Air Caraïbes

Air Caraïbes is a French West Indian airline, with its headquarters in Les Abymes, Guadeloupe. The airline's main base of operations is at Pointe-à-Pitre International Airport in Guadeloupe, with a focus city at Martinique Aimé Césaire International Airport, near Fort-de-France in Martinique. It operates scheduled and charter services in the West Indies, as well as transatlantic flights to and from Paris Orly Airport in Metropolitan France.

History

The airline was originally established as Société Caribéenne de Transports Aériens, and started operations in September 1994. In 2000, Air Guadeloupe was acquired by Groupe Dubreuil, which had previously established Air Vendée before the airline was acquired by Air France, rebranding it as Regional Airlines.[4] The current Air Caraïbes was founded in July 2000 through the merger of various local airlines Air Guadeloupe, Air Martinique, Air Saint Barthélémy, and Air Saint Martin, and was created in response to the air transport needs of the French Caribbean territories. In 2002, the company flew 445,000 passengers and had €68 million in revenues.

In July 2003, the airline received its first ATR 72-500.[5] On 12 December 2003, the airline began services to Orly Airport from Guadeloupe and Martinique using an Airbus A330-200. The transatlantic services were operated under a franchise agreement by Air Caraïbes Atlantique, a jointly run subsidiary airline of Groupe Dubreuil, which was registered in Martinique with its own air operator's certificate, using an ICAO airline designator of "CAJ" and callsign of "CAR LINE".[6][7] Its operations were further integrated with and operated under the airline codes of Air Caraïbes at a later date. In June 2006, Air Caraïbes expanded its Airbus A330 fleet in receiving its first Airbus A330-300, and also planned to receive another A330-300 to replace one of its A330s.[8] Air Caraïbes sold one of its Airbus A330-200s to the French Air Force, where it was re-registered and became one of the French presidential planes.[9]

On 13 December 2013, Air Caraïbes announced it had ordered the Airbus A350, with a fleet of three A350-900s and three A350-1000s, the first of which were expected to be delivered in 2016 and 2020 respectively.[10] On 14 December 2016, the airline received its first ATR 72-600.[11] The airline received its first A350-900 on 28 February 2017, and its first A350-1000 on 19 December 2019.[12][13] However prior to the delivery of some of the airline's A350s, parent company Groupe Dubreuil allocated some to sister airline French Bee,[14] before ordering additional A350s for both airlines by June 2019.[15]

In 2024, the airline announced further fleet expansion plans with one A350-1000 and two ATR 72-600s to be delivered later in the year.[16][17]

Corporate affairs

Air Caraïbes is owned by Groupe Dubreuil (85%) and had 1,105 employees as of 2019.[18] Air Caraïbes uses Travel Technology Interactive's airline management system, Aeropack.

Destinations

Air Caraïbes operates both a regional network in the West Indies, and a transatlantic long-haul network based at Paris Orly Airport in France.[19]

Codeshare agreements

Air Caraïbes has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:[20]

The airline also codeshares with the SNCF, the French national railway operator.[23] Previously, Air Caraïbes also had codeshare agreements with Aigle Azur until the airline ceased operations in September 2019, and with Corsair International until 26 October 2019.[24][25]

Fleet

Current fleet

As of August 2025, Air Caraïbes operates the following aircraft:[26][27]

Former fleet

Air Caraïbes and its franchised partners have operated the following aircraft types. It does not include aircraft types that were retired by its predecessor airlines prior to being merged to form Air Caraïbes.[28]

Accidents and incidents

  • On 24 March 2001, Air Caraïbes Flight 1501 crashed into a house while on approach to Gustaf III Airport in Saint Barthélemy with 17 passengers and 2 crew members. All occupants were killed. One person on the ground was killed in the subsequent fire. The investigation concluded that the crash was caused by the pilot's error in managing the thrust lever. The report blamed the crew for accidentally entering the thrust into BETA range.[30]

See also

References

  1. Tom Norwood. North American Airlines Handbook Airways International, 2002^
  2. Legal Notices Air Caraïbes, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  3. Gouvernance Groupe Dubreuil, retrieved 18 June 2025^
  4. A Dubreuil Group company Air Caraïbes, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  5. Elegance: a touch of class from Air Caraibes FlightGlobal, DVV Media International Limited, 14 June 2003, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  6. Enterprise Air Caraibes Atlantique au Lamentin (97232) Le Figaro, 10 September 2020, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  7. Air Caraibes Atlantique code and information AirportDatabase.net, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  8. Air Caraïbes signs for an additional A330-300 Airbus S.A.S., 18 July 2006, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  9. INFO LE POINT.FR : Le premier palais volant de Nicolas Sarkozy livré vendredi à Villacoublay, actualité Défense ouverte : Le Point archive.wikiwix.com, retrieved 2024-07-08^
  10. Alain Coffre. Air Caraïbes: premiers vols en A350 en 2016-2017 Business Traveller France, 2013-12-12, retrieved 2013-12-12^
  11. Air Caraïbes takes delivery of its first ATR 72-600 ATR, Avions de Transport Régional, 14 December 2016, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  12. Air Caraïbes takes delivery of its first A350-900, opening up a new era in air transport to the French Caribbean Airbus S.A.S., 28 February 2017, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  13. First Airbus A350-1000 joins Air Caraïbes' fleet Airbus S.A.S., 19 December 2019, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  14. Fabrice Gliszczynski. La low-cost long-courrier French Blue fait des vagues chez Air Caraïbes La Tribune, 16 March 2016, retrieved 15 August 2020^
  15. Air Lease Corporation Announces Lease Placement of Three New Airbus A350-900 and One New Airbus A350-1000 Aircraft with Air Caraïbes and FrenchBee Aviator.aero, 16 June 2019, retrieved 3 April 2022^
  16. Helen Massy-Beresford. Air Caraibes To Add Two ATRs To Strengthen Regional Fleet Aviation Week Network, Informa Markets, 2 May 2024, retrieved 5 October 2024^
  17. Helen Massy-Beresford. Air Caraïbes Explores Expanding Long-Haul Fleet, Regional Flying Aviation Week Network, Informa Markets, 10 July 2024, retrieved 5 October 2024^
  18. Air Caraïbes en chiffres Air Caraïbes, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  19. Destination Map Air Caraïbes, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  20. Nos accords aériens Air Caraïbes, retrieved 14 September 2020^
  21. https://guyanachronicle.com/2025/09/23/caribbean-airlines-air-caraibes-ink-codeshare-agreement-to-boost-caribbean-france-connectivity/^
  22. Profile on Cubana de Aviacion CAPA Centre for Aviation^
  23. L'offre Train + Air Air Caraïbes, retrieved 14 September 2020^
  24. Partenariat aérien Air Caraïbes, retrieved 14 September 2020^
  25. Serge Fabi. Air Caraïbes et Corsair arrêtent leur partage de codes sur les Antilles 27 July 2019, retrieved 14 September 2020^
  26. Global Airline Guide 2025 - Air Caraïbes Airliner World, September 2025^
  27. La Flotte Air Caraïbes, retrieved 13 September 2020^
  28. North American Airlines Handbook published by Airways International Inc 1997^
  29. Air Caraibes S.a. Routesonline, Informa Markets, retrieved 15 September 2020^
  30. bea-fr.org retrieved 2014-11-13^