Air Algérie


Air Algérie SpA is the flag carrier of Algeria, with its head office in the El-Djazair office block in Algiers. With flights operating mostly from Houari Boumedienne Airport in Algiers and Ahmed Ben Bella Airport in Oran, Air Algérie operates scheduled services to 33 domestic destinations in Algeria and 42 international destinations in 28 countries across Europe, North America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East., Air Algérie was 100% owned by the Government of Algeria.

History

Formation and early years

In 1946, Compagnie Générale de Transports Aériens was established. It started operating flights between Algeria and Europe on a charter basis in 1947. However, by the end of the decade, CGTA was operating scheduled flights serving Algiers, Basel, Bône, Geneva, Marseille, Paris, Philippeville, and Toulouse. In 1952, three 34-seater Bretagnes joined a fleet of seven DC-3s. Meanwhile, Compagnie Air Transport , a subsidiary of Air France and Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, had been formed in the late 1940s to connect Basel, Lyon, Marseille, Paris, and Toulouse with Algiers, Constantine, and Oran. Seasonal LondonDeauville, and London–Le Touquet flights were also undertaken. Following a drop in traffic after 1951, a merging partner was under consideration.
CGTA, and CAT merged on 23 May 1953 to form the Compagnie Générale de Transports Aériens Air Algérie, with a combined fleet that included one Breguet 761, six Bretagnes, five DC-3s, and three DC-4s. Following the merger, Air Algérie commenced seasonal services to Ajaccio, Clermont, Montpellier, and Perpignan. Furthermore, Switzerland was added to the regular schedule, a stop at Palma was performed on a weekly basis in partnership with Aviaco, and most of the trans-Mediterranean routes were operated in a pool agreement with Air France, with the French carrier flying 54% of these services, and the remainder was left for Air Algérie. Flights to the Cote d'Azur were added in the late 1950s.
Two Noratlas aircraft were acquired in July 1957, with a third entering the fleet in the following year. In addition, it became the first private French carrier to order the Caravelle in early 1958, the first of which was handed over by the manufacturer in January 1960. Following delivery, the aircraft was deployed on the Algiers–Paris route. The type was also used to fly Paris–Bône and Paris–Oran services in the subsequent months. By April 1960, Air Algérie's fleet consisted of three Caravelles, three DC-3s, ten DC-4s, two Lockheed L-749 Constellations, and three Noratlases. The Caravelles were gradually deployed on the routes previously flown with the Constellations and the DC-4s, which were used for cargo services or sold.

Algerian independence

Two shipping companies, Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, and Compagnie de Navigation Mixte, were the owners of a majority stake in Air Algérie until Algeria gained its independence in 1962. Following independence, the Délégation Générale in Algeria and Air France took over a controlling interest. The financial structure changed in March 1963, when the shipping companies and Air France ceded a 31% interest, and the Algerian government took possession of 51% of the company assets, with the airline gaining flag carrier status. In April 1964, the government increased the participation in the airline to 57%. That month, a contract was signed for the acquisition of two Ilyushin Il-18s aimed at operating the Algiers–Moscow service. Air Algérie took delivery of just one of these aircraft, as the contract was later cancelled. The sole Il-18 in the fleet was used by the government. There were eight DC-4s in the airline's fleet by April 1968. That year, four ex-Lufthansa Convair 440s were bought and converted to the 640 version. These aircraft came to replace the ageing DC-4s. Charter operations made up to 20% of the airline activities.
By March 1970, the government was the owner of 83% of the company; at this time, a Boeing 737-200, five Caravelles, four CV-640s, three DC-3s and one DC-4 were part of the fleet. Société de Travail Aérien, a domestic carrier that had been founded in 1968, was taken over by Air Algérie in May 1972. In, three Fokker F27-400s were ordered for £2.5 million. In, with a second Boeing 737 pending delivery, two more aircraft of the type —one of them a convertible model— were ordered. That year, the government of Algeria boosted its participation in the carrier to 100% when it acquired the remaining 17.74% stake held by Air France. A new route to Karachi was inaugurated in 1975. In November 1979, four Boeing 727s were ordered in a deal worth million.
By July 1980, Air Algérie had 5,621 employees and a fleet comprising 57 aircraft, including 14 Ag-Cats, six Boeing 727-200s, ten Boeing 737-200s, three Boeing 737-200Cs, one Boeing 747-200C, one Cherokee Six, two Convair CV-640s, one Douglas DC-8-63CF, one Nord 262 and 18 Queen Airs; at this time, the company offered international scheduled services to Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, France, Germany, Italy, Yugoslavia, Libya, Romania, Spain, the UK, the USSR and Switzerland, among other countries, as well as an extensive domestic network. In January 1981, the carrier ordered three Lockheed L-100-30s; by late the same year, the first of these aircraft was due to be delivered. In November 1981, a Boeing 727-200 and a Boeing 737-200 were acquired. Three Boeing 737-200s were ordered for million in 1983. Air Algérie became Airbus' 48th customer when it placed an order for two Airbus A310s in 1984. That year, a subsidiary called Inter Air Services, an airline that flew domestic and regional services using Fokker F-27 aircraft, was formed. The IAS network was operated on Air Algéries's behalf, and at March 1985 included Adrar, Algiers, Bechar, Bordj B. Mokhtar, Djanet, El Golea, Ghardaia, Hassi Messaoud, Illizi, In Amenas, In Salah, Oran, Ouargla, Tamanrasset and Timimoun; by this time, Air Algérie had 6,788 employees. In 1989, the carrier ordered three Boeing 767-300s for million.
The first Boeing 767-300 was handed over by the aircraft manufacturer in mid-1990. That year, the carrier entered a process of restructuring that would last until 1995, following years of losses that totalled only for 1990, with debts rising to million after a devaluation of the local currency. Restructuring seemingly bore fruit, as the company made a profit of million in 1992.
Air Algérie and Sonatrach created Tassili Airlines in 1998; Air Algérie's 49% shareholding in this airline was handed over to Sonatrach in 2005.

Modernization of the company

Air Algérie became a limited company in 1997. In 2006 its capital amounted to 57 billion dinars.
The sales network comprises 150 agencies in Algeria and abroad, linked to the booking system and distributed through GDS to which Air Algérie has subscribed.
Air Algérie is a Joint Stock Company the registered capital of which is 43.000.000.000,00 DA.
In November 2010, Air Algérie announced an investment of 400 million to renew its fleet, to be launched in 2011.

Corporate affairs

Business trends

The airline is loss-making. Its full Annual Report does not seem to be published regularly; figures disclosed for Air Algérie for recent years are shown below :
YearSales turnover
Operating profit
Net profit
Number of employeesNumber of passengers Passenger load factor Cargo carried Number of aircraft References
200749.42.95714.7
200854.33.2
200958.12.24.08,8983.513.539
201055.62.92.39,5023.560.513.439
201157.02.92.69,7503.763.611.743
201265.62.72.89,5634.366.411.343
201369.61.29,4694.766.415.743
201477.61.49,0955.263.214.944
201580.60.18,6105.569.715.354
201691.59,0166.17015.556
201796.08,7686.37217.758
2018113.68,6706.67420.156
20196.675.117.157
202056
20211.973.111.556
20227,9454.67817.958

Ownership and subsidiaries

Air Algérie is a joint stock company, with the shares 100% owned by the Algerian state, as of 2013.
The airline has the following main subsidiaries:
  • Technics Air Algérie
  • Air Algérie Catering, with 2,000 employees, preparing the meals of all Air Algérie's flights departing from Algeria
  • Air Algérie Cargo
  • Air Algérie Handling
  • Domestic Airlines
The airline also provides charter services in support of oil exploration, and the annual Hajj pilgrimage in Mecca.

Key people

, Hamza Benhamouda is the chief executive officer of the company.

Corporate identity

The Air Algérie logo was created in 1966 in Algiers. On 21 June 2011, the company officially announced that the logo is a swallow. This bird is a national Algerian symbol. In 2023, the airline updated its logo, with a new typeface and an updated swallow.

Destinations

In June 2007, Air Algérie inaugurated the Algiers–Montreal route. Flights to Beijing were launched in February 2009., Air Algérie has a 46% market share on international routes; the airline was the leading operator for flights between Algeria and Spain, and six of ten of its international routes with highest seat availability served France.
In October 2015, the carrier serves a domestic network that comprises 32 destinations within Algeria, including its hub at Houari Boumediene Airport, plus an international network that serve 43 more cities.
, the airline serves 33 countries and 78 routes.

Codeshare agreements

Air Algerie has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:

Interline agreements

Air Algerie has interline agreements with the following airlines:

Fleet

Recent developments and future plans

Ten Next Generation 737s—seven-800s and three-600s—were ordered in 1998 to replace the ageing Boeing 727-200s and Boeing 737-200s; the 737-600 commitment was later increased to include two more aircraft. The first Boeing 737-800 included in this order was handed over by the airframer in August 2000. When the first Boeing 737-600 was delivered to the company in May 2002, Air Algérie became the fifth airline worldwide in operating the type.
Five Airbus A330-200s were ordered in late 2003, along with nine ATR72-500ssix of them taken over from and order previously placed by Khalifa Airways. The former type would act as a replacement for the two Airbus A310s, a Boeing 747-200 and three Boeing 767-300s, while the latter would replace the seven-strong Fokker F27 fleet. Four more ATR72-500s were ordered in 2009 at a cost of approximately million, with the first of these 66-seater four turboprop machines being phased-in in February 2010. Also in 2009, during the Dubai Airshow, Air Algérie announced the purchase of seven additional Boeing 737-800s. In April 2011, the fourth aircraft from this order became the Boeing jetliner delivered to the company.
In November 2012, the airline announced an investment worth 600 million for the incorporation of eight aircraft, two of them freighters, between 2012 and 2016. Air Algérie had its IOSA certification renewed in December 2012, for a period of two years. In February 2013, unofficial announcements disclosed the airline has ordered three additional Airbus A330-200s, five additional Boeing 737-800s. It was also reported the carrier's intention of deploying the new A330s on new routes to Johannesburg, New York, Shanghai and São Paulo.
The airline launched in April 2013 a tender for the acquisition of 14 passenger and two cargo aircraft. Plans for the purchase of new equipment worth million, including three 250-seater airframes to replace the ageing Boeing 767s, were disclosed again in December 2013; already in, Air Algérie signed a letter of intent with Airbus for three Airbus A330-200s at the 2013 Dubair Air Show. In January 2014, three 68-seater ATR 72-600s were ordered, and a commitment for eight Boeing 737-800s, valued at million at list prices, was signed with Boeing. The ATR order made Air Algérie the largest operator of the type within Africa. In the same year, Boeing 737-700Cs were ordered for million. Air Algérie first ATR 72-600 was handed over to the company in December 2014.
In June 2023, the company ordered five Airbus A330-900s and two Airbus A350-1000s from Airbus; an order for eight Boeing 737 MAX 9 was placed with Boeing and a commitment for the purchase of two Boeing 737BCFs was also signed. In addition to this, 10 other aircraft will be leased, including four Airbus A330ceo, two Airbus A330-900, two Boeing 737-800 and two Boeing 737 MAX 9.

Current fleet

, Air Algérie operates the following aircraft:

Historical fleet

So far, Air Algérie has operated the following aircraft types:
AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredNotesRefs
Aérospatiale N 262
Airbus A300B42Leased from Lufthansa-
Airbus A310-300220052007
Airbus A320-200420052015All fleet were leased
Airbus A330-300820142016All fleet were leased
Airbus A340-300320122014All fleet were leased
Beechcraft Queen AirLight aircraft operated as freighter
Boeing 7071971
Boeing 727-100
Boeing 727-200
Boeing 737-400519992002
Boeing 737-400SF320042009
Boeing 747-100519791986
Boeing 747-100SF119861986
Boeing 747-200120052006Leased from Air Atlanta Icelandic
Boeing 747-200C319751982Leased from World Airways
Boeing 747-200M120042004Leased from Air Atlanta Icelandic
Boeing 747-200SF119811985
Boeing 767-300519902019
Bréguet 763 Deux-Ponts19521953Launch customer
Operated as freighter
Convair CV-640
Douglas C-47 Skytrain
Douglas C-54 Skymaster
Douglas DC-4
Douglas DC-6
Fokker F27 Friendship
Grumman Ag CatAgricultural aircraft operated as freighter
Handley Page Dart Herald
Lockheed Constellation
McDonnell Douglas MD-83Leased from Swiftair
Piper PA-32Light aircraft operated as freighter
Sud Aviation Caravelle1960
Sud-Ouest Bretagne
Vickers Viscount

To cope with the increased passenger volume during the Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages, Air Algérie has repeatedly leased Boeing 747 jumbo jets: from Aer Lingus, Middle East Airlines, SAS, Air France and Air Atlanta Icelandic.
Other aircraft types that were operated on short-term leases during the Hajj season included the Airbus A310-300, the Airbus A320-200, the larger Airbus A330-300, Airbus A340-300, Boeing 757-200, Boeing 767-200 and Boeing 777-200, as well as the Douglas DC-8, the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar, and the McDonnell Douglas DC-10.

Accidents and incidents

Fatal

Non-fatal

Hijackings

  • On 31 August 1970, three passengers armed with pistols and molotov cocktails hijacked an Air Algérie Convair CV-640 on a scheduled domestic flight from Annaba to Algiers and demanded the pilots to head to Albania instead. During a fuel stop in Brindisi, eleven passengers were allowed to leave the aircraft. As the aircraft was denied landing permission by the Albanian authorities, it diverted to Dubrovnik in then Yugoslavia instead, where the perpetrators could be arrested.
  • When an Air Algérie Boeing 737-200 landed at Houari Boumedienne Airport on 31 March 1991 following a scheduled passenger flight from Béchar, a passenger threatened to detonate a hand grenade and insisted on being allowed to have a political statement on live national television, concerning the planned national election. The demand was rejected, and the hijacker was persuaded to give up and set free the 53 other persons on board.
  • A similar hijacking occurred on 13 November 1994 on board an Air Algérie Fokker F27 Friendship during a flight from Algiers to Ouargla. The aircraft with 42 occupants was forced to divert to Palma de Mallorca Airport, where the three perpetrators surrendered.
  • On 25 July 1996 at around 9:00 local time, an Air Algérie Boeing 767-300 with 232 persons on board was hijacked at Oran Es Sénia Airport by a man who demanded to be flown to the United States, rather than to Algiers where the aircraft had been scheduled to leave for. After more than four hours of negotiation he surrendered to the local authorities.
  • On 19 January 2003, Air Algérie Flight 6025 from Constantine to Algiers was hijacked shortly after take-off by a man who demanded the pilots fly the Boeing 737-800 to North Korea. The flight continued to Algiers, though, where the perpetrator could be restrained by police forces storming the aircraft. None of the 24 other passengers and 6 crew members were injured.
  • On 19 August 2003, an Air Algérie Boeing 737-800 was hijacked by a mentally-ill passenger right after take-off from Houari Boumedienne Airport, who threatened to blow up the aircraft when the crew would not divert to Geneva. The crew carried out an allegedly necessary fuel stop at Oran Es Sénia Airport, where the man could be arrested.