Safair

Safair

Safair

South African airline


Safair is an airline based at the O.R. Tambo International Airport in Kempton Park, South Africa.[1] It operates one of the world's largest fleets of civil Lockheed L-100 Hercules cargo aircraft.[2][3]

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History

Safair Operations as it is known today was established in 1965. At the time it was known as Tropair (Pty) Ltd and was a general aviation charter company. In 1970 the company name changed to Safair Freighters (Pty) Ltd when the company was purchased by Safmarine and the new entity began operations on 18 March 1970. Its primary client in the 1980s was the South African Defence Force.[4]

Safair is a Level 4 BBBEE contributor. Safair Operations (PTY) LTD has been independently verified in accordance with the Codes of Good Practice, issued in terms of section 9(1) of the Broad Black Based Economic Empowerment Act 53 of 2003 as Amended per Act 46 of 2013 (Gazette 37271 of 27 January 2014). Safair is an affiliate airline of ASL Aviation Holdings. Humanitarian Aid and Relief operations has always been Safair's "niche" market. Safair assists aid and relief agencies such as the United Nations, World Food Programme, and the International Committee of the Red Cross in delivering much needed humanitarian aid to stricken regions on the African continent as well as other areas in the world where such assistance is required.[5]

Until 2018, Safair was contracted to the Italian Antarctic Program (National Antarctic Research Program (PNRA)) to support science over the austral summer, flying Lockheed L-100-30 missions from Christchurch, New Zealand to Zucchelli Station in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica. In 2007, Safair obtained its IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA)[6] approval.

Fleet

Safair Boeing 737-300 at Sharjah International Airport
Safair Lockheed L-100-30 Hercules
Safair L100-30 ZS-RSC sitting on the Deep Freeze ramp at Christchurch International Airport in-between missions to Zucchelli Station in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica.

As of July 2019 the Safair fleet consists of the following aircraft:[7][8]

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Previously operated


Reliability and On-Time Performance

In October 2023, Safair was the most reliable low-cost carrier according to Cirium's On-Time Performance rankings. In October 2023, Safair flights arrived on time 90.81% of the time.[18]

FlySafair

In 2013, Safair created a low-cost carrier operating under a separate brand called FlySafair. The initial plan to operate flights in October 2013 had to be cancelled, as a result of a High Court application by Comair.[19] FlySafair is currently operational with the first flight having taken place on 16 October 2014.[20] FlySafair operates passenger flights between Cape Town, George, PortElizabeth,Johannesburg, Lanseria, Durban and East London.[21]


References

  1. "Contact". Safair. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  2. Flight International 12–18 April 2005
  3. Secrets, Open (16 August 2017). "Declassified: Apartheid profits – The Sanctions Busters' Toolkit". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  4. "UN World Food Programme (WFP)". www.wfp.org. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  5. IATA. "IATA – IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA)". iata.org. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  6. "Our Fleet" – Safair. Retrieved 12 December 2013
  7. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  8. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Sutton, UK, 2008–2013
  9. "History of Safair" – Safair. Retrieved 25 March 2022
  10. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  11. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  12. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  13. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  14. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  15. Klee, Ulrich & Bucher, Frank et al. jp airline-fleets international. Zürich-Airport, 1966–2007
  16. "Safair Flights, Bookings | SFR Flights". Southafrica.to. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  17. Ensor, Linda (17 October 2014). "FlySafair will bring needed competition". Business Day. Johannesburg. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
  18. "FlySafair". Domestic Flights South Africa. Retrieved 27 January 2021.

Media related to Safair at Wikimedia Commons


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