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| Founded | 2008 | |||
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| Hubs | Campinas-Viracopos | |||
| Secondary hubs | Belo Horizonte-Confins | |||
| Frequent-flyer program | TudoAzul | |||
| Fleet size | 49 (+40 ordered) | |||
| Destinations | 50 | |||
| Company slogan | Azul. Você lá em cima | |||
| Parent company | Azul Trip | |||
| Headquarters | Barueri, Brazil | |||
| Key people | Pedro Janot (President) David Neeleman (Director & President) |
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| Website | www.voeazul.com.br | |||
Azul Linhas Aéreas Brasileiras S/A (English: Azul Brazilian Airlines; or simply Azul) is a Brazilian domestic low-cost airline based in Barueri.[1] It was established on 5 May 2008 by Brazilian-born David Neeleman, founder and former-CEO of JetBlue. The airline began service on December 15, 2008[2][3] and has ordered a fleet of 76 Embraer 195 jets.[4] The company was named Azul ("Blue" in Portuguese) after a naming contest in 2008, where "Samba" was the other popular name.[5]
According to the National Civil Aviation Agency of Brazil (ANAC) in December 2011 Azul had 9.77% of the domestic market share in terms of passengers per kilometre flown.[6]
Azul also achieved the highest load factor in the Brazilian domestic market for 2009, with an average factor of 79.71%, an achievement held since March 2009, with an average load factor above 85 percent.[7] Its 2009 performance allowed Azul to become the first airline in the world to board more than 2 million customers during its first year of operation.[7][8]
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JetBlue founder David Neeleman launched his fourth airline, Azul Linhas Aéreas Brasileiras S.A. The Brazilian domestic carrier inaugurated service on December 15, 2008 between three cities: Campinas, Salvador, and Porto Alegre.[3] Azul launched operations with three Embraer 195 and two Embraer 190 aircraft (with 118 and 106 seats, respectively).[citation needed] Another three airplanes were added in January 2009 to introduce nonstop service from Campinas (State of São Paulo) to both Vitória (State of Espírito Santo), and Curitiba (State of Paraná).[3]
On May 28, 2012, it was announced that Azul purchased the regional airlines TRIP Linhas Aéreas creating the holding Azul Trip. During the year 2012 the brands will co-exist operating in integrated form but eventually they would merge, probably maintaining the name Azul.[9][10]
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Azul's Embraer 195 parked at Viracopos-Campinas International Airport, Azul's hub, located in São Paulo.
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Azul check-in counter at Viracopos International Airport.
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Cabin view of one of Azul's Embraer 190.
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As of May 2012 Azul Brazilian Airlines operated scheduled services to the following destinations:[11]
Additionally, Azul operates dedicated executive bus services between some locations and its nearest airports, as connecting services to its flights:[12]
Furthermore, in 2010 Azul operated irregular international charter flights to Argentina.[13]
As of December 2011 the fleet of Azul Brazilian Airlines included the following aircraft:[14]
| Aircraft | Total | Orders | Options | Passengers (Y) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATR 72-200 | 8 | – | – | 70 | |
| ATR 72-600 | 3 | 29[15] | 10 | 70 | |
| Embraer 190 | 10 | – | – | 106 | |
| Embraer 195 | 28 | 11 | 20[16] | 118 | |
| Total | 49 | 40 | 30 |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Azul Linhas Aéreas Brasileiras |
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