Many travelers across Africa have expressed their happiness that one of the continent’s biggest airlines is back to the skies as South African Airways resumes flight after resurrecting from its is back. The airline operated the first flight of its return Thursday, operating from Johannesburg to Cape Town with an Airbus A320. The airline was placed into business rescue in December 2019 and was even set to be shut down completely at the height of the world health crisis last summer.
A year ago, it didn’t look very likely that South African Airways would ever return to the skies. Recently Etihad CEO Tony Douglas told Simple Flying never to say never about the Airbus A380’s return. It seems that we also should’ve never said never to SAA’s return.
This morning was one of celebrations for South African Airways. Since the airline was grounded over a year ago, a flight carrying passengers took to the skies for the first time. This was flight SA317 from Johannesburg to Cape Town.
According to data from RadarBox.com, the aircraft was scheduled to depart at 08:05, with a landing in Cape Town planned for 10:15. The aircraft departed just three minutes late, touching down four minutes behind schedule. The aircraft cruised between 32,000 and 36,000 feet, with a flight time of two hours 11 minutes.
A six and a half-year-old Airbus A320 was given the honor of operating the airline’s re-inaugural flight. According to ch-aviation.com, ZS-SZJ is 6.62, having first flown on February 10th, 2015. The jet is owned by Goshawk and is leased by SAA, who took delivery of the aircraft new.
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SZJ spent much of the past year outside of South Africa. While it didn’t leave SAA, it was flown to Abu Dhabi on October 10th, 2020. After ten months in storage, the jet flew back to Johannesburg on August 12th, ahead of its return to service. As of May 31st, the aircraft had completed 15,206 flight hours across 8,421 flights, with a current market value of $26.05 million.
Information from aviation data experts Cirium shows that the airline has just over 200 round trips planned for each month moving forward. For the time being, the airline is focusing on intra-African flights. All flights are scheduled for the A320 family aircraft, except for Accra in Ghana, which has the sole A330 assigned.
Kelechi Deca
Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry