Air Greece

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Air Greece - Aerodromisis
AirGreece Logo.png
IATA ICAO Callsign
JG AGJ[1] Air Greece
Founded1994
Ceased operations1999
HubsHeraklion International Airport
Focus citiesAthens, Thessaloniki, Rhodes
Fleet size5
Destinations12
HeadquartersHeraklion, Greece
Key peopleKostas Mpantouvas (Chairman, CEO)

Air Greece was an airline based in Heraklion, Greece. It was one of the first private airlines to operate scheduled domestic flights in Greece.

Code data[]

  • IATA Code: JG
  • ICAO Code: AGJ
  • Callsign: Air Greece

History[]

ATR-72 in Heraklion airport.

Air Greece was established in 1994 by Cretan businessmen and started operations in the same year using two leased ATR72 turboprops on domestic routes. In April 1997 a third ATR72 was added to the fleet, followed by the lease of two Fokker 100's in May and June 1999. Delivery of the Fokkers marked the international expansion of the company and new routes to destinations in Germany were opened.

In 1999, passenger ferry company Minoan Lines acquired a 51% stake in Air Greece. However, at that time Air Greece was facing strong competition from Aegean Airlines, Cronus Airlines and Olympic Airways, forcing it to begin a cooperation with Aegean which ended in a full takeover by Aegean in December 1999. During 2000, Air Greece's original owners made an unsuccessful attempt to launch as its successor.

Services[]

F-100 in Stuttgart airport.

[citation needed]

Air Greece operated scheduled services from/to the following cities:

International destinations:

Fleet[]

The fleet of Air Greece consisted of the following aircraft:

  • 3 ATR-72 turboprops. (SX-BAO/cn 326, SX-BAP/cn 330, SX-BFK/cn 313)
  • 2 Fokker-100 jets. (SX-BGL/cn 11387, SX-BGM/cn 11476)

References[]

  1. ^ "Operators by state" (PDF). icao.int. Retrieved 16 April 2015.

External links[]

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