. The IMCS maintenance and engineering system was added, a new Amman city air terminal was opened at the 7th Circle of the Jordanian capital, and services to Rafah started, since then halted. The cities of Toronto, Colombo, Jakarta, Berlin, Mumbai, Milan and Tel Aviv were added to the network. In November 1997, Royal Jordanian became a code-sharing partner with the US carrier Trans World Airlines and moved operations into the TWA Flight Center (Terminal 5) at the John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.[10]
2000 and beyond, and privatization
[edit]In 2000, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) renewed the airline's maintenance and engineering department's license. The duty-free shop was among the services to be privatised. A holding company, RJI, wholly owned by the government, was incorporated as a public limited company in February 2001 to hold all the airlines and associated investments. The airline's name was changed on 5 February 2001 to Alia – The Royal Jordanian Airlines Company, although travellers still use the popular name of Royal Jordanian.
The flag carrier's subsidiary Royal Wings operated an Airbus A320-212 aircraft on both scheduled and charter services to destinations in Egypt, Cyprus, and Israel.
On 20 December 2006, Royal Jordanian announced that they would replace two Airbus A321s with two new units, and order four new Airbus A319s to enter service in early 2008.
In April 2007, Royal Jordanian became part of Oneworld, thus becoming the first Arab airline to join such a global alliance system. The following month, the airline announced an order for a total of 10 Boeing 787 Dreamliners, for service entry in 2010. This is the first order Royal Jordanian has placed with Boeing.[11]
Montreal was re-added to the network on 25 May 2007, after the route was cancelled in 1997. Also during May, Royal Jordanian was the sponsor of the World Economic Forum, which was held at the Dead Sea, Jordan.
On 11 July 2007, Royal Jordanian celebrated thirty years of non-stop service between Amman and New York City, making it the longest-serving Arab airline to this gateway to the U.S. RJ won the "Airline Strategy Award" in the technology category at the sixth annual Airline Strategy Awards on 16 July 2007. On 23 July, RJ saw the introduction of cargo flights, Damascus being the first destination served from Amman, using a Boeing 737.
Royal Jordanian made its first flight to Budapest, on 28 July, using an Embraer 195. In October, RJ announced the switch of two Embraer 195 jets of its original order to two Embraer 175 jets. Royal Jordanian opened a new lounge at King Hussein International Airport in Aqaba.
RJ will be the first Middle East airline to provide its passengers with OnAir's in-flight Internet and mobile phone services, including e-mail, SMS and voice calls.[12] Royal Jordanian has upgraded its three Airbus A310s at a cost of over 10 million Jordanian dinars (JOD).
Royal Jordanian was privatized at the end of 2007, resulting in 71% of its assets being sold. The market capitalization of the company stands at 260 million JOD, and share-trading commenced on 17 December 2007.
On 24 December 2007, Royal Jordanian confirmed Baku as one of its new destinations for 2008, using an Embraer 195 twice weekly from Amman. In early 2008, however, RJ officials decided against the new route, citing that high fuel prices and a new market were a risk too large to take at that time. Royal Jordanian plans to operate the Amman-Baku route in late 2009 or early 2010. On 22 January 2008, RJ launched flights to Hong Kong via Bangkok, with three flights/week during winter, and five flights/week during summer, making it the airline's first route to China.[13]
The Airbus A319 entered service on 13 March 2008, making RJ the first Middle East airline to operate three aircraft of the Airbus A320 family.[14] On 17 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened a new route to Kyiv, using Embraer 195 jets for this twice-weekly service. On 24 August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge at Queen Alia International Airport Amman, replacing the "Petra" and "Jerash" lounges. The new lounge is located on the second floor of the South Terminal and is the second-largest airport lounge in the Middle East, being able to handle over 340 passengers.[15]
The airline recorded an 18% increase in passenger numbers in July 2008. With the airline transporting 278,000 passengers, the seat factor grew by 5% in that month to reach 81%.[16] As part of Royal Jordanian's commitment to its airline alliance Oneworld, an announcement was made at the alliance's 10th birthday celebrations on 3 February 2009 that RJ would paint its new A319 (due for delivery in late March) in a scheme that would be based around the Oneworld name and logo. This is the first special colour scheme Royal Jordanian will have used.[17]
Royal Jordanian resumed service to Brussels on 1 April 2009, six years after the route was discontinued by the airline, flying twice weekly from Amman with the airline planning to add a further two flights per week later in 2009.
On 28 March 2010, Royal Jordanian inaugurated regular direct flights to Madinah Munawwarah, Saudi Arabia, with four weekly flights. On the 23 March, Royal Jordanian confirmed that it had ordered two A330-200s and one Embraer 175. Royal Jordanian recommenced operations to Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur on June 2, 2010, after it had suspended this route in 2004. Aircraft used on this route is the new Airbus A330-200 and later switched to Boeing 787 Dreamliner.
In May 2011, Royal Jordanian announced that they will retire the Airbus A310 aircraft in December 2011, and January 2012. Royal Jordanian uses an Airbus A330 and an Airbus A321 for non-stop flights to London (Heathrow Terminal 3). [18]
In June 2014, Royal Jordanian announced that it had suspended services to Mosul in northern Iraq due to the capture of the airport by the Islamic State.
The first of Royal Jordanian's Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft (267-seat, two-class configuration) entered service in September 2014, initially linking Amman with Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.[19] The 787 Dreamliner is Royal Jordanian's first Boeing aircraft since the 707s and 747s, and replaced the Airbus A340-200s which had reached the end of their lives. The Dreamliners have replaced the Airbus A330-200s as leases on those aircraft have expired. The Dreamliners are generally used on Royal Jordanian's Far East destinations, to London and North America.
In May 2017, Royal Jordanian announced the appointment of Stefan Pichler, the ex CEO of Air Berlin, Fiji Airways, Jazeera Airways, Virgin Australia and Thomas Cook as the new president and CEO.[20] Pichler developed a turnaround plan which helped moving Royal Jordanian back into profitability by the end of 2017.[21] In this context, the airline cancelled the order of the 8th Dreamliner and also withdrew the A330F from its Cargo fleet for similar reasons. The CEO also stated that the strategy of Royal Jordanian would lead to a single type narrow-body fleet, not mentioning whether it will be Airbus, Boeing, Bombardier, or Embraer. In September 2020, Pichler resigned from his duties which were taken over by Chairman Saeed Samih Darwazah.[6]
Corporate affairs
[edit]Head office
[edit]As of 2009[update], Haddadinco Engineering Company for Contracting is building the new Royal Jordanian head office in Amman.[22] The building was designed by Niels Torp.[23] The new building was completed in late 2011, and RJ employees began work in the building on January 3, 2012. In the 1960s, Alia's head office was in the Mango Building in Amman.[24]
Employment
[edit]Royal Jordanian has invested heavily in its crew training facility at its headquarters in Amman. As of 2015[update], Royal Jordanian employed 4,394 people, according to the most recent annual report.
Rivalry
[edit]Royal Jordanian began to put into place a new strategy at the end of 2002 which saw the airline concentrate on its neighboring nations, with increased frequencies. In a plan to establish itself as the Middle East's "regional airline" it began to add smaller routes such as Alexandria in Egypt to Aleppo in Syria which the bigger airlines, such as Emirates, would not undertake with the larger aircraft compared to Royal Jordanian's regional jets. As of the end of 2008, the plan had proven successful for the airline, with its main rivals being Middle East Airlines and Egypt Air.[25]
Since 2008, Royal Jordanian has faced increased competition within the Middle East. The arrival of many new low-cost airlines such as Air Arabia, Jazeera Airways, and flydubai have caused problems for the Jordanian airline. With the arrival of these new airlines, Royal Jordanian has focused upon improving its onboard and ground services in order to retain market share.
Business figures
[edit]The key trends for Royal Jordanian are (as at the financial year ending December 31):[26]
Year | Profit/loss (JOD m) | Employees | Passengers (m) | Seat factor | Fleet size | Sources |
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2002 | 3.0 | 3,008 | 1.3 | 66% | ||
2003 | 9.7 | 3,162 | 1.4 | 68% | ||
2004 | 15.3 | 3,313 | 1.7 | 71% | ||
2005 | 20.5 | 3,557 | 1.8 | 69% | ||
2006 | 6.1 | 3,799 | 2.0 | 66% | ||
2007 | 24.1 | 4,275 | 2.2 | 71% | ||
2008 | 23.4 | 4,507 | 2.7 | 72% | ||
2009 | 28.6 | 4,399 | 2.6 | 68% | ||
2010 | 9.6 | 4,700 | 3.0 | 71% | ||
2011 | −57.9 | 4,545 | 3.1 | 69% | ||
2012 | 1.1 | 4,541 | 3.3 | 73% | 29 | [27] |
2013 | −38.8 | 4,643 | 3.3 | 70% | 32 | [27] |
2014 | −39.6 | 4,543 | 3.2 | 70% | 28 | [28] |
2015 | 16.0 | 4,394 | 2.9 | 67% | 27 | [29] |
2016 | −24.5 | 4,185 | 3.0 | 65% | 26 | [30] |
2017 | 0.27 | 4,135 | 3.1 | 71% | 26 | |
2018 | −5.8 | 4,054 | 3.2 | 73.8% | 26 | |
2019 | 10.3 | 4,018 | 3.3 | 74.2% | 27 | |
2020 | −161 | 3,599 | 0.75 | 65.4% | 23 | |
2021 | −74.2 | 3,437 | 1.6 | 67.9% | 24 | |
2022 | −78.8 | 3,913 | 3.0 | 77% | 27 | |
2023 | −8.5 | 3,913 | 3.6 | 78% | 30 |
Destinations
[edit]Codeshare agreements
[edit]Royal Jordanian codeshares with the following airlines:[31]
Fleet
[edit]Current fleet
[edit]As of October 2024[update], the Royal Jordanian fleet consists of the following aircraft:[32]
Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C | Y | Total | ||||
Airbus A320-200 | 9 | — | 12 | 138 | 150 | |
Airbus A320neo | — | 13 | TBA | Deliveries from 2025[citation needed] | ||
Airbus A321-200 | 2 | — | 20 | 142 | 162 | |
Airbus A321neo | — | 3 | TBA | Deliveries from 2025[citation needed] | ||
Boeing 787-8 | 7 | — | 24 | 246 | 270[33] | One painted in Discover Petra livery (JY-BAH). |
Boeing 787-9 | — | 6[34] | TBA | |||
Embraer E175 | 2 | — | 12 | 60 | 72[35] | |
Embraer E195 | 1 | — | 12 | 92 | 104[36] | |
Embraer E190-E2 | 3 | 1 | 12 | 80 | 92 | Deliveries begin Q4 2023.[37] |
Embraer E195-E2 | 2 | 2 | 12 | 110 | 122 | |
Royal Jordanian Cargo fleet | ||||||
Airbus A321-200/P2F | 1 | — | Cargo | Deliveries from 2023.[38] | ||
Total | 28 | 25 |
Former fleet
[edit]Royal Jordanian previously operated the following aircraft types:[39]
Aircraft | Total | Introduced | Retired | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Airbus A310-200 | 2 | 1999 | 2000 | |
Airbus A310-300 | 11 | 1987 | 2012 | |
Airbus A319-100 | 7 | 2008 | 2024 | |
Airbus A330-200 | 3 | 2010 | 2017 | |
Airbus A340-200 | 4 | 2002 | 2014 | |
Boeing 707-320C | 14 | 1976 | 1996 | |
Boeing 720B | 2 | 1972 | 1983 | |
Boeing 727-200 | 7 | 1974 | 1990 | JY-ADU written off as Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines Flight 600 |
Boeing 747-200 | 2 | 1977 | 1989 | |
Bombardier Q400[40] | 2 | 2005 | 2008 | |
Douglas DC-6 | 1 | 1966 | 1972 | |
Douglas DC-7 | 21 | 1963 | 1967 | |
Fokker F27 Friendship | 2 | 1967 | 1969 | |
Fokker F28 Fellowship | 1 | 2000 | 2007 | |
Handley Page Dart Herald | 2 | 1964 | 1965 | |
Lockheed L-1011-500 Tristar | 5 | 1981 | 1999 | |
Sud Aviation Caravelle 10B | 3 | 1965 | 1975 | |
Vickers Viscount | 5 | 1961 | 1967 |
Livery
[edit]From 1963 to 1986, the original livery of Royal Jordanian Airlines consisted of a white fuselage with both red and gold cheatlines.
In December 1986, the airline changed its name from Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines to simply Royal Jordanian Airlines, which coincided the arrival of Airbus A310 and Airbus A320 airliners. The new livery consisted of a charcoal grey fuselage with the same red and gold cheatlines, similar to the earlier version. The tail consists of a golden crown with a red tip on the charcoal grey coloured aircraft tail.
Special color schemes
[edit]Until 2009, Royal Jordanian had never had an aircraft painted in a special colour scheme. It announced at the 10th birthday celebrations in February 2009 of the airline alliance Oneworld that it would paint its new A319 due for delivery in late March in a special scheme, which would be based around the Oneworld name and logo. The aircraft, registration JY-AYP, has its fuselage painted white, with the tailfin and engines in normal Royal Jordanian colours. "A member of Oneworld" in prominent lettering is located at the front of the aircraft, with the usual title "Royal Jordanian" further back.[41]
In October 2021, Royal Jordanian unveiled "Discover Petra" special livery on one of its Boeing 787 Dreamliners, registered JY-BAH.[42]
A month later, in November 2021, the airline revealed an Airbus A321, JY-AYV, in its retro "Alia" livery. The aircraft's first flight in the new paint scheme was to London Heathrow.[43]
Services
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2011) |
Catering
[edit]Food and drinks served on flights leaving Amman are provided by Dnata. Hot meals will be served on a flight of at least three hours in length. If the flight is shorter than one hour, the cabin crew will provide snacks and drinks throughout, or before, the flight. These flights include those to Tel Aviv, Cairo, Baghdad, Beirut and Aqaba from Amman.
In-flight entertainment
[edit]Royal Jordanian's onboard entertainment system is called "Sky Cinema".
- In Economy Class on board the Airbus and Boeing aircraft all passengers are supplied with personal televisions (PTV), the system is audio- and video-on-demand system (AVOD). The system provides passengers with a selection of movies, television shows, audio and games.
- In Crown Class, passengers are provided with AVOD which includes a large library of movies, television shows, audio and games on board the Airbus and Boeing aircraft. Portable entertainment devices (IMS) are only available for Crown Class passengers flying on Embraer aircraft. The IMS service is provided on all international flights. The IMS library contains movies, short subjects, an audio library and games.
Interactive games are available in all classes on all flights, as well as news provided by CNN on all flights. On very short flights (from Amman to Tel Aviv, Beirut or Damascus), the AVOD system is turned on but there is only the selection of games, CNN News, the "Flight Show", and the comedy channel. This is due to the flights being less than 45 minutes hence movies/shows would not be complete upon arrival.
Seating
[edit]Crown Class seats on Boeing 787s are fully flat beds. Seat pitch is 83 inches on the Dreamliners and 46 inches on the short and medium haul aircraft. In Economy Class, Royal Jordanian offers 32-inch seat pitch on board its Embraer aircraft, whilst it offers 34-inch seat pitch on board its Airbus aircraft. All Royal Jordanian Economy class seats also offer a foot-rest.
Crown Class lounges
[edit]Crown Class passengers can use lounges across the world including all Oneworld member airline lounges. As of August 2008[update] Royal Jordanian operates two lounges: one in Amman, at Queen Alia International Airport, and one at Aqaba, at King Hussein International Airport. In August 2008, Royal Jordanian opened its new lounge, which can handle over 340 passengers. It is located in the South Terminal on the second floor and replaces the previous Jerash and Petra lounges in the airport.
Frequent-flyer program
[edit]Royal Club is Royal Jordanian's frequent flyer program.[1] Passengers are awarded miles based on the type, class of flight and destination. Royal Club members can also get miles by traveling on other Oneworld airlines. Card holders of Royal Jordanian's Royal Plus with either Silver, Gold or Platinum can use Oneworld airport services across the world while Gold and Platinum also have lounge access.
Accidents and incidents
[edit]Royal Jordanian has experienced 13 aviation occurrences and six hijackings throughout its history, four of them fatal. The airline's two worst accidents, both involving chartered Boeing 707s, happened in Nigeria in 1973 and Morocco in 1975, and to date are both the deadliest accidents in those countries and the deadliest worldwide involving the 707.
- On April 10, 1965, all 54 passengers and crew aboard an ALIA Handley Page HPR-7 Herald 207 died after their plane crashed into a mountain near Damascus, Syria as a result of a structural failure of the fuselage in flight.
- On January 22, 1973, 176 people were killed when an ALIA Boeing 707 was landing at Kano, Nigeria.[44]
- On August 3, 1975, all 188 people on board were killed when an ALIA Boeing 707 struck a mountain ridge while making its approach for a landing in Morocco.[45]
- On March 14, 1979, 45 of the 64 persons aboard an ALIA Boeing 727 were killed as a result of a windshear on landing at the Doha International Airport in Qatar.[46]
- On June 11, 1985, Fawaz Younis and four Amal Movement men hijacked Flight 402, a Boeing 727, forcing the plane to and from Beirut and Jordan. 13 hours later, after releasing the passengers, the hijackers blew up the plane.
Since the name of the carrier was changed to Royal Jordanian Airlines in 1986, the only fatal incident was when a hijacker, seeking political asylum, was killed by the on-board security agent on 5 July 2000, on board a Royal Jordanian Airbus A320 flying from Amman to Damascus.[47]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Arabian Aerospace – Royal Jordanian launch all new frequent flyer programme". www.arabianaerospace.aero.
- ^ "RJ owns of 90% of Jordan Airports Company". Jordan News. 7 July 2023. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Royal Tours". Royal Tours Travel & Tourism. Royal Tours. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Tikram For Airport Services". Tikram. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Samer Majali designated to assume the role of RJS President CEO - Royal Jordanian".
- ^ a b "Royal Jordanian CEO Pichler Is Said to Have Resigned Last Month". Bloomberg. 8 October 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ "RJ Phone numbers in Jordan." Royal Jordanian. Retrieved on 21 June 2010. "Office Address: Building 37 -Mohammad Ali Janah St. -Abdoun near the 5th circle P.O. Box: 302 Amman 11118"
- ^ "Royal Jordanian - oneworld Member Airline". www.oneworld.com. Retrieved 2023-01-20.
- ^ "Royal Jordanian Airlines". Trofam Spotting. Retrieved 2019-05-24.
- ^ "TWA Press Releases". Archived from the original on 1999-09-13. Retrieved 2018-05-30.
- ^ Golden, Lara Lynn (20 May 2007). Press release "Royal Jordanian negotiating for 12 787s through direct purchase and lease contracts". AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited.
- ^ Home | OnAir. Onair.aero. Retrieved on 2010-11-13.
- ^ Manibo, Medilyn (22 January 2008). Press release "RJ starts operating flights between Amman and Hong Kong today". AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited.
- ^ [1] Archived February 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [2] Archived February 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "RJ reports 18% increase in passenger numbers last month | Royal Jordanian | AMEinfo.com". Archived from the original on 2013-08-01. Retrieved 2018-11-26.
- ^ "oneworld news". www.oneworld.com.
- ^ "Royal Jordanian". Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- ^ Airliner World. March 2014 p.15
- ^ "RJ appoints veteran executive as CEO". 28 May 2017.
- ^ "AACO – Royal Jordanian returns to profitability".
- ^ "RJ News". Royal Jordanian. 24 November 2009. Retrieved on 13 December 2009.
- ^ "Niels Torp: airline headquarters, Amman, Jordan.(Work)(Royal Jordanian Airlines has new corporate headquarters)". Architectural Review. 1 January 2007. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.
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- ^ "Royal Jordanian Airlines First To Operate Bombardier Q400 In Middle East – Bombardier". www.bombardier.com. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
- ^ "oneworld airlines renew their commitment to build on the value the alliance offers customers worldwide – including a standard oneworld livery". 3 February 2009.
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 08031975". Archived from the original on 23 May 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 03141979". Archived from the original on 3 January 2009. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Bomb Explodes On Jordanian Jet". CBS News. 5 July 2000.
External links
[edit]Media related to Royal Jordanian Airlines at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (Royal Jordanian)
- Official website (Royal Jordanian Cargo)