Harbour Air Seaplanes

Not to be confused with Bar Harbor Airlines or Harbor Airlines.
Harbour Air Seaplanes
IATA ICAO Callsign
H3[1] HES[1] HARBOUR EXPRESS
Founded 1982
Hubs Vancouver Harbour
Victoria Inner Harbour
Secondary hubs Vancouver International
Nanaimo Harbour
Focus cities Vancouver, Richmond, Victoria, Nanaimo, Sechelt, Comox, Whistler, Gulf Islands
Frequent-flyer program High Flyer Rewards, Air Bucks Program, Quickticket Discounts
Fleet size 37,[2] 43[3]
Destinations 12[4]
Company slogan Your Travel Experience. Elevated
Headquarters Richmond, British Columbia
Key people -Greg McDougall, CEO
-Peter Evans, President
-Doug Hamerton, VP Maintenance
-Randy Wright, VP Business Development
-Chad Wetsch, VP Ground Operations
-Meredith Moll, VP Sales and Marketing
-Eric Scott, VP Flight Operations and Safety
-Mark Riddell, VP Finance
Website www.harbourair.com

Harbour Air Seaplanes is a scheduled service, tour and charter airline based in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada. The predominately seaplane airline specializes in routes between Vancouver, Nanaimo, Victoria, Sechelt, Comox, Whistler and the Gulf Islands, primarily with de Havilland Canada floatplanes. Along with Westcoast Air, Saltspring Air and Whistler Air, it operates de Havilland Beavers, Otters and Twin Otters.

History

The airline was established and started operations in 1982 as Windoak Air Service to provide seaplane charter services for the forestry industry in British Columbia. In 1993, Harbour Air purchased Trans-Provincial Airlines, added charter flights to resorts, and increased scheduled services. Today, Harbour Air refers to itself as the world's largest all-seaplane airline and became North America's first carbon neutral airline. A small subsidiary, Harbour Air Malta, was set up in June 2007 and a DHC-3 Turbo Otter floatplane is permanently based in Valletta, Malta for scheduled flights to Gozo and sightseeing trips around the islands.[5] Harbour Air Magazine is the official in-flight magazine of Harbour Air.[6]

On May 9, 2012 Harbour Air purchased Whistler Air.[7]

In September 2013, Harbour Air launched a land-based charter carrier, Tantalus Air.[8][9]

In November 2015, Harbour Air purchased Salt Spring Air.

Awards and accolades

Harbour Air has won the following awards:[10]

In 2007, Harbour Air became the first airline in North America to achieve complete carbon neutrality in both flight services and corporate operations. Teamed up with Vancouver-based Offsetters, the airline started to include a carbon offset on each ticket used to mitigate the environmental impact of the greenhouse gas emissions (GHG's) associated with the flight. The funds are invested in renewable energy projects.[11]

On February 16, 2010, Deloitte Canada announced that Harbour Air was a winner of a 2009 Canada’s 50 Best Managed Companies Award.[12] This national award is sponsored by Deloitte, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, National Post and Queen's School of Business.

On March 31, 2010, Harbour Air completed the acquisition of Westcoast Air and consolidated their terminal services.[13]

On May 20, 2011, Harbour Air grounded its service from Victoria Harbour to Langley Regional Airport due to low passenger numbers and fuel price surges.[14]

In November 2015, Salt Spring Air was purchased by the Harbour Air Group. Salt Spring Air's fleet now joins Harbour Air, Westcoast Air and Whistler Air as the largest seaplane airline in the world.

Destinations

Harbour Air floatplane at Victoria's Inner Harbour Airport
Harbour Air hangar at the Vancouver International Airport
Seaplane taking off, Middle Harbour, Victoria, British Columbia

As of February 2016 Harbour Air serves the following destinations in British Columbia:[4][15]

Fleet

A Harbour Air De Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver in Richmond in June 2006

As of February 2016, the Harbour Air fleet consisted of 37 aircraft and 39 registered with Transport Canada:[2][3]

Harbour Air
AircraftCount
HA
Count
TC
VariantsNotes
Cessna 17201172M3 passengers
Cessna 18501185F1-3 passengers
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver1116DHC-2, DHC-2 MK. I, DHC-2 MK. III5-6 passengers
de Havilland Canada DHC-3-T Turbo Otter2321DHC-3-T Turbo Otter10-14 passengers
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter22DHC-6-20018 passengers
Pilatus PC-1211PC-12/47E6-8 passengers, operated by Tantalus Air
Robinson R4401R44 IIhelicopter
Total3743
An Otter of Harbour Air in the harbour at Valletta 
DHC-2 Beaver at Vancouver Harbour 
A lineup of 2 DHC-2's and a DHC-3 
Harbour air at Vancouver Harbour 
The vertical stabilizer of a Harbour Air DHC-2 

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harbour Air.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.