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China Airlines holds on to older planes amid 787 delays

China Airlines holds on to older planes amid 787 delays

The Sun10 hours ago

TAOYUAN: Taiwan's China Airlines is postponing the retirement of some of its older aircraft due to delays in getting Boeing 787-9 jets that may result in compensation payments from the planemaker, the carrier's newly appointed chairman said.
Taiwan's oldest airline, established in 1959, is in the midst of a fleet renewal, last year splitting an order for new long-haul aircraft worth almost US$12 billion (RM51 billion) at list prices between Boeing and European rival Airbus.
China Airlines has also ordered 24 Boeing 787s for regional and some longer-distance routes, including 18 787-9s and six of the stretched 787-10 variant.
But chairman George Kao said China Airlines' fleet renewal plan to replace ageing Airbus A330s and Boeing 737-800s with 787-9s and A321neos was being hit by delays in getting new aircraft delivered, especially the 787-9s.
'We are at present being greatly impacted. Some aircraft that were scheduled to be phased out, or handed back at the end of their lease, as some are leased, will remain and have their leases extended,' he told Reuters in an interview at the airline's headquarters in Taoyuan, home to Taiwan's main international airport.
Boeing has not given China Airlines an exact timeframe for the 787-9 delays, though it has said deliveries will 'basically' start from the end of 2025, added Kao, a pilot by training who started out as a flight attendant and became chairman in March.
'This is written into the contract,' he said, when asked whether China Airlines would seek compensation.
'For example, if it's in the supply chain, the responsibility is Boeing's, and Boeing has to provide some compensation. But if it's not, then there is no compensation. It's all recorded in the contract.'
Boeing did not respond to a request for comment.
Other airlines are facing similar issues.
International Air Transport Association director-general Willie Walsh, whose group represents airlines globally, this month called predictions of aircraft delivery delays throughout this decade 'off-the-chart unacceptable'.
Still, Kao was upbeat about expansion plans, pointing to the more fuel-efficient 777-9s and A350-1000s ordered last year that will enable more capacity to be added to routes like New York and London, and a new third terminal at Taoyuan airport, the first section of which is expected to open later this year.
He signalled further aircraft additions ahead for subsidiary Mandarin Airlines, which flies almost exclusively domestic routes with ATR-72 turboprops and is getting a revamp to focus on regional routes from southern and central Taiwan with new jet aircraft.
'I can talk about this with aircraft lessors,' he said, without disclosing the jet models it could add. 'We have this plan, to let Mandarin Airlines grow up.'
China Airlines faces competition at home not only from long-established rival EVA Air but also rapidly growing Starlux Airlines, which last week placed an order for 10 more A350s.
Kao said while the Taiwan market itself was small, transit traffic, which all three airlines are focusing on, meant supporting three full-service airlines was not an issue.
Seoul's Incheon airport is too big, meaning passengers can get lost, Tokyo's landing fees are too expensive and Hong Kong has 'political issues', whereas Taoyuan airport's new terminal will greatly improve the travel experience, he said.
'Our passengers are not all Taiwanese; many are transit. Because Taiwan's location, connecting the Pacific to all of Asia, is really very convenient.' – Reuters

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Wall Street Eyes Breakout Cancer Therapies Amid Soaring Drug Prices
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Malaysian Reserve

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  • Malaysian Reserve

Wall Street Eyes Breakout Cancer Therapies Amid Soaring Drug Prices

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We are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular financial situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decision. This is a paid advertisement and is neither an offer nor recommendation to buy or sell any security. We hold no investment licenses and are thus neither licensed nor qualified to provide investment advice. The content in this report or email is not provided to any individual with a view toward their individual circumstances. Equity Insider is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Market IQ Media Group, Inc. ('MIQ'). MIQ has been paid a fee for Oncolytics Biotech Inc. advertising and digital media from the company directly. There may be 3rd parties who may have shares of Oncolytics Biotech Inc., and may liquidate their shares which could have a negative effect on the price of the stock. 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From Courtroom To Cork In Bangsar: The Lawyer Who Traded Briefs For Bordeaux
From Courtroom To Cork In Bangsar: The Lawyer Who Traded Briefs For Bordeaux

Rakyat Post

time4 hours ago

  • Rakyat Post

From Courtroom To Cork In Bangsar: The Lawyer Who Traded Briefs For Bordeaux

Subscribe to our FREE Lau Jia-Sen had it all figured out – law degree, CLP certification, four solid years building a legal practice. The 36-year-old from Old Klang Road was living the Malaysian dream: steady paycheck, predictable hours, respectable profession. Then, in April 2024, everything changed. 'If I'd discovered my passion earlier, I would never have studied law,' Lau told TRP, sipping a cup of artisanal coffee at Juno, his gastro wine bar tucked away in a quiet corner of Bangsar. Named after the Roman goddess of protection and marriage (Hera in Greek mythology), the venue seems fitting for someone who's found his true calling. It's the kind of confession that makes parents everywhere clutch their pearls, but for this former lawyer-turned-sommelier, it's pure liberation. The Great Career Plot Twist The transition wasn't exactly overnight. While building his legal career, Lau was moonlighting as a barista – perhaps the universe's way of dropping hints about his true calling. Fast forward to today, and he's running Juno, a spot that's part wine sanctuary, part culinary playground, where natural wines meet European-Asian fusion in the most unpretentious way possible. 'Wine can be intimidating for the uninitiated,' Lau explains, describing his approach to hospitality. We want customers to appreciate what we have without feeling like they need a PhD in viticulture. His 60-70 label collection focuses heavily on natural wines – think free-range chicken, but for grapes. Minimal intervention, no chemicals, just fruit doing what fruit does best in ideal natural environments. More Than Just Grape Expectations The beauty of Juno lies in its refusal to take itself too seriously. Sure, they've got your classic French three to four-course meals and sophisticated wine flights, but they've also paired char kuay teow and nasi lemak with wine because why not? It's this kind of 'let's-see-what-happens' energy that keeps things exciting. The menu reads like a greatest hits of comfort food with a twist – European-Asian fusion pasta, fresh oysters, quality steaks, and hot doughnuts for dessert. Lau's personal favourite is the pepetama pasta, a Japanese take on carbonara that's 'salty, cheesy, savoury, a bit spicy, very Asian.' It's the kind of dish that makes you question why anyone ever thought fusion was a dirty word. Double Life, Double Trouble But wait, there's more. Lau also runs The plan? Merge the two operations at Juno's location – café by day, wine bar by night. It's ambitious, slightly crazy, and exactly the kind of move you'd expect from someone who went from practising law to curating wine lists in the span of a year. 'I knew nothing about wine a year ago,' Lau confesses. I do a lot of reading, ask wine professionals, do tastings, write notes. It's the kind of crash course that would make most people's heads spin, but Lau seems to thrive on the chaos. (Pix: Instagram/@junobangsar) The New Normal These days, Lau wears more hats than a vintage shop – operations manager, front of house, sommelier, cook, HR department, event planner, business development guru, menu curator, and doughnut maker. It's exhausting just reading the list, but he wouldn't have it any other way. I miss the predictability of a lawyer's paycheck, but I relish wearing all sorts of hats now. With several full-time staff members helping out and partners covering when he's away, Juno has become more than just a business – it's a community. Wine O'Clock Wisdom The monthly steak and wine nights (RM88 for grass-fed Angus beef and a glass of wine) perfectly capture Juno's philosophy: wine shouldn't be reserved for special occasions. It should be woven into the fabric of daily life, paired with whatever makes you happy, whether that's a perfectly cooked steak or a late-night bowl of noodles. Open daily except Tuesdays (6 pm-12 am weekdays, until 1 am weekends), Juno operates in that competitive Bangsar landscape where every corner seems to house another trendy spot. However, Lau has found his niche among natural wine enthusiasts and regular customers who appreciate his unpretentious approach to a good life. The Pour Decision When he's not busy revolutionising Bangsar's wine scene, Lau unwinds with pickleball. His current wine obsession? Matassa—meaning 'forest' in Catalan—offers fruity, floral, and mineral notes that create a journey in your mouth, said Lau. Maybe fruit and floral chamomile on the first sip, then towards the end, some sensation in your mouth. That's the beauty of natural wine. It's the kind of passionate description that makes you understand why someone would abandon a stable legal career for the unpredictable world of hospitality. Sometimes, the most important thing is just having the courage to try. Share your thoughts with us via TRP's . Get more stories like this to your inbox by signing up for our newsletter.

China helpless as Middle East war craters regional leverage: analysts
China helpless as Middle East war craters regional leverage: analysts

The Star

time6 hours ago

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China helpless as Middle East war craters regional leverage: analysts

BEIJING: China has been able to do little more than stand back and watch as war between its key partner Iran and Israel harms its hard-fought leverage in the Middle East, analysts say. Beijing has sought to frame itself as a mediator in the region, facilitating a 2023 rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran and portraying itself as a more neutral actor in the Israel-Palestinian conflict than its rival the United States. And its position as the largest purchaser of Iranian oil has served as a crucial lifeline for Tehran as its economy is battered by crippling international sanctions. But as Israel and Iran engaged in an unprecedented exchange of attacks and the United States struck key targets on Iranian soil in the past week, Beijing has offered little beyond calls for de-escalation. "Beijing has offered Tehran no real help -- just rhetoric that paints China as the principled alternative while it stays safely on the sidelines," Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies think tank, told AFP. China, he said, "sticks to rhetoric -- condemnations, UN statements, talk of 'dialogue' -- because over-promising and under-delivering would spotlight its power-projection limits". "The result is a conspicuously thin response that underscores how little real heft China brings to Iran when the shooting starts." - 'Strategic' friendship - China -- alongside its "no limits" partner Russia -- has long been a key backer of Iran, deepening ties in the wake of the United States' withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear deal in 2018. President Xi Jinping described relations as "strategic" in a 2023 meeting with Iran's then-president Ebrahim Raisi, and backed Tehran in its fight against "bullying". Liu Qiang, a retired Chinese Senior Colonel, was even more explicit in an article on the academic website Aisixiang this month. "Iran's survival is a matter of China's national security," said the director of the Academic Committee of the Shanghai International Center for Strategic Studies. Beijing, he insisted, must take "proactive measures" in light of the recent war to ensure that Tehran "will not be broken by the military conflict" or "jointly strangled by the US and Israel". Analysts say Beijing's ties with Tehran are central to its efforts to ensure a regional counterbalance against both the United States and Israel as well as the Gulf States. "Iran fits into Beijing's broader campaign to counterbalance US-led hegemony and to a lesser extent NATO encroachment," Tuvia Gering, non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council's Global China Hub, told AFP. Those efforts have gone into overdrive following blows to other "Axis of resistance" players since the start of the Gaza war -- the collapse of Bashar Al-Assad's rule in Syria and the degradation of Hamas and Hezbollah in fighting with Israel. "Beijing has sought to prevent a total unravelling of Iran's regional role," Gering said, pointing to Chinese efforts to resurrect the nuclear deal. - 'Little leverage' China has condemned recent US strikes on Iran and called for parties in the region, "especially Israel", to de-escalate. And it has called for a political solution to help a declared ceasefire hold. Fighting last month between India and Pakistan saw Beijing furnish its long-time allies in Islamabad with state-of-the-art military gear. Analysts don't expect China to extend the same courtesy to its comrades in Tehran, given the risk of direct confrontation with the United States. "Iran needs more than statements at the UN or missile components," Andrea Ghiselli, a lecturer at the University of Exeter, told AFP. "It needs air defences and fighter jets, which are things that China could provide but would require much time to be put into use -- not to mention the likely extremely negative reaction by Israel and, especially now that is directly involved, the US," he added. The United States has urged China to use its influence on Iran to help deter its leaders from shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for oil and gas. But Ahmed Aboudouh, an associate fellow with the Chatham House Middle East and North Africa Programme, was sceptical that Beijing has the leverage. "China's position in the Middle East after this conflict" has been badly affected, he told AFP. "Everybody in the Middle East understands that China has little leverage, if any, to play any role in de-escalation." - AFP

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