Nordica (airline)

Summary

Nordica, part of the Nordic Aviation Group AS, is an Estonian charter airline which was the flag carrier of Estonia from 2016 to 2023, a capacity purchase arrangement provider, headquartered in Tallinn,[1] with its office premises in the vicinity of Tallinn Airport. The company used to operate scheduled flights to Sweden, but those flights ceased in October 2023, and as of October 2023, the airline focuses on operations under wet-lease contracts on behalf of other European airlines. Nordica also operates PSOs.

Nordica
IATA ICAO Callsign
ND NDA NORDICA AIR
Founded25 September 2015; 8 years ago (2015-09-25)
Commenced operations8 November 2015; 8 years ago (2015-11-08)
AOC #EE-023
Operating bases
SubsidiariesXfly
Fleet size22
Parent companyNordic Aviation Group AS
Government of Estonia
HeadquartersTallinn, Estonia
Key people
  • Remco Althuis, CEO
  • Jan Palmer, (former CEO)
  • Erki Urva (former CEO)
  • Hannes Saarpuu (former CEO)
  • Jaan Tamm (former CEO)
RevenueIncrease €60.16 million (2021)
ProfitIncrease €1.19 million (2021)
Employees314
Websitenordica.ee
Notes
Successor to Estonian Air. Nordica is a commercial airline brand, a CPA airline flying for major European companies under ACMI contracts. Nordica provides ACMI services. Nordica and its daughter company Xfly are both part of Nordic Aviation Group.

History edit

 
A Nordica ATR 72-600
 
A Nordica Bombardier CRJ900 Operated For LOT Polish Airlines

The company was founded on 25 September 2015, subsequent to a decision of the Estonian Government[2] to form a new airline after the liquidation of the previous national carrier, Estonian Air, due to bankruptcy. The symbolic first flight left Tallinn for Amsterdam on 8 November 2015, operated by wet-lease partner BMI Regional. The first flight with Estonian service on board on the same route took off on 20 January 2016.

The company have reused the IATA code (EE) and call-sign (REVAL) of Aero Airlines, which ceased operations in early 2008.

On 30 March 2016, a new brand name – Nordica – was officially announced and published in the media.[3][4][5] According to the company, the airline's name derives from Estonia being a part of the Nordic region, both in geographic terms and according to recent scientific studies, thus also culturally – blending the organizational culture of the company with what a Northern European company culture is expected to be, built on soft values and democratic rules. The country's leaders, who were involved in launching the brand, also wished that the name would reflect this "nordicness" clearly, thus forming a first idea of the national carrier. Erik Urva, a former CEO of the company, also underlined that “Nordica is a logical follow-up for its previous name, the Nordic Aviation Group”.[6]

During the first year of activities, Slovenian Adria Airways operated most of Nordica's flights, whilst Nordica was building up its fleet and crew. On 19 November 2016, Nordica entered into a strategic partnership with LOT Polish Airlines, using the latter's commercial platform, ticketing system and flight code.[7] Since most of the flights were marketed by LOT Polish Airlines, which owned 49% shares of the Nordica's subsidiary Regional Jet, still a member of Star Alliance,[8] Nordica also carried LOT's flight codes and callsign on most of its flights. However, the partnership came to and end in early 2021, when Nordica acquired all LOT shares in Xfly (former Regional Jet) and became its sole owner.[9]

In March 2018, Nordica opened a base at Groningen Airport Eelde, in the north of the Netherlands. The base served four routes: to Copenhagen and Munich throughout the year and Ibiza and Nice in the summer. In November 2018, Nordica announced it would shut down eight of its routes from Tallinn Airport from the summer schedule of 2019.[10] Additionally, the carrier closed its base in Groningen by 29 December 2018.[11]

In June 2019, Nordica announced it would terminate all remaining scheduled operations from its home base in Tallinn due to the very high competition and loss-making routes on the local market. While a few key routes would shortly be taken over by the company’s partner airline LOT Polish Airlines, Nordica would focus its services on wet-lease operations for other airlines with the ambition to expand.[12]

Rebranding of Nordica’s subsidiary, Regional Jet edit

In February 2020, in the turmoil of the global corona pandemics, Nordica's subsidiary Regional Jet announced its successful rebranding to Xfly, eyeing new opportunities for business growth. The company also expressed interest in expanding the operations by leasing seven Embraer 190/195s.[13] However, these plans were never put to practice because of the global pandemic. The rebranding boosted the growth and expansion of the company. Today[when?] Xfly and Nordica operate together a fleet of 17 aircraft, three more are being added in spring 2023.[14]

Expansion edit

In July 2021, Xfly announced it was planning to uptake operations other airlines had been ramping up due to pandemic-related low-season in aviation. The management of the company saw opportunities to secure ACMI service contracts throughout Europe from 2021.[15] In the end of the year, the group touched the verge of 600 employees of 30 different nationalities.

The fleet edit

Through its subsidiary Xfly in a partnership with Scandinavian Airlines, Xfly operates six ATR72-600s and seven Bombardier CRJ-900s between Scandinavian and other Northern European destinations.[16]

Today Xfly and Nordica operate a fleet of 19 aircraft consisting of ATR72-600s, CRJ900s, CR700s and A320s, where three Airbus A320neo state of the art, emission reduced aircraft will empower the growth of the company in a sustainable manner from spring 2023. Headquartered in Tallinn, Nordica and its subsidiary Xfly have bases in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Turku, Aarhus, Gällivare, Vilnius, Lisbon, Munich and Hamburg.

The Group edit

The Nordic Aviation Group, owner of two trusted CPA airlines, Nordica and Xfly, is an employer to over 600 people of 30 different nationalities. Xfly Aviation Academy is also formally part of the group, making sure the company can keep recruiting new pilots in a globally foreseen future shortage of aviation specialists. The maintenance team of the company has grown three times in the years 2020–2022, and in autumn 2022, the so called PART145 was nominated Estonia's top three management teams by the Estonian Aviation Academy.

Destinations edit

As of October 2023, Nordica has terminated all of their scheduled operations to focus on wet-lease operations.

Codeshare agreements edit

  • Nordica currently uses no codeshare agreemeents in operations. The company previously used a codeshare agreement with Lufthansa in operating connections for Munich.

Fleet edit

As of April 2022, the Nordica fleet consists of the following aircraft:[17]

Nordica fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
P Y Total
Airbus A320-200 1 10[18] 180 180 Operated for Cyprus Airways
Airbus A320neo 3 TBA Operated for Marabu Airlines
ATR 72-600 9 70 70 Operated for Scandinavian Airlines
2 ATR 72-600 operated for TAP Air Portugal
Bombardier CRJ900ER 9 88 88
Total 22 13

References edit

  1. ^ "Contacts". Nordica. Retrieved 24 June 2019. Company details Name: Nordic Aviation Group AS Adress [sic]: Lennujaama tee 13, 11101 Tallinn, Estonia
  2. ^ "Nordic Aviation Group takes over Estonian Air routes". Eesti Rahvusringhääling. 7 November 2015.
  3. ^ "Ettevõttest". Nordic Aviation Group. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016.
  4. ^ Dron, Alan (11 March 2016). "Estonia's Nordic Aviation rebrands as Nordica". Air Transport World.
  5. ^ Tubalkain, Marge (28 March 2016). "Nordica: oleme kriitikast üllatunud". Postimees.
  6. ^ Nordica - the story behind the new name of the airline
  7. ^ "Estonian Nordica enters into strategic partnership with Polish LOT". 4 November 2016.
  8. ^ "Star Alliance". nordica.ee. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  9. ^ "Nordica to acquire LOT stake in Xfly, become sole owner". 4 January 2021.
  10. ^ "Nordica to shut down 8 routes from Tallinn next summer". Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  11. ^ luchtvaartnieuws.nl - Vertrek Nordica flinke domper voor Groningen Airport Eelde 3 December 2018
  12. ^ aerotelegraph.com
  13. ^ news.err.ee - Regional Jet changes name to Xfly, to lease seven new aircraft
  14. ^ "CAMO Fleet Engineer Airbus, Tallinn, Harjumaa, Xfly | CV.ee". www.cv.ee. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  15. ^ "Xfly Sees Opportunities For Capacity Purchase Agreements Post-COVID | Aviation Week Network". aviationweek.com. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  16. ^ "Regional Jet OÜ takes over ATR production for SAS". Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  17. ^ "Õhusõidukite register | Transpordiamet". transpordiamet.ee. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  18. ^ "Hold on guys, we go for A320! - Xfly". xfly.ee. 27 April 2022. Retrieved 4 July 2022.

External links edit

  Media related to Nordica at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website