Air Nelson

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Air Nelson
Air Nelson Logo.png
IATA ICAO Callsign
NZRLKLINK
Founded30 June 1979
Ceased operations19 November 2019
Hubs Auckland Airport
Christchurch Airport
Wellington Airport
Frequent-flyer program Airpoints
Alliance Star Alliance (affiliate)
Fleet size23
Destinations19
Parent company Air New Zealand
Headquarters Nelson, New Zealand
Key peopleKelvin Duff (GM Regional Airlines)
Website http://www.airnelson.co.nz

Air Nelson was a regional airline based in Nelson, New Zealand. It was founded as an independent airline in 1979. Air New Zealand took a 50% shareholding in 1988 and 100% ownership in 1995. Air Nelson operated services on provincial routes under the Air New Zealand Link brand.

Contents

The airline operated one type of aircraft, the 50-seat Bombardier Q300, which provided an intensive regional air service that cannot be sustained with regional jet types of this size. Until 2008, it operated the 33-seat Saab 340, which took over provincial Fokker F27 services by Air New Zealand in 1990.

Air Nelson Q300s wore the Air New Zealand livery and operated from Kerikeri in the far north of the North Island to Invercargill in the far south of the South Island. [1] The airline had 517 employees (at March 2015). [1]

On 31 March 2019, it was announced that Air New Zealand was considering merging both Air Nelson and fellow Link subsidiary Mount Cook Airline into the mainline fleet. [2]

History

Early history

It was founded on 30 June 1979 by Robert Inglis and Nicki Smith as a flying school and charter services with the name of Motueka Air. In 1988 was renamed to Air Nelson and acquired by Air New Zealand operating under Air New Zealand Link name. [3]

It initially operated as a small commuter airline in the top half of the South Island, linking Nelson and Wellington with up to half-hourly services. It also provided isolated towns such as Takaka and Motueka with a convenient safe service to the outside world. At this time aircraft included Piper PA-31 Navajo, Fairchild Metro, and Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante.

In 1986, Air New Zealand announced it would start to scale back its Fokker F27 Friendship operations and smaller regional centres were the first affected. Air Nelson services immediately replaced the F27 on those routes. Air Nelson grew their network at the same time and started operating non-stop service to Auckland, complementing F27 services.

Air New Zealand purchased a 50% stake in Air Nelson (and a 50% stake in Eagle Airways) in 1988 to secure the airline's support when deregulation saw the arrival of Ansett New Zealand.

Air Nelson Saab 340A at Auckland International Airport in November 2005 Air Nelson Saab 340.JPG
Air Nelson Saab 340A at Auckland International Airport in November 2005
Air Nelson DeHavilland Canada Dash 8-300 on the tarmac at Hawke's Bay Airport in November 2005 Air Nelson Q300.JPG
Air Nelson DeHavilland Canada Dash 8-300 on the tarmac at Hawke's Bay Airport in November 2005

Air New Zealand suspended all F27 services in August 1990 and Air Nelson responded by introducing the Saab 340. Initially the Saab 340 wore Air Nelson colours, before all Air Nelson's fleet were repainted in Air New Zealand's 'Link' livery. The Saab fleet soon grew to one of the largest in the world at that time and Air Nelson divested itself of its smaller aircraft, operating only the Saab. This was in line with Air New Zealand's policy of rationalising the overall cost of fleet maintenance. Eagle Airways soon operated a fleet of Beechcraft 1900Ds, while Mount Cook Airlines operated the ATR 72-500.

Full Air New Zealand ownership

Air New Zealand took 100% ownership of Air Nelson in 1995. [4]

The last Saab 340A aircraft had been withdrawn from service by the end of 2007. The company had 23 Dash 8 Q300 aircraft. Air Nelson was the largest singular operator of the Q300 outside Canada. Although Air Nelson looked towards ATR for the smaller ATR 42, Bombardier offered a better discount for a bulk purchase. [5]

The increase in fleet size allowed Air New Zealand to start pioneering longer provincial routes that were considered sustainable with 50-seat aircraft, such as Wellington to Invercargill, New Plymouth and Tauranga to Christchurch. Air New Zealand has also used the Q300 to ramp up a more intensive high-frequency regional service allowing more departure choices. A new Paraparaumu to Auckland route was started in 2011. A second route from the Kāpiti Coast was opened in 2013, Paraparaumu to Christchurch, but it could not be sustained and the short-lived service ceased in 2015.

The Hokitika Christchurch route joined the Air Nelson network as a result of the Pike River coal mine disaster in November 2010 when Air New Zealand added capacity to the Westland town. This became permanent in February 2011 when subsidiary operator Air National was grounded by the NZCAA due to irregularities with operating practises. The larger aircraft proved popular on peak services to the West Coast airport, which also serves the town of Greymouth.

In November 2014, Air Nelson started to take over services from fellow subsidiary Eagle Airways after parent company Air New Zealand had announced the close-down of the airline by August 2016. Routes including AucklandTaupō, AucklandWhanganui, Hamilton Palmerston North, WellingtonGisborne, WellingtonTimaru, Wellington Palmerston North and ChristchurchBlenheim joined the Air Nelson network as a result of Eagle Airways' closure. Air New Zealand immediately reviewed and closed down the AucklandHamilton, AucklandWhanganui and ChristchurchBlenheim routes. Some routes were picked up by second-tier operators.

In 2018 Air New Zealand announced that the AucklandParaparaumu route was to close due to aircraft scheduling issues. After intense lobbying by local authorities, Air Chathams took over the route with a Saab 340 airliner in September 2018, with Air New Zealand leaving behind ground servicing equipment for the airline to use.

End of operation and merger

On 19 November 2019, the merger of Air Nelson took place, with their fleet moving to the Air New Zealand air operators certificate and the airline ceasing to operate, [6] these aircraft are now also operating under the Air New Zealand callsigns (NZxxxx), furthermore removing the old RLK ICAO code.

Destinations

Air Nelson served the following routes at its closure:

Air Nelson used to serve the towns of [8] Kāpiti Coast, Motueka, Oamaru, Takaka, Westport and Whanganui.

Fleet

The Air Nelson fleet consisted of the following aircraft (as of August 2019): [9]

AircraftTotalOrdersPassengers
(Economy)
Notes
Bombardier DHC-8-Q300 23050

Historic fleet

AircraftIntroducedRetiredNotes
Cessna 152 19861997One aircraft
Cessna 650 Citation III 19951998One aircraft
Fairchild Swearingen SA.227 Metro 1987200212 aircraft
Piper PA-23-250E Aztec 19841992Three aircraft
Piper PA-31-310 Navajo 19861997Two aircraft
Piper PA-31-350 Chieftain 19861995Five aircraft
Saab 340A 19902008Seventeen aircraft

Accidents

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International . 27 March 2007. pp. 63–64.
  2. Anthony, John (31 March 2019). "Air New Zealand considering merging Air Nelson and Mount Cook with jet business". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  3. "Motueka Air". Airline History. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  4. Dann, Liam (9 June 2006). "Origin is found in the regions". The New Zealand Herald . Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  5. NZ CAA list of Air Nelson DHC-8 Q300 aircraft. Archived 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved: 11 December 2009
  6. "LINK off the air waves - UPDATED". 3rd Level New Zealand. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  7. 1 2 "Air New Zealand Domestic Network Changes from July 2016". airlineroute. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  8. Lowe, Steve. "Air Nelson - Part 2 - Farewelling the Friendship - A Time of Meteoric Growth". 3rd Level NZ. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  9. "Global Airline Guide 2019 (Part One)". Airliner World (October 2019): 22.
  10. "Plane makes emergency landing in Blenheim". TV3 News. 9 February 2011. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  11. Bayer, Kurt (7 February 2013). "Crash landing could have been avoided - report". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  12. "AO-2019-002 | Bombardiers DHC-8-311, ZK-NEH and ZK-NEF, 'Loss of separation' near Wellington, New Zealand, 12 March 2019". Transport Accident Investigation Commission. 14 April 2022. Retrieved 7 August 2022.