African Pilot Weekly Magazine 22:2026

African Airline

Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 Strategic Expansion and Investment Plan

Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 strategic expansion plan includes major allocations for aircraft procurement, spare engines, hangar rehabilitation, cargo infrastructure, ICT systems and pilot training equipment, with ATCL targeting a 47-destination network and TZS 1.09 trillion in revenue from passenger and cargo operations.

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Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 Strategic Expansion and Investment Plan
  • Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 Strategic Expansion and Investment Plan

    Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 strategic expansion plan includes major allocations for aircraft procurement, spare engines, hangar rehabilitation, cargo infrastructure, ICT systems and pilot training equipment, with ATCL targeting a 47-destination network and TZS 1.09 trillion in revenue from passenger and cargo operations.

    Read More
    Air Tanzania’s 2026/27 Strategic Expansion and Investment Plan

    African Airline

  • Kenya Airports Authority Reaffirms Commitment to Maasai Mara Airport Upgrade

    Kenya Airports Authority has reaffirmed its commitment to the upgrade and development of Maasai Mara Airport following the signing of an Intergovernmental Partnership Agreement between the Ministry of Roads and Transport and the County Government of Narok.

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    Kenya Airports Authority Reaffirms Commitment to Maasai Mara Airport Upgrade

    African Infrastructure & Projects: Airport

  • Angola’s New M’banza Kongo International Airport Scheduled for Completion in 2027

    Angola’s future M’banza Kongo International Airport is scheduled for completion in 2027, with the project expected to improve air connectivity in Zaire Province and support tourism, freight movement and regional integration.

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    Angola’s New M’banza Kongo International Airport Scheduled for Completion in 2027

    African Infrastructure & Projects

  • Pilot Training & Skills

    Tanzania Set to Strengthen Aviation Training Pipeline

    Tanzania is expanding its aviation skills pipeline through CATC, the National Institute of Transport, TCAA and ATCL, with investment in pilot training, aviation security, technical capacity, cabin crew training and Dash 8 Q400 simulator equipment.

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    Tanzania Set to Strengthen Aviation Training Pipeline
  • Tanzania Set to Strengthen Aviation Training Pipeline

    Tanzania is expanding its aviation skills pipeline through CATC, the National Institute of Transport, TCAA and ATCL, with investment in pilot training, aviation security, technical capacity, cabin crew training and Dash 8 Q400 simulator equipment.

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    Tanzania Set to Strengthen Aviation Training Pipeline

    Pilot Training & Skills

  • Tanzania Updates Aviation Governance and Regulations

    Tanzania is updating aviation-related governance through changes to the Civil Aviation Act, new airport regulations, environmental oversight of air transport routes, ICT systems, procurement controls, monitoring and evaluation, staff recruitment and training.

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    Tanzania Updates Aviation Governance and Regulations

    Civil Aviation

  • Tanzania Strengthens Aviation Weather Services as Aircraft Movements Increase

    Tanzania is expanding aviation meteorological services through the Tanzania Meteorological Authority, with improved forecast accuracy, AVIMET systems at Mpanda and Pemba airports, planned Upper Air Stations for Mtwara and Kigoma, and continued ISO 9001:2015 certification.

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    Tanzania Strengthens Aviation Weather Services as Aircraft Movements Increase

    African Infrastructure & Projects

  • Tanzania Sets Out 2026/27 Airport Development Programme

    Tanzania’s 2026/27 airport development programme includes construction, rehabilitation, expansion and improvement works across international, regional and strategic airports, with dedicated allocations for Mwanza, Arusha, Serengeti, Kagera, Kilimanjaro International Airport, Julius Nyerere International Airport and regional airport projects.

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    Tanzania Sets Out 2026/27 Airport Development Programme

    African Infrastructure & Projects

  • Air Cargo & Air Freight

    African Air Cargo Demand Climbs as Capacity Contracts Sharply

    African carriers recorded above-market air cargo demand growth in April 2026, with total CTK up 7.7% year-on-year, even as available cargo capacity fell sharply.

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    African Air Cargo Demand Climbs as Capacity Contracts Sharply
  • African Air Cargo Demand Climbs as Capacity Contracts Sharply

    African carriers recorded above-market air cargo demand growth in April 2026, with total CTK up 7.7% year-on-year, even as available cargo capacity fell sharply.

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    African Air Cargo Demand Climbs as Capacity Contracts Sharply

    Air Cargo & Air Freight

  • TAAG Targets Operational Turnaround in 2026 With Fleet, Training and Partnership Drive

    TAAG Angola Airlines is targeting 2026 as a key year in its operational turnaround, with fleet renewal, aviation training, international partnerships and network development forming part of a broader strategy to strengthen Angola’s national carrier.

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    TAAG Targets Operational Turnaround in 2026 With Fleet, Training and Partnership Drive

    African Airline

  • WHO Ramps Up Support to the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Ebola Outbreak Response

    The World Health Organization is intensifying support to the Democratic Republic of the Congo following the declaration of an Ebola outbreak in north-eastern Ituri Province on 15 May 2026. WHO delivered 11.5 tonnes of medical supplies and equipment within 72 hours and has deployed more…

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    WHO Ramps Up Support to the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Ebola Outbreak Response

    Humanitarian Aviation

  • Air Cargo & Air Freight

    Why Airports Cannot Be an Afterthought in Africa’s Intermodal Transport Planning

    Airports are often left out of Africa’s intermodal transport debate, yet they are critical where cargo is time-sensitive, high-value, perishable or linked to export-led growth. For aviation to support trade, agriculture, emergency logistics, tourism and regional connectivity, airports must be planned as logistics nodes within a connected system of roads, rail, customs, cold chain facilities, fuel supply, cargo handling and digital visibility.

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    Why Airports Cannot Be an Afterthought in Africa’s Intermodal Transport Planning
  • Why Airports Cannot Be an Afterthought in Africa’s Intermodal Transport Planning

    Airports are often left out of Africa’s intermodal transport debate, yet they are critical where cargo is time-sensitive, high-value, perishable or linked to export-led growth. For aviation to support trade, agriculture, emergency logistics, tourism and regional connectivity, airports must be planned as logistics nodes within…

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    Why Airports Cannot Be an Afterthought in Africa’s Intermodal Transport Planning

    Air Cargo & Air Freight

  • Deutsche Aircraft to Showcase D328 ® Multi Role Portfolio at ILA Berlin 2026

    Deutsche Aircraft will present its D328 Multi Role aircraft and a new uncrewed aircraft capability at ILA Berlin 2026, positioning the portfolio for public-sector, governmental and mission-critical operations.

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    Deutsche Aircraft to Showcase D328 ® Multi Role Portfolio at ILA Berlin 2026

    Military & Defence: Aircraft

  • Successful First Flight of the World’s First Unmanned Airborne Early Warning Solution

    SAAB and GA-ASI have completed the first flight of an unmanned Airborne Early Warning solution, integrating Saab’s LoyalEye radar sensor with GA-ASI’s MQ-9B unmanned aircraft.

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    Successful First Flight of the World’s First Unmanned Airborne Early Warning Solution

    Military & Defence

  • Eve Completes Hover & Low-Speed Flights Block, Advancing eVTOL Toward Transition Flight Testing

    Eve has completed the hover and low-speed flight test block for its full-scale eVTOL engineering prototype, recording 59 flights and more than two hours of accumulated flight time as the programme moves towards transition flight testing.

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    Eve Completes Hover & Low-Speed Flights Block, Advancing eVTOL Toward Transition Flight Testing

    Future Flight

  • Congo to Introduce Visa-Free Access for African Nationals from 2027

    The Republic of the Congo will waive visa requirements for all African nationals from 1 January 2027, following an announcement by President Denis Sassou-Nguesso during the African Development Bank Group’s 2026 Annual Meetings in Brazzaville.

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    Congo to Introduce Visa-Free Access for African Nationals from 2027

    Policy: Visa

  • Intellisense Systems Selected by Boeing for $400M+ C-17 Flight Deck Replacement Program

    Intellisense Systems has been selected by Boeing to provide Data Concentrator Units and Multifunction Displays for the U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III Flight Deck Replacement programme.

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    Intellisense Systems Selected by Boeing for $400M+ C-17 Flight Deck Replacement Program

    Military & Defence

  • RTX’s Pratt & Whitney Completes Fully Digital Assembly Readiness Review for NGAP Engine

    Pratt & Whitney has completed a fully digital technical assessment of its XA103 engine for the US Air Force’s Next Generation Adaptive Propulsion programme, marking progress towards hardware production and future engine testing in the late 2020s.

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    RTX’s Pratt & Whitney Completes Fully Digital Assembly Readiness Review for NGAP Engine

    Military & Defence: Engine

  • Uganda Civil Aviation Authority Lists Air Services Licence Applications for June 2026 Hearing

    African Airline

    Uganda Civil Aviation Authority has listed companies applying for new and renewed air services licences covering scheduled, non-scheduled, passenger, cargo, aerial work and private operations.

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  • Open R&D Opportunity for Aerospace Innovation

    Aerospace: R&D

    The Transnational Eureka Lightweighting Call 2026 is open for international R&D projects, with aerospace among the eligible sectors for lightweighting, circular design, advanced materials and sustainable manufacturing innovation.

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  • Menzies Aviation Supports TaxiBot Electric Aircraft Towing at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport for easyJet

    Menzies Aviation is supporting the roll-out of TaxiBot electric aircraft towing at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, working with easyJet and industry partners to reduce fuel burn, emissions and apron noise during aircraft ground movements.

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    Menzies Aviation Supports TaxiBot Electric Aircraft Towing at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport for easyJet

    Ground Handling

  • HENSOLDT and Robin Partner to Protect Barn Swallows and Enhance Safety at King Shaka International Airport

    HENSOLDT South Africa and Robin Radar have partnered to deploy MAX avian radar at King Shaka International Airport, supporting real-time bird monitoring, Barn Swallow conservation and airport safety.

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    HENSOLDT and Robin Partner to Protect Barn Swallows and Enhance Safety at King Shaka International Airport

    Airport : Safety

  • Emirates Taps GE Aerospace for Expertise to Advance Piece Part Repair Capabilities for Engine Maintenance

    Emirates has signed an agreement with GE Aerospace to support technical consultancy, training and knowledge transfer for GE90 and GP 7200 engine component repair capabilities.

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    Emirates Taps GE Aerospace for Expertise to Advance Piece Part Repair Capabilities for Engine Maintenance

    MRO

  • AFRAA’s Maureen Kahonge on African Airline Collaboration and Connectivity

    On the sidelines of the 14th Aviation Stakeholders Convention, hosted by AFRAA and South African Airways, African Pilot Magazine spoke to Maureen Kahonge, Director Commercial & Communications at AFRAA.

    Maureen shares her reflections on the key discussions from the Convention, including fleet acquisition, aircraft financing, profitability, intra-African connectivity, market access, airline collaboration, cargo, safety and youth development.

    The conversation looks at why collaboration is now an imperative for African airlines, why intra-African connectivity remains too slow, and how African carriers can work together more effectively through partnerships, alliances, joint projects and practical cost-saving initiatives.

    She also discusses air cargo as an economic catalyst, the need for improved airport infrastructure, the role of modern retailing and AFRAA’s ongoing work around safety, training and future aviation careers.

    Maureen also shares what comes next for AFRAA, including the AFRAA Assembly in Libreville, the MRO conference in Cairo, and more.

    Watch the full interview for a clear look at the issues, opportunities and action points shaping African aviation.

  • Inside SAA’s Next Chapter with Acting Group CEO Matshela Seshibe

    A growing population, an expanding middle class, increasing urbanisation, tourism potential, and intra-African trade opportunities all point to one central issue: connectivity. For Matshela Seshibe, Acting Group Chief Executive Officer of South African Airways, aviation sits at the centre of that opportunity.

    Speaking to African Pilot Magazine on the sidelines of the 14th Aviation Stakeholders Convention, hosted by the African Airlines Association and South African Airways, Seshibe reflects on his first 30 days in the role, the priorities facing SAA, and the work required to strengthen the airline’s operational, financial and organisational performance.

    Seshibe notes the current disruption in the aviation market, including pressure from jet fuel costs, the impact on airline planning, and the measures being taken by SAA to protect cash-positive operations.

    Looking ahead, Seshibe outlines what he wants to see within his first 100 days, including the restatement of strategy, alignment across the organisation, implementation of the corporate plan, stronger accountability structures, effective steering and loss-control committees, and the continued maintenance and improvement of SAA’s safety record.

    Watch the full interview for insight into South African Airways’ current priorities, the pressures facing African airlines, and the role of connectivity, skills, safety and operational discipline in shaping the future of aviation on the continent.

  • AASA Calls for Practical Action on Fuel Security, Regulation and Aviation Sustainability

    Southern Africa’s airlines are navigating survival, recovery and growth, but several pressures are constraining momentum.

    African Pilot Magazine caught up with Aaron Munetsi, Chief Executive Officer of the Airlines Association of Southern Africa, during the South African Civil Aviation Authority’s National Aviation Conference.

    Munetsi highlighted three major areas of concern for airlines: geopolitics, fuel security and costs.

    He also cautioned that fragmented regulation, policy and administration remain a significant constraint on the sector.

    On sustainability, Munetsi argued that SAF is important, but should not be treated as the only solution. Engine efficiency, lighter aircraft, improved ground equipment, digitalised flight procedures and better routing also have a role to play in reducing emissions.

    For Africa, the feedstock question is critical. SAF development must not come at the expense of food security, and should prioritise agricultural waste, industrial waste and other responsible feedstock options.

    AASA is also advancing work with AFCAC and IATA, including Carbon Connect, a facility that enables airlines to record and report their emissions.

  • SACAA Highlights SAF, Mental Health and Safety Performance at National Aviation Conference

    African Pilot Magazine caught up with Poppy Khoza, Director of Civil Aviation and Chief Executive Officer of the South African Civil Aviation Authority, during the SACAA-hosted National Aviation Conference.

    Key themes from the two-day event included sustainable aviation fuel, fuel diversification, mental health in safety-critical aviation roles, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity.

    Khoza highlighted the importance of South Africa’s ICAO business implementation study into the production and distribution of sustainable aviation fuel, particularly as geopolitical disruption continues to place pressure on fuel supply and cost.

    She also stressed that mental health must be treated as part of aviation safety, with professionals able to report concerns without fear of punitive consequences.

    South Africa’s latest aviation safety performance was also a major point of pride, with the country improving from 91.23% in 2023 to 95% and ranking seventh globally.

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