Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

TACV

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
VR
  
TCV

Frequent-flyer program
  
TACV Club

Headquarters
  
Praia, Cape Verde

Fleet size
  
5

TCV
  
CABOVERDE

Destinations
  
17

Founded
  
1958

TACV httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaeneedTAC

Focus cities
  
São Pedro Airport Portela Airport

Company slogan
  
O prazer de viajar bem ("A pleasurable way of flying ")

CEO
  
Joao Pereira Silva (Mar 2012–)

Motto
  
O prazer de viajar bem; ("A pleasurable way of flying ")

Hubs
  
Nelson Mandela International Airport, Amílcar Cabral International Airport

Profiles

Tacv cabo verde airlines arrival in providence


TACV Cabo Verde Airlines (TACV is an abbreviation for Transportes Aéreos de Cabo Verde, meaning “Air Transportation of Cape Verde” in Portuguese) is a scheduled and charter, passenger and cargo airline based in Praia, Cape Verde. It is the national flag carrier of Cape Verde, operating inter-island services and flights to Europe, North America, South America and the West African mainland. Its main base is Sal Airport, with smaller ones at Praia International Airport and São Pedro Airport. TACV is also a ground handling company serving all airports in Cape Verde.

Contents

Approach to praia city atr 72 500 tacv cabo verde airlines


History

TACV was established in 1958. In July 1975, following the independence of Cape Verde, the airline was designated as the national carrier and became a public (state-owned) company in 1983. It employs 788 staff. The Cape Verdean government is currently preparing the airline for privatization. The TACV logo includes a blue wing with seven lines that represent the number of domestic inter-island flights offered by the airline.

European flights began in 1985, with Lisbon as first European destination of TACV. In 1996 TACV got its first Boeing 757-200, brand new and directly from the Boeing factory, in Seattle, considered as “the pride and joy of Cape Verde Airlines", baptized with the name B.Leza. With B.Leza (registration D4-CBG), TACV begins flying to Europe with its own aircraft and crew.

In 2004, another Boeing 757-200 named Emigranti (registration D4-CBP) joined the TACV fleet. For several years, the Boeing 757 pair operated all of TACV's international routes before one being replaced by two smaller leased Boeing 737-800 which however meanwhile have been phased out again.

Destinations

As of December 2016, TACV serves 7 domestic and 10 international destinations in Europe, Africa, North America and South America.

Codeshare agreements

As of August 2012, TACV Cabo Verde Airlines had codeshare agreements with the following airlines:

  • Cabo Verde Express
  • TAAG Angola Airlines
  • TAP Portugal
  • Current fleet

    As of December 2016, the TACV fleet consists of the following aircraft:

    Incidents and accidents

  • On 28 September 1998, a TACV de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter (registered D4-CAX) carrying Carlos Veiga, then Prime Minister of Cape Verde, 18 other passengers and three crew members capt/instructor Socorro, first officer Elianne and third cockpit crew, crash-landed at Francisco Mendes Airport (serving Praia at that time) during a landing attempt in stormy weather, in which one bodyguard of the minister was killed. Four other people were injured and the aircraft was damaged beyond repair. Upon approach following the flight from Preguiça Airport, the aircraft had been hit by a gust of wind in an instant when the pilots intended to execute a left turn, and forced down.
  • On 7 August 1999 at 12:02 local time, the domestic TACV Flight 5002 from São Pedro Airport to Agostinho Neto Airport crashed into a mountain on Santo Antão island at an altitude of 1370 metres, killing the 16 passengers and 2 crew members on board. The domestic flight had been carried out using a Dornier Do 228 (registered D4-CBC) on this day. Due to bad weather conditions with rain and fog, the pilot was prevented from landing at the destination airport (which was only VFR-certified), so he had decided to return to São Pedro. The aircrash marked the worst aviation accident in the history of both Cape Verde and TACV.
  • On 24 October 2005, the right main landing gear of a TACV ATR 42 (registered D4-CBH) collapsed upon landing at Dakar Airport, Senegal following a scheduled passenger flight from Praia.
  • References

    TACV Wikipedia