U.S. carrier Breeze confirms buying 20 more Airbus A220 jets
						
		 
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		 [September 13, 2021]  By 
		David Shepardson 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Breeze Airways, the 
		new U.S. carrier founded by entrepreneur David Neeleman, on Monday 
		publicly unveiled an order for 20 more Airbus A220-330 aircraft as it 
		looks to operate longer flights, confirming a Reuters report earlier 
		this year. 
		 
		The order brings Breeze's total A220 order to 80, making it the family's 
		second-biggest customer after Delta Air Lines and leapfrogging Neeleman-backed 
		JetBlue. 
		 
		Breeze is Neeleman's fifth commercial airline and is injecting new 
		competition into a battered airline market as U.S. domestic travel 
		recovers from the coronavirus crisis. 
		 
		It began operations in May using Embraer regional jets and plans to 
		start using the new, Canadian-designed A220 on routes longer than two 
		hours’ flight time from early 2022. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"This just shows growth is on the way," Neeleman told Reuters in an 
		interview after confirming the purchase, which involved the exercising 
		of purchase options. 
		 
		Reuters reported in April that Breeze had placed an order for 20 Airbus 
		A220 jets, bringing its total to 80, but that the name of the buyer was 
		being withheld - a common practise as airlines polish tightly held 
		marketing plans.. 
		 
		Airbus confirmed that the order announced on Monday was already on its 
		books in the undisclosed buyer column. 
		 
		Breeze will take delivery of its first A220 next month, on October 26. 
		After that, Breeze will take delivery of a total of 80 A220s at one per 
		month for the next six and a half years. 
		 
		Airbus said the A220 aircraft would be delivered from its Mobile, 
		Alabama, assembly line. 
						
		  
						
		
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			David Neeleman, founder of Azul SA, attends an event to mark the 
			service launch of its new E2-195 planes with Brazil's No. 3 airline 
			Azul SA in Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil September 12, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Roosevelt Cassio/File Photo 
            
			
			  
Last month, Breeze Airways' parent company closed a $200 million Series B 
funding round led by funds and accounts managed by BlackRock Inc and Knighthead 
Capital Management LLC. 
  
Breeze Aviation Group had previously raised more than $100 million. 
 
Breeze currently serves 16 U.S. cities and nearly 40 routes. 
 
Using 13 Embraer aircraft, it has set its sights on linking smaller U.S. cities 
with little or no direct service from larger carriers, including Tampa, Florida 
or Norfolk, Virginia. 
 
Neeleman, who has founded a string of airlines including JetBlue and Canada's 
WestJet, said he also expects to acquire about a half-dozen additional Embraer 
planes next year. 
 
He said Breeze's bookings are "a little softer" in the near-term because of 
COVID-19, but look stronger further out. "The virus has probably taken 10% out 
of the bookings," he said. 
  
(Reporting by David Shepardson, Tim Hepher, editing by Diane Craft) 
				 
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