12/11/1996: Oasis International Airlines Ceases Operations

In the early 1990s, Oasis International Airlines had carved out a successful charter operation to various European destinations.

Lee

Cross

11/12/23

DALLAS — Today in Aviation, Spanish charter carrier Oasis International Airlines (OB) ceased operations in 1996 due to the saturation of its charter market. 

Oasis was established in 1986 as Andalusair, an air broker based in Malaga (AGP). The Oasis Hotel Group took over the company in 1987 and was renamed Oasis International.

Flights commenced on May 26, 1987, between AGP and Dublin (DUB). As more McDonnell Douglas MD-80s were added, OB opened additional bases in Palma (PMI) and the Canary Islands and expanded its network across northern Europe.

The airline used five Airbus A310s. Photo: Aero Icarus from Zürich, SwitzerlandCC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Expansion

In August 1992, the Oasis group purchased Aerocancun, which at the time operated charter flights from Mexico to numerous cities across the USA. This led to the Airbus A310-300 being introduced into the OB fleet. 

By 1992, the airline was carrying over 1.5 million passengers per year and had a turnover of more than €65 million. However, storm clouds were gathering for the carrier.

Pictured at Manchester Airport OB MD-83 (EC-EOM). Photo: Ken Fielding/https://www.flickr.com/photos/kenfieldingCC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

In 1995 Oasis was hit by a pilot's strike, which led to hundreds of flights being cancelled. The charter market was also becoming massively overcrowded as various rivals emerged. This led to the airline moving into the scheduled market. But losses continued to mount. 

The airline was forced to return numerous aircraft to their lessors, which subsequently led to the fleet consisting of a single A310. This was later detained at New York (JFK) after the airline declared bankruptcy and ceased operations. 

Featured Image: Oasis would operate a total of 17 MD-82 and MD-83 aircraft. Photo: Pedro Aragão, CC BY-SA 3.0 GFDL, via Wikimedia Commons

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