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KJOS

Norwegian boss to tell ‘the true story’ of airline

Bjørn Kjos, the man who built Norwegian into one of Europe's biggest low-cost airlines, has written an autobiography telling the story of the carrier's meteoric ascent.

Norwegian boss to tell 'the true story' of airline
Bjørn Kjos - Kjetil Ree
 
The book has been written to clear up what Kjos claims are the falsehoods in Hoyt Spill (High Stakes), last year's biography, which claimed Kjos had a violent temper and had at times smashed chairs against the walls of his offices, stories he dismissed as "nonsense". 
 
"There are things he just invented, and the most interesting stuff he knows nothing about," Kjos told the DN newspaper. 
 
Kjos was a pilot in the Norwegian air force before becoming a lawyer and then founding Norwegian Airlines largely by mistake after friends asked him to draft an investment plan for their struggling aviation company. 
 
Instead, he and his brother took a 55 percent stake, and Norwegian Airlines was born. 
 
This is not the first time Kjos has put pen to paper. In 2006, he published a spy thriller The Murmansk Affair, which drew on his own experiences as a fighter pilot. 
  
The new book is set to be released this autumn. 
 

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NORWEGIAN

Norwegian ranked most fuel efficient airline

Norwegian Air been ranked the world's most fuel efficient major airline in a new study released on Tuesday, thanks to its growing fleet of fuel efficient Dreamliner aircraft.

Norwegian ranked most fuel efficient airline
One of Norwegian Air Shuttle's Boeing 787 Dreamliners coming into land. Photo: Creative Commons
The study, by the International Council for Clean Transportation (ICCT), found that Norwegian used the least fuel per passenger of all the 20 major non-stop transatlantic carriers, using 51 percent less than the UK's BA. 
 
According to the study Norwegian's Scandinavian rival SAS was among the three least fuel efficient carriers, along with BA and Germany's Lufthansa.  Together, the three laggards account for some 20 percent of the transatlantic air travel market.
 
Air Berlin and Ireland's Aer Lingus came in second and third in the study, which the ICCT said was intended to provide greater insight into the fuel efficiency, and therefore carbon intensity, of international flights.
 
The study, which comes ahead of a Paris conference on climate change due to start November 30, showed Norwegian Air Shuttle, the world's seventh-largest low-cost airline, averaged 40 passenger kilometres per litre of fuel.
 
By comparison, Germany's second-largest airline Air Berlin had a fuel efficiency of 35 passenger kilometres per litre.
 
It was the US-based ICCT which helped to uncover the pollution cheating scandal at German auto giant Volkswagen in September after it tested actual emissions figures for diesel cars and found some Volkswagen models to be above permitted limits.
 
Noting the fuel efficiency disparities between the carriers, ICCT said seat configuration was a key factor in the results and that the average fuel burn of the aircraft used was also significant.
 
It also noted that first class and business class seats accounted for around a third of carbon emissions but only 14 percent of overall seats.
 
“The very high fuel efficiency of Norwegian Air Shuttle demonstrates the central role of technology in reducing CO2 emissions from the aviation sector,” the ICCT concluded.
 
“Airlines that invest in new, advanced aircraft are more fuel-efficient than airlines that use older, less efficient aircraft.”