Jens Fehlinger – new CEO of Swiss International Air Lines
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Jens Fehlinger – new CEO of Swiss International Air Lines
Jens Fehlinger will be the new CEO of Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS). He will assume his new role on 1 October 2024 and succeed Dieter Vranckx who will become a member of the Lufthansa Group Executive Board as of 1 July 2024.
Jens Fehlinger – new CEO of Swiss International Air Lines
The New CEO of Swiss International Air Lines
Jens Fehlinger started his professional career at the Lufthansa Group in 2006, where he held various management positions. Among other things, he was in charge of strategy and business development at Lufthansa Airlines and the operational performance management for Lufthansa Group. During the Covid pandemic, he was responsible for the Group’s crisis management office and subsequently headed the ReNew restructuring project. In recent years, Jens Fehlinger has been Co-Managing Director of Lufthansa Cityline and at the same time established as managing Director the new airline Lufthansa City Airlines.
Jens Fehlinger holds a commercial pilot’s license for the Airbus A320 and is currently an active pilot for Lufthansa Cityline. Fehlinger holds a graduate degree (Dipl.-Ing.) in Aviation Systems Engineering and Management from the University of Bremen, Germany, and a master’s degree (M.Sc.) in Traffic and Transport from the Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany. He also received an Executive MBA from the IE Business School in Madrid, Spain.
The History of SWISS
Swiss International Air Lines AG, stylized as SWISS, is the flag carrier of Switzerland and a subsidiary of the Lufthansa Group, as well as a Star Alliance member. It operates scheduled services in Europe and to North America, South America, Africa and Asia. Zurich Airport serves as its main hub and Geneva Airport as its secondary hub.
Jens Fehlinger – new CEO of Swiss International Air Lines
Its headquarters are at EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg near Basel, Switzerland, and an office at Zurich Airport in Kloten, Switzerland. The company’s registered office is in Basel.
The airline was formed following the bankruptcy in 2002 of Swissair, Switzerland’s then-flag carrier. The new airline was built around what had been Swissair’s regional subsidiary, Crossair. Swiss retains Crossair’s IATA code LX (Swissair’s code was SR). It assumed Swissair’s old ICAO code of SWR (Crossair’s was CRX), to maintain international traffic rights.
Beginnings
Swiss was formed after the 2002 bankruptcy of Swissair, Switzerland’s former flag carrier. Forty percent of Crossair’s income came from Swissair. The new airline lost US$1.6 billion from 2002 to 2005. Swissair’s biggest creditors, Credit Suisse and UBS, sold part of Swissair’s assets to Crossair, which had been Swissair’s regional counterpart. At the time, both Swissair and Crossair were part of the same holding company, SAirGroup. Crossair later changed its name to Swiss International Air Lines, and the new national airline officially started operations on 31 March 2002. The airline was initially owned by institutional investors (61.3%), the Swiss Confederation (20.3%), cantons and communities (12.2%), and others (6.2%). Swiss also owns subsidiaries Swiss Sun (100%) and Crossair Europe (99.9%). It has a total of 7,383 employees.
Head office
The Swiss International Air Lines head office at EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg. Swiss International Air Lines has its operational headquarters at EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg near Basel, Switzerland. The French-Swiss airport is located on French territory and has customs-free access to Switzerland. The Swiss head office is located in the Swiss section of the airport, and it is only accessible from Switzerland. According to the commercial register, the legal seat is in Basel itself.
Swiss International Air Lines’ head office was previously the head office of Crossair. In 2002 the “Crossair” sign on the building was replaced by a “Swiss International Air Lines” one. As of 2004 the Basel area offices housed about 1,000 employees, while the Zurich area offices housed about 850 employees. When Swiss started as a company, about 1,400-1,500 worked at the Basel offices. Swiss also operates offices at Zurich Airport in Kloten and at Geneva Airport.
SWISS from 2002 onwards
Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS) is now Switzerland’s national airline. It runs flights from its hub, Zurich, and Geneva to more than 100 destinations in 50 countries worldwide.
As Switzerland’s national airline, SWISS represents the country’s traditional values and is committed to providing top-quality products and services.
SWISS is part of the Lufthansa Group and a member of the Star Alliance, the largest network of airlines in the world.
Swiss International Air Lines is Certified as a 4-Star Airline for the quality of its airport and onboard product and staff service. Product rating includes seats, amenities, food & beverages, IFE, cleanliness etc, and service rating is for both cabin staff and ground staff.