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  • βœ‡Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • 20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ007-2K Manuel Gual
    Manuel Gual posted a photo: A Cinematic Journey Through the History of Aviation Description: A wide cinematic collection celebrating the evolution of aviation, from fragile early biplanes and daring pioneer pilots to flying boats, wartime fighters, classic airliners, supersonic icons, stealth aircraft, and futuristic aerospace designs. The series combines golden hour light, dramatic skies, ocean crossings, misty runways, military silhouettes, retro travel atmosphere, and science fiction con
     

20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ007-2K

Manuel Gual posted a photo:

20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ007-2K

A Cinematic Journey Through the History of Aviation

Description:
A wide cinematic collection celebrating the evolution of aviation, from fragile early biplanes and daring pioneer pilots to flying boats, wartime fighters, classic airliners, supersonic icons, stealth aircraft, and futuristic aerospace designs. The series combines golden hour light, dramatic skies, ocean crossings, misty runways, military silhouettes, retro travel atmosphere, and science fiction concepts to create a visual timeline of flight as both engineering achievement and human dream.

These images have been generated by Artificial Intelligence.

  • βœ‡Malay Mail - All
  • Private jet demand rises as Monaco GP, Cannes drive travel surge despite Iran war disruption
    LONDON, June 9 β€” As soaring jet fuel prices triggered by the Iran war send ripples across the global travel market, a wealthy elite of CEOs, celebrities and sports stars is flying by private jet in greater numbers than ever before, to glitzy events from the Monaco Grand Prix to the Cannes film festival.The phenomenon is another sign of the so-called β€œK-shaped” economy that is showing up across consumer markets from luxury to dining, industry watchers say, as high
     

Private jet demand rises as Monaco GP, Cannes drive travel surge despite Iran war disruption

8 June 2026 at 23:00

Malay Mail

LONDON, June 9 β€” As soaring jet fuel prices triggered by the Iran war send ripples across the global travel market, a wealthy elite of CEOs, celebrities and sports stars is flying by private jet in greater numbers than ever before, to glitzy events from the Monaco Grand Prix to the Cannes film festival.

The phenomenon is another sign of the so-called β€œK-shaped” economy that is showing up across consumer markets from luxury to dining, industry watchers say, as high-income travellers spend more while middle- and lower-income groups tighten their belts, with budget carriers in particular feeling the squeeze.

Jet fuel costs have roughly doubled since the start of the war in late February, forcing global airlines to cancel flights and raise ticket prices, while missile and drone strikes around the Gulf have seen flights almost halve in a region that was a global connection hub.

β€œThe world is in turmoil, but not our passengers,” Deniz Weissenborn, owner of Platoon Aviation, which charters eight-seat jets, told Reuters, explaining that its clients are wealthy enough to absorb higher prices.

β€œIf you fly in a private jet, I don’t think you’re bothered by an increase of 1,000 or 2,000 euros.”

According to aviation data firm WINGX, the number of private flights has increased by about 4 per cent globally so far this year, adding thousands of trips. In the same period, overall global capacity has fallen 3-4 per cent, data from aviation analytics firm Cirium shows.

β€˜As busy as ever’

Private jet pilots and executives told Reuters that charter jet services are seeing an uptick in bookings as wealthy travellers turn away from premium, business and first class in an effort to dodge the risk of commercial flight cancellations and airport disruption due to the conflict.

Amalfi Jets founder and CEO Kolin Jones said there had been around a quarter more requests for Cannes this year compared to last, while those for Sunday’s Monaco GP were up almost a third, as people switched up from commercial flights.

β€œLots who could afford it but flew commercial are now happy to pay more for the safer option,” Jones said. β€œCannes Film Festival, Monaco Grand Prix, and World Cup-related travel from Europe to the US are driving demand.”

Eight private jet executives said that while private traffic to the Middle East had dipped given airspace safety concerns, demand for travel to Europe and the United States was likely to approach record levels this year.

β€œIt is as busy as ever,” said Andy Spencer, a private jet pilot who has flown routes in the Middle East and Asia.

During early February’s US Super Bowl in California, private traffic at nearby airports was three times that of a normal day, WINGX told Reuters. For April’s Masters Golf Tournament in Augusta, private traffic was 10 times more than normal, jumping from fewer than 50 flights to more than 400.

β€œOur customers’ flight hours continue to hit record highs month after month,” private jet maker Embraer’s CEO Francisco Gomes Neto told Reuters at an executive aviation airshow in May in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

β€˜People feel safe when they have control’

Private jets have come in for criticism from climate groups and campaigners, who say their use underscores global inequality, is a threat to the environment and that regulation of the sector is too lax.

A spokesperson for the European Business Aviation Association said the sector played an important role in Europe’s connectivity and criticism was overly simplistic, while manufacturers and charter operators added that well-heeled individuals were simply looking for more security in uncertain times.

β€œEvery time there are world events, private aviation gets a little bit of a bump, every single time,” said Jason Middleton, owner of Silver Air Private Jets, citing the Iran war, the Covid pandemic and unrest in South America.

β€œIt’s like a safety thing...People feel safe when they have control.” β€” ReutersΒ 

  • βœ‡Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • 20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ018-2K Manuel Gual
    Manuel Gual posted a photo: A Cinematic Journey Through the History of Aviation Description: A wide cinematic collection celebrating the evolution of aviation, from fragile early biplanes and daring pioneer pilots to flying boats, wartime fighters, classic airliners, supersonic icons, stealth aircraft, and futuristic aerospace designs. The series combines golden hour light, dramatic skies, ocean crossings, misty runways, military silhouettes, retro travel atmosphere, and science fiction con
     

20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ018-2K

Manuel Gual posted a photo:

20260324-HISTORIA AVIACION 001-MJ018-2K

A Cinematic Journey Through the History of Aviation

Description:
A wide cinematic collection celebrating the evolution of aviation, from fragile early biplanes and daring pioneer pilots to flying boats, wartime fighters, classic airliners, supersonic icons, stealth aircraft, and futuristic aerospace designs. The series combines golden hour light, dramatic skies, ocean crossings, misty runways, military silhouettes, retro travel atmosphere, and science fiction concepts to create a visual timeline of flight as both engineering achievement and human dream.

These images have been generated by Artificial Intelligence.

G-AHKX Avro Anson C19 RAF TX176 Royal Air Force

chris murkin posted a photo:

G-AHKX Avro Anson C19 RAF TX176 Royal Air Force

G-AHKX Avro Anson C19 RAF TX176 Royal Air Force
The Avro Anson was constructed in Manchester
This Anson has now been painted in the colours of one that would have been used by RAF based at Coningsby Station Flight
Photo taken at Old Warden Shuttleworth Air Show 10th May 2026
HAA_1419

  • βœ‡Malay Mail - All
  • Thailand finally adopts ICAO power bank rules after airline fire scares Malay Mail
    BANGKOK, June 6 β€” Thailand’s aviation regulator has tightened rules on power banks on flights after a series of lithium-battery scares, more than two months after standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) took effect.The move follows the January 2025 Air Busan fire in South Korea, where early investigations suggested a power bank may have been involved, as well as Thai-linked incidents on Thai AirAsia in January 2024 and Bangkok Airway
     

Thailand finally adopts ICAO power bank rules after airline fire scares

6 June 2026 at 08:12

Malay Mail

BANGKOK, June 6 β€” Thailand’s aviation regulator has tightened rules on power banks on flights after a series of lithium-battery scares, more than two months after standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) took effect.

The move follows the January 2025 Air Busan fire in South Korea, where early investigations suggested a power bank may have been involved, as well as Thai-linked incidents on Thai AirAsia in January 2024 and Bangkok Airways in July 2025.Β 

The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand said power banks must now be carried only in cabin baggage and are banned from checked luggage, The Bangkok Post reported this week.

It capped devices at 100 watt-hours, or 20,000 milliampere-hours, while power banks between 101Wh and 160Wh require airline approval.

Each passenger may carry no more than two lithium-battery power banks, and devices with unclear or missing capacity labels are not allowed on board.

Passengers are also barred from charging power banks or using them to charge phones or other devices during flights.Β 

Power banks must be kept within reach, such as in a seat pocket, under the seat in front or on the passenger, and cannot be stored in overhead lockers.

The safety logic is simple: a lithium battery fire in the hold is hard to detect, while a smoking battery in the cabin can be isolated, cooled and contained by trained crew.

The ICAO guidelines, set on March 27, limits passengers to two power banks each, besides barring them from recharging the devices during flights.Β 

That means Thailand took about 10 weeks, or 69 days, to turn the latest international safety practice into a local regulator rule.

But Thailand was not starting from zero, as Thai Airways had already announced similar power bank restrictions in early April based on ICAO requirements.Β 

Malaysia Airlines, Firefly and MASwings tightened power bank controls on April 1, 2025, requiring passengers to keep devices with them, barring overhead storage and banning the charging of power banks in flight.Β 

Malaysia-based budget carrier AirAsia also moved to require power banks to be kept in the cabin and within reach, while barring their in-flight use and charging.Β 

Malaysia had also put core lithium-battery flight limits into a regulator directive as far back as December 2015, showing that parts of Thailand’s new package reflect safety practice that has existed regionally for more than a decade.Β 

Singapore moved faster on the 2026 ICAO update, limiting passengers flying out of the island nation to two power banks from April 15.

Singapore Airlines and Scoot had already banned passengers from using or charging power banks in flight from April 1, 2025, after a series of battery-related cabin fire incidents.Β 

The common international baseline remains that power banks and spare lithium batteries should travel in the cabin, devices under 100Wh are generally allowed, 101Wh to 160Wh devices require airline approval, and higher-capacity units are banned from passenger baggage.

Thailand’s version is slightly stricter in practice because it states the standard limit as 20,000mAh, below the roughly 27,000mAh often treated as the 100Wh equivalent for typical 3.7-volt power banks.

For travellers, the message is blunt: bring no more than two clearly labelled power banks, keep them in hand luggage, do not put them overhead, do not use them in flight, and charge your phone before boarding.

Β 

Transport chief says health risks linked to late-night aircraft noise over Tung Chung at β€˜acceptable’ levels

3 June 2026 at 09:18
tung chung noise

Hong Kong’s transport chief has said that late-night aircraft noise over Tung Chung is within acceptable limits in terms of risks to residents’ health.

Secretary for Transport Mable Chan on December 17, 2025. Photo: GovHK.
Secretary for Transport Mable Chan on December 17, 2025. Photo: GovHK.

Lawmaker Chan Hok-fung relayed concerns from residents during a legislative Q&A on Wednesday. He said that the issue β€œhas been aggravated significantly,” since the operating hours of the South Runway were extended to 2am in August last year.

His requests for the utilisation rate of the runway during midnight and 2am were not met by Secretary for Transport and Logistics Mable Chan. However, the minister said that the Airport Authority had conducted health impact assessments with regard to noise.

β€œThe assessment indicates that both short-term and long-term potential health risks resulting from the operation of the 3RS [Three Runway System] are within acceptable levels,” she said.

Housing and urban planning
Tung Chung. File Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The Aviation Environmental Federation, a UK-based non-profit, says high levels of aviation noise can lead to chronic sleep disturbance and long-term annoyance.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that the annual average outdoor noise level for aircraft, across 24 hours, remains below 45 decibels. The WHO uses a Day-Evening-Night level metric, taking account of quiet and loud moments throughout a year, whilst penalising night-time noise before averaging them out to a single figure.

In environmental impact assessments, Hong Kong uses the Noise Exposure Forecast (NEF) 25 contour, under which the day-night average sound level of aircraft should be kept at around 55 to 60 decibels.

Cathay Pacific. Photo: GovHK.
Cathay Pacific. Photo: GovHK.

Hong Kong’s Civil Aviation Department monitors aircraft noise by tracking the peak instantaneous noise level of individual flights passing overhead, rather than a continuous annual average. It then publishes the percentage of total flights which hit certain decibel brackets.

In the 12 months leading up to March 31 this year, 91.49 per cent of flights over Tung Chung emitted noise under 65 decibels – the rest exceeded the limit.

Mitigation measures

The transport chief said on Wednesday that a number of aircraft noise mitigation measures had been rolled out and aviation technology was improving to dampen engine sound.

β€œRelevant measures include control at source by prohibiting/restricting aircraft with higher noise levels from operating in Hong Kong, and reducing the number of flights overflying densely populated areas at night when weather and safety conditions permit, such as arranging arrival aircraft to land from the southwest over the water, thereby mitigating the noise impact on residents living in the vicinity of the airport,” she said.

β€œWhile consolidating and enhancing Hong Kong’s position as an international aviation hub, the Government will continue to balance community well-being and environmental benefits, proactively promoting the synergistic development of the aviation industry and the environment to achieve high-quality and sustainable growth,” she added.

Hongkongers may complain about aircraft noise by contacting the Civil Aviation Department hotline on 2769 6969 or emailing aircraftnoise@cad.gov.hk.

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