SAS receives 50th Next-Generation 737 from Boeing

Report this content

SAS receives 50th Next-Generation 737 from Boeing Boeing today delivered to Scandinavian Airlines Systems (SAS) its 50th new direct-purchase Next-Generation 737 jetliner in just four years. With this milestone delivery, SAS now has 15 Next-Generation 737-800s, six 737-700s and 29 737-600s in its fleet. Eight of the airplanes were delivered in 1998, 21 in 1999, 19 in 2000 and one earlier this year. SAS has eight more Next-Generation 737s on order; they are scheduled for delivery in 2001 and 2002. A long-time operator of Boeing airplanes, SAS ordered its first Boeing jetliner, the DC-8, in 1955. Forty years later, in March 1995, the airline helped Boeing launch the Next-Generation 737-600 by ordering 41 of the new model jetliners. Boeing delivered the first 737-600 to SAS in September 1998. "For more than 45 years, we have teamed with Boeing to provide our passengers with the most reliable, comfortable airplanes available," said Kurt Kuhne, vice president of Fleet Development at SAS. "With the Next-Generation 737, Boeing also produced an airplane with the economics we need to maintain our competitive advantage and the design which allow us to be an environmentally responsible neighbor." 20 precent less fuel Kuhne said the Next-Generation 737s primarily replace Fokker F-28s and McDonnell Douglas DC-9s in the SAS fleet. "The 737s consume 20 percent less fuel and produce 20 percent lower emissions of carbon dioxide than the DC-9s," he said. "Emissions of nitrous oxide from the 737's jet engines are 40 percent lower than those of the DC-9." Building a quieter, more fuel-efficient airplane was a top priority for Boeing engineers designing the Next-Generation 737 family. The new, advanced-technology wing design on the models helps improve fuel efficiency. The model's new CFM56-7 engines produced by CFMI, a joint venture of General Electric Co. of the United States and Snecma of France, meet community noise restrictions well below current Stage 3 limits and below expected Stage 4 limits. Emissions also are reduced beyond required standards "The delivery of this 50th 737 is another milestone in the long-term cooperative relationship between SAS and Boeing," said Toby Bright, Boeing Commercial Airplanes vice president - Europe and Russia. "We are proud they have chosen the 737 as the right airplane to operate in the environmentally sensitive European region." SAS uses its Boeing Next-Generation 737-800s on intra-Europe and domestic Sweden routes, its 737-700s on domestic Norway routes only and its 737-600s on intra-Europe and domestic Norway and Sweden routes, For additional information, please contact: Ulf Thorné, Manager, Public and Media Relations, Tel +46 8 797 28 33 SAS CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS ------------------------------------------------------------ This information was brought to you by Waymaker http://www.waymaker.net The following files are available for download: http://www.waymaker.net/bitonline/2003/08/01/20030801BIT00260/wkr0001.doc http://www.waymaker.net/bitonline/2003/08/01/20030801BIT00260/wkr0002.pdf