JetBlue founder starting airline

SAO PAULO, Brazil – The founder of JetBlue Airways wants to start a new Brazilian airline and is in negotiations with Brazil’s Embraer plane maker to buy 36 mid-range jets, a leading Brazilian newspaper reported Tuesday.

David Neeleman, JetBlue’s chairman, has lined up investment totaling about $200 million for the venture, the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper reported.

SAO PAULO, Brazil – The founder of JetBlue Airways wants to start a new Brazilian airline and is in negotiations with Brazil’s Embraer plane maker to buy 36 mid-range jets, a leading Brazilian newspaper reported Tuesday.

David Neeleman, JetBlue’s chairman, has lined up investment totaling about $200 million for the venture, the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper reported.

The newspaper, citing sources close to the deal, said Neeleman has already bought a small Brazilian airline named Cheta with government authorization to operate in Latin America’s largest nation.

A message left for Neeleman was not immediately returned. Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica SA had no immediate comment.

JetBlue spokesman Bryan Baldwin said, “The story is about David, and he’s not commenting at this point.”

Neeleman was ousted as chief executive of JetBlue Airways Corp. last year after the low-fare airline was gridlocked following a U.S. ice storm that created problems for the carrier’s policy of not canceling flights ahead of bad weather. Thousands of people were trapped on planes for hours or stranded in terminals for days.

Because Neeleman holds both American and Brazilian citizenship, he would be able to overcome a major hurdle: A requirement that only 20 percent of Brazilian airlines can be owned by foreigners or foreign companies.

JetBlue uses Embraer planes in the United States, and Neeleman helped the Brazilian plane maker by placing the first large orders of its mid-range jets by an American airline. He was born in Brazil and speaks fluent Portuguese.

The entry of a new carrier in Brazil would mark the first major competition for Brazilian market leaders TAM Linhas Aereas SA and Gol Linhas Aereas Intelligentes SA in several years, following the collapse former Brazilian flagship carrier Varig under a mountain of debt.

Varig’s passenger flight operations were sold to Gol, which is running far fewer Varig flights than when the carrier was Brazil’s leading airline.

businessweek.com

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Linda Hohnholz

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