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C.A.I. Second

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
C.A.I. Second[1]
IATA ICAO Call sign
VE[1] VLE VOLA
Founded
  • 1997 (1997)
    (as Volare)
  • 5 February 2003 (2003-02-05)
    (as Volareweb.com)
Commenced operations
  • 3 April 1998 (1998-04-03)
    (as Volare)
  • 30 March 2003 (2003-03-30)
    (as Volareweb.com)
Ceased operations
  • 30 March 2003 (2003-03-30)
    (as Volare)
  • 12 January 2009 (2009-01-12)
    (as Volareweb.com)
  • 11 February 2015 (2015-02-11)
    (integrated into Alitalia)
Operating basesLinate Airport
Frequent-flyer program
AllianceSkyTeam (affiliate)
Parent companyAlitalia
HeadquartersMilan Malpensa Airport Terminal 1, Ferno, Varese, Italy

C.A.I. Second S.p.A. was[2] an Italian airline operating flights for its parent company, Alitalia. When Alitalia merged with Air One, it didn't close C.A.I. (at that time known as Volare S.p.A. and then Volareweb.com) so that it could preserve slots at Milan Linate Airport.

It was once a low-cost subsidiary of the old Alitalia-LAI. Its head office was located in Area Tecnica Sud of Terminal 1 of Milan Malpensa Airport, in Ferno, Varese, Italy,[3] and it ceased activity with this name on 12 January 2009. The airline was then used to operate Alitalia flights from Linate Airport as C.A.I. Second. This name was only a legal one and not used in public; all of its flights were branded as Alitalia. The airline ceased operations and was merged into Alitalia mainline by February 2015.[2]

History

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Early years

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At one time the airline (Volare Group) operated flights from Italy to Spain, Germany, France, Belgium, Poland, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and London Luton Airport. The airline suspended its operations in November 2004 and filed for bankruptcy. The tickets on suspended flights were never refunded to passengers. Since then, the airline exited bankruptcy and, for a period, only operated Italian domestic routes.

By May 2008, Volare flew to 20 destinations in Europe. Volare's charter and leisure subsidiary Air Europe flew to other long-haul destinations. With the fusion of Alitalia-CAI and Air One later on that year, however, Air Europe was discontinued.[4]

New ownership

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After bankruptcy, the Volare Group was put up for sale by the Italian Government in December 2004. Alitalia-LAI's offer for 38 million euros was the winning bid,[5] however Air One tried to block the sale by going to court. On 14 April 2006 Volare S.p.A. was founded.[6] On 15 May 2006 the former Volare Group employees were transferred to Volare SpA (the Alitalia subsidiary).

Volare Group had its head office in Thiene, Italy and its commercial management and charter management in Milan.[7] Alitalia's offer for 38 million euros was the winning bid. On 15 May 2006 the former Volare Group employees were transferred to Volare S.p.A. In Italy, the sale of Volare is considered a soap-opera due to the multiple obstacles placed on the sale of the airline to Alitalia-LAI.

As of 1 January 2008, Volareweb was an integral part of Alitalia-LAI and was serving as the company's Italian low-cost subsidiary. Furthermore, due to Alitalia-LAI's hub switch from Milan-Malpensa to Rome-Fiumicino, several flights from Malpensa were discontinued (such as Kraków and Timișoara) and transferred to Volare. With the Alitalia-CAI-Air One fusion, these flights ceased to exist. Nowadays from Milan Malpensa Alitalia-CAI has adopted Air One as a subsidiary for low-fare flights.[8] Only one Airbus A320 coming from parent Alitalia-CAI remained in the fleet (EI-IKB) to preserve the slots.

On 11 February 2015, the airline was dissolved and its operations integrated into Alitalia mainline.[2][9]

Destinations

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Last operations

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Volare Airlines code VE was used on some Alitalia flights from Milan Linate Airport (in this way, Alitalia can operate more flights than it would have been able to using a single airline, as there is a limit to the operations at Linate airport for airlines). C.A.I. First was used for the same purpose.

Former destinations

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Volareweb.com, the low-cost subsidiary of Alitalia-LAI, served these destinations at the time of closure:

 Finland
 France
 Greece
 Italy
 Japan
 Malta
 Netherlands
 Norway
 Poland
 Portugal
 Romania
 Spain
 United Kingdom

Fleet

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A Volareweb.com branded Airbus A320-200
A Volare Airlines branded Airbus A330-200

Prior to its shutdown in February 2015, the fleet consisted of the following aircraft:

C.A.I. Second fleet
Aircraft In fleet Passengers
J Y+ Y Total
Airbus A320-200 1 34 114 148
Total 1

Historical fleet

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Volareweb.com operated the following aircraft throughout operations:[10]

The last two Volareweb.com A320s were repainted in March 2010 into the Air One livery and are being used alongside three others for Air One's "low fare" model operations.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "IATA - Codes - Airline and Airport Code Search". iata.org. IATA. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "Alitalia cancels CAI First and Second's AOCs".
  3. ^ "Volare Group SpA." Businessweek. Retrieved on February 8, 2011. "The company is based in Ferno, Italy." and "Aeroporto Malpensa 2000 - S.P. 52 Terminal 1- Area Tecnica Sud Ferno, VA 21010"
  4. ^ Air Europe information
  5. ^ Italy puts low-cost airline Volare up for sale - Alitalia
  6. ^ "Profile." Volareweb.com. 11 January 2007. Retrieved on 8 February 2011.
  7. ^ "Contact us." Volareweb.com. Retrieved on 8 February 2011. "HEADQUARTER Corso Garibaldi, 186 - 36016 Thiene (VI) - ITALY." "COMMERCIAL MANAGEMENT Via Pirelli, 20 - 20124 Milano - ITALY" and "CHARTER MANAGEMENT Via Pirelli, 20 - 20124 Milano - ITALY"
  8. ^ The new Alitalia is using Air One for leisure operations at Milan Malpensa Archived 2010-06-30 at the Wayback Machine (french)
  9. ^ "Enac - Compagnie aeree". www.enac.gov.it. Archived from the original on 2009-03-22.
  10. ^ Volare Airlines Fleet
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