Air Carrier Routes, 2006 - Regional Carriers

Air Carrier Routes, 2006 - Regional Carriers In 2006, there were 2311 airline licences issued to 1580 foreign and domestic airlines operating in Canada. Domestically, Air Canada and its partner Jazz were the largest airline in 2006 followed by WestJet. There were 45 airlines that provided service to remote communities and smaller niche markets. Each air route represents an origin destination pair between two airports that may be shared by one or more air carriers. The non-stop air routes shown on the map represent the straight line distance between two airports and not the actual flight navigation route. 2022-03-14 Natural Resources Canada geoinfo@nrcan.gc.ca Transportairlineseconomymap Download the English JP2 File through HTTPJP2 https://ftp.geogratis.gc.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/raster/atlas_6_ed/eng/6307_air_carrier_routes_2006_regional_carriers.jp2 Download the English ZIP (PDF,JPG) file through HTTPZIP https://ftp.geogratis.gc.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/raster/atlas_6_ed/eng/6307_air_carrier_routes_2006_regional_carriers.zip Download the French JP2 File through HTTPother https://ftp.geogratis.gc.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/raster/atlas_6_ed/fra/6307_routes_de_transporteurs_aeriens_2006_regionaux.jp2 Download the French ZIP (PDF, JPG) File through HTTPZIP https://ftp.geogratis.gc.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/raster/atlas_6_ed/fra/6307_routes_de_transporteurs_aeriens_2006_regionaux.zip

In 2006, there were 2311 airline licences issued to 1580 foreign and domestic airlines operating in Canada. Domestically, Air Canada and its partner Jazz were the largest airline in 2006 followed by WestJet. There were 45 airlines that provided service to remote communities and smaller niche markets. Each air route represents an origin destination pair between two airports that may be shared by one or more air carriers. The non-stop air routes shown on the map represent the straight line distance between two airports and not the actual flight navigation route.

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