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Croatia Airlines to focus on Europe, Mediterranean expansion with A220s

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Croatia Airlines will expand its network with the arrival of new Airbus A220 aircraft but will continue to primarily focus on Europe and the Mediterranean region. The carrier’s CEO, Jasmin Bajić, said, “Our network analysts always keep about twenty potential routes in the pipeline. They undertake daily monitoring of the wishes and needs of our passengers, as well as trends in the aviation industry. Some of our routes are year-round from Zagreb, and some are seasonal from our Adriatic coast. All new potential destinations are primarily located in Europe and the Mediterranean”. He added, “The new A220 aircraft will ensure a better response to the specific needs of passengers and a more efficient business model, thanks to which additional business opportunities will be unlocked along with the gradual expansion of the network”.

Mr Bajić confirmed the first of fifteen A220s will arrive in Zagreb this June, followed by another unit at the end of the year. “The first of fifteen new A220 aircraft will join Croatia Airlines’ fleet in June 2024, followed by the second by the end of 2024. After the planned delivery in 2024, we expect the arrival of the next six aircraft in 2025, four more in 2026, and the last three in 2027”. He added, “The significant increase in the Republic of Croatia's credit rating (S&P, Fitch and Moody's) in the last eight years, as well as the entry into the Schengen zone and the introduction of the euro as a currency in 2023, helped Croatia Airlines increase its reputation and results on the financial and air transport market.

Croatia Airlines has so far announced the introduction of one new route this summer – a seasonal service between Split and Istanbul. So far, there have been no major frequency fluctuation in the network for the coming summer, however, further changes are expected. As it currently stands, Croatia Airlines has 1% fewer scheduled flights compared to summer 2023 and 12.3% fewer operations compared to the pre-pandemic 2019. “In 2024 Croatia Airlines is celebrating its 35th anniversary, twenty years of membership in Star Alliance and the start of the entire aircraft fleet renewal program. I believe everyone will agree that in the past three and a half decades Croatia Airlines has become a renowned brand both in Europe and worldwide, recognised by passengers for its safety and top-quality service”.



February 22, 2024
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Comments

  1. Anonymous09:01

    Do we already know the MSN of their first A220? And the livery - has it been revealed yet?
    We are getting close!

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    1. Anonymous09:33

      It hasn't yet

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    2. Anonymous13:09

      MSN 55290, registracija ce biti 9A-CAE

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    3. Anonymous13:43

      Do we have any clues in what way the livery would be updated?

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    4. Anonymous14:58

      The livery guy gaslighting again...
      Always first to turn the discourse on an irrelevant direction...

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    5. Anonymous10:03

      Normal persons learn from experience while growing up and they learn early that magical thinking doesn't work. You can't just wish something to become reality. On their case adulthood has been somewhat postponed as whether there's a problem, big daddy comes and saved the day.

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  2. Anonymous09:03

    Well there go my hopes of them introducing Dubai or another destination in the Middle East. Great.

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    1. Anonymous09:03

      Realistically they should do Saudi Arabia - Split route next summer. The amount of Saudi Arabians traveling to EU is insane

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    2. Anonymous09:04

      Dubai with regional plane? What stops them to introduce Dubai even now with A319?

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    3. Anonymous09:05

      AirBaltic successfully used A220 on their Dubai routes.

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    4. Anonymous09:14

      @anon 09:05
      Will OU be competitive to Dubai against FlyDubai?

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    5. Anonymous09:25

      Well they can offer connections to anywhere in Croatia, something Flydubai can't.

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    6. Anonymous09:36

      And Flydubai can offer connections anywhere in the world thought Dubai with Emirates. Although their own network is pretty huge too.

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    7. Anonymous13:51

      Would it than make more sense for OU to maybe fly to Abu Dhabi and offer some type of codeshare on Etihad to Australia and Asia

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  3. Anonymous09:03


    So more of the same just with A220s?

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    1. Anonymous09:05

      Yes, you'll be able to charge your phone on your hop from zagreb to mostar now. Enjoying a row to yourself because the load factor will be the same as a model number : around 22.0%

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    2. Anonymous09:46

      I think it is not that bad overall. Connected to LH hubs from which you can get to anywhere. I mean, it is OU, you can't expect anything spectacular.

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    3. Anonymous12:27

      You cannot seriously believe that they will send their a220 to Mostar LOL. The load factor is aprox 39% today with a small airceaft like dash q800. A220 with over 100 seats will simply not be relevante for OMO. Not to mention the disadvatage the airport has with handling landings of largeer aircrafts. I guess croatia will have to cut flights to SJJ, OMO, SKP, osijek etc as they already fly half-full q-800 and will never be able to fill an a220. Such a pity but i guess they want to focus on other destinations

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    4. Anonymous13:12

      No need to cut SKP or SJJ, just try with normal prices for an hour long flight and not 100-200 for oneway

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    5. Anonymous14:11

      12:27 Do you understand that they get paid to fly to OMO? Dash or A220, it has no relevance.

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    6. Anonymous05:37

      SKP is almost always fully packed

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    7. Anonymous08:46

      Exactly, flying time with a jet from SJJ to ZAG is 30 minutes. If you give attractive prices per leg, many more people will fly to ZAG or other destinations in the network.

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    8. Anonymous09:57

      It's beyond me OU doesn't use the Saab not just to OSI but why not also to OMO and few times weekly to LSZ and BWK for ex. Would be a perfect fit.

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  4. Anonymous09:04

    Bravo OU!

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  5. Anonymous09:04

    Congrats on the A220s but I really hope they try to explore some new regions with them. Ryanair has shown leisure flights from Zagreb can work. OU could have done this over the last 35 years. Why not try flights to Egypt, Morocco, Middle East. Hell, try Saudi Arabia as well. There is certainly a market there. But it looks like Lufthansa will just be fed with more modern aircraft

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    1. Anonymous09:15

      +1

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    2. Anonymous09:16

      @anon 09:04
      Why not try now with A319?

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    3. Anonymous09:17

      ^ Because the A220s are more cost effective.

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    4. Anonymous13:20

      A319 is a cash cow for almost all airlines. At the moment A220 may be more cost effective only if you put aside the cost of acquisition.

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    5. Anonymous13:41

      A319 is not a cash cow.

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    6. Anonymous13:53

      Judging by the tone of Mr Bajić statement, doubt we will see anything different from OU..... so hopeless.

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  6. Anonymous09:04

    Bravo Hrvatska!

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  7. Anonymous09:08

    Top quality service? You offer business class passengers to London a box with crackers inside.

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    1. Anonymous09:18

      True. Their catering has been one of the most impacted in the last few years. A big slide down from what it used to be.

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    2. Anonymous09:26

      Airlines cut costs on catering a lot so I can understand OU to a certain degree but I don't understand why they destroyed their offer in business class.

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  8. Anonymous09:26

    "As it currently stands, Croatia Airlines has 1.7% fewer scheduled flights compared to summer 2023"

    This is not true. Where are you getting such info from?

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    1. EX-YU Aviation09:30

      Yes, it is correct. Croatia Airlines currently has 16.779 flights scheduled during the 2024 summer season, compared to 16.972 scheduled flights during the 2023 summer season. This is based on GDS availability. Naturally it will change as we approach the summer season.

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    2. Anonymous09:46

      And on which routes there is decrease?

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    3. EX-YU Aviation09:50

      The reductions are currently mostly concentrated in April with fewer flights on a range of routes from Zagreb, Split and Dubrovnik. As mentioned in the article, this is subject to change and their summer timetable has not been finalised.

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    4. Anonymous11:32

      Summer season 2024 is 6 days shorter compared to 2023 (=-2,5% less calendar days). Is this taken into account?

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    5. Anonymous13:23

      Summer season 2024 is 6 days shorter compared to 2023 for all airlines.

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  9. Anonymous09:33

    I'm wondering which are these 20 routes that they have in the pipeline. Any guesses?

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    1. Anonymous10:20

      Most of the routes that they have not resumed from Zagreb are now on the airport's incentives list. My guess it is some of those.

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    2. Anonymous10:50

      ^ Let's see if OU brings any of them back now that these incentives are offered.

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    3. Anonymous16:26

      I would say maybe Larrnaca and Spain and Lisbon. Croatia is quite famous in Spain. But they better be careful with those sudden and big expansions and do it slowly.

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    4. Anonymous14:21

      An absolute farce with these "incentives"... The analogy would be a bus station subsidizing bus operators to drive to certain destinations. Is there demand it inst there?

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  10. Anonymous09:33

    I hope they plan more new routes from Zagreb.

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    1. Anonymous09:35

      They do

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    2. Anonymous10:21

      I hope so but it is the end of February and still nothing. Summer season begins in a month and a bit.

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    3. Anonymous11:39

      They do not need to start operating new routes at the beginning of summer season

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  11. Anonymous09:33

    Looking forward to the first A220.

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    1. Anonymous09:36

      Not too long to go now :)

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    2. Anonymous10:22

      Honestly I was expecting them to make a bit more noise about the new planes. What is their marketing/PR team doing?

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    3. Anonymous10:51

      ^ Agree. They need to build more hype around it.

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    4. Anonymous14:23

      It's just an airplane. OK, some of the things in their possession aren't... But the thrill is about nothing. It's a Bombardier with 150 seats

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  12. Anonymous09:36

    If the plane is arriving in June, I'm surprised they haven't already scheduled it on some routes.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:37

      I mean the A220

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    2. Anonymous09:38

      I think they are still finalising the schedule

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    3. Anonymous13:10

      hope there won't be any more delays. First plane was originally supposed to come this month.

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  13. Anonymous09:46

    Why is OU ignoring ZAG? They could at least add BER and ARN to the network

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:55

      They want to punish Zagreb Airport for Ryanair. And they're failing. Ryanair is doing very well in Zagreb so far this year and ZAG finances are doing fully fine.

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    2. Anonymous09:56

      But at least they are finally scheduling routes based on demand rather than working on making Zagreb a hub and producing losses.

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    3. Anonymous10:15

      Basically all the new routes they introduced since Covid (including Mostar) are paid and subsidized route by tourism board or local governments.

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  14. Anonymous09:51

    They should really take some more risk and extend some of their seasonal flights from Zagreb to year round.

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    1. Anonymous09:52

      They don't have too many seasonal routes out of Zagreb anymore because they discontinued most routes which used to be seasonal and transferred them to Split.

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    2. Anonymous19:12

      How about no more delayed flights

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  15. Anonymous09:51

    Flights from ZAG to Rome still going via Split. Will this ever change?

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    1. Anonymous09:52

      Same with Athens...

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    2. Anonymous09:55

      If they haven't changed this now that Ryanair offers nonstop flight to Rome, they never will.

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    3. Anonymous11:17

      Ryanair will boost frequencies to Rome as well. Croatia Airlines has become completely uncompetitive

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    4. Anonymous14:33

      There is no reason for change. It's been done this way, irritating the costumer, since '89... It's a wining strategy

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  16. Anonymous09:55

    They have been making steps in the right directions. Good to see growth is on the cards.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:57

      *direction

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    2. Anonymous14:39

      They made a step closer to the edge of the grave. One airplane costs cca. 270.000 $ monthly. 12 will cost 3,3mio a month, it's gonna be in the neighborhood of 40mio$ a year .. I'd like to see where that revenue is gonna come from? I truly, truly wish I'm completely and utterly wrong.

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  17. Anonymous09:58

    Good luck to OU this summer. It will be a big one with the A220s coming and new livery.

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    1. Anonymous14:41

      Is this the 'livery' gaslighter/es again? The livery is IRRELEVANT.

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  18. Anonymous09:58

    at least they are trying to improve

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  19. notLufthansa10:00

    they should base one aircraft in BEG, I hear BEG-DUS route was quite popular

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous10:02

      I really don't understand these types of comments. Neither are they funny nor do they make any sense.

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    2. Anonymous13:34

      that idea is superb

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    3. Anonymous16:32

      Dunno why DUS is so "unlucky". Usually associate it with the germanwings crash from BCN that was also bound to DUS but sadly ended up quite tragic :( Strange coincidence.

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  20. Anonymous10:15

    This is crazy. Almost all European airlines will be above pre covid levels this year in terms of flights.

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    1. Anonymous10:52

      It's not almost all. Most legacy EU carriers are still below 2019 ops. Even Air France which has the Olympics this year.

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    2. Anonymous11:33

      as well as KLM, Iberia, SAS...

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  21. Anonymous10:16

    Bravo OU!

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    1. Anonymous14:42

      Bravo taxpayers

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  22. Anonymous10:20

    Let's see how this plays out.

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    1. Anonymous10:51

      What?

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  23. Anonymous10:51

    Jasmin actually speaks? First time I see him give a statement about anything.

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    1. Anonymous12:01

      Reading what he says, he sounds deluded like the "prestige" commentator here (maybe that's him). I don't know who associates Croatia Airlines with prestige or top quality service. Don't get me wrong, I wish OU all the best but the reason this guy is quiet is because he is a typical political appointee. If he keeps quiet, no one will notice him or the atrocious results him and his management team have achieved. For all the potential the Croatian coast and Croatia in general has, he has been failing badly in delivering any meaningful growth.

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    2. Anonymous13:28

      Beacuse the growth is not the goal. He obviously works good for goals the owner set for the company.

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    3. Anonymous13:30

      Profitability isn't a goal either.

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    4. Michael16:45

      And the moment he says anything it becomes obvious what a political bot he is.
      It's completely irrelevant to them whether or not what they're saying makes any sense.
      As mentioned above: Croatia Airlines brand being recognized for its top quality service not only in Europe bit worldwide, is gobbledygook. Meaningless drivel.

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  24. Anonymous10:52

    Their Split operations are developing nicely. It would be good if they could extend more routes into the winter.

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    1. Anonymous11:42

      What are you talking about? Do you have any data to support your theory?

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  25. Slav.Man10:54

    Jasmin just needs to make sure no more delays and get them in on time.
    Probably should have tried to jump on the Egyptian a220 they're getting rid of to speed it up.

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    1. Anonymous17:37

      Hi Slav.Man, Quick question for a survey we are running; what do you think about mandatory carbon offsets for all pax traveling on non-essential purposes?

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  26. Anonymous13:08

    How long does each lease for the A220 last?

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    1. Anonymous14:45

      The are several different types of depreciation models...

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  27. Anonymous14:13

    With A220 additional business opportunities will be unlocked? Will they be locked again with Ryan Max 200 and later Max 10?

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  28. Anonymous14:25

    : everyone will agree that Croatia Airlines has become a renowned brand worldwide, recognised for top-quality service

    I don't agree. Not recognized for top quality service compared to real top quality airlines like Qatar or Singapore, not distinguished or even well-known in Europe let alone other continents where it doesn't fly to.

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    1. Anonymous16:34

      It is about prestige. OU is an official Star Alliance member.

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    2. Anonymous18:46

      That doesn't automatically make OU top quality, profitable airline or worldwide renowed brand. Adria Airways was also Star Alliance memeber what look what happened to them in the end.

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    3. Anonymous23:58

      Exactly

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    4. Anonymous02:27

      Yeah, this is a head in the sand type of dumb comment by the CEO but what else is he supposed to say?

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  29. Anonymous17:10

    Is the A220 scheduled already on any route?

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    1. Anonymous17:11

      No, not yet

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  30. Anonymous17:39

    What does it mean, "pipeline" routes?

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    1. Anonymous23:57

      Pipeline = possible/potential. So they always have 20 potential routes they could launch.

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    2. Anonymous14:49

      Corporate BS. A term from dreary boardrooms where recycled ideas are mirrored around until they become self-evident truths and rock solid facts.... And then ... Ms. Reality kicks in

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  31. Anonymous20:09

    As I always think, Croatia Airlines has missed a great opportunity in not getting a couple of upcoming A321XLR and using them for flights across the Atlantic during the summer season, and around Europe during the off months.

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    1. Anonymous23:58

      +1
      They could have gone with 10 A220s and 4 A321xlrs

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    2. Anonymous14:52

      They decide about nothing. Never did, never will, nor are capable. The only thing they can decide about is petty malice and spite towards/against own employees. That's how they prove they are managers.

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    3. Anonymous19:46

      No excuse for this missed opportunity with the a321XLRs!! It’s as if they want to keep Croatia Airlines in the gutter.

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