Air Transat makes second humanitarian flight to Haiti tonight carrying volunteers and essential supplies

Montreal, January 26, 2010

Air Transat has received authorization to operate a second humanitarian flight to Port-au-Prince tonight, with the co-operation of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada. The plane, an Airbus A330 wide-body jet, will take off from Montreal at 1:40 a.m. on Wednesday, January 27; on board will be some 60 volunteers from a variety of organizations including the Canadian Red Cross and the Centre for International Studies and Cooperation (CECI). Air Transat will also deliver approximately 40 tonnes of medical supplies (drugs, orthopedic appliances, etc.) and essential goods.

Approximately 100 evacuees, including a group of orphaned children, are expected to board the return flight, scheduled to land in Ottawa at 1:15 p.m. on Wednesday, January 27. Around 20 specialists from the Service d’intervention d’urgence du Centre du Québec (an emergency response team), including doctors and nurses, along with some 40 Air Transat employee volunteers (pilots, flight crew and office staff) will be on the plane to accompany the children and see to their well-being while in transit and upon arrival.

“We have worked extremely hard to organize this humanitarian flight, which allows us to transport more specialized personnel able to respond to emergency situations in Haiti, as well as bring a maximum of relief supplies to the country,” said Air Transat President and Chief Executive Officer Allen B. Graham. “We know that when it comes to meeting the still-pressing needs of the Haitian people, every gesture counts.”

Air Transat made an initial humanitarian flight to Haiti on January 20, also using a wide-body jet, which carried some 40 tonnes of relief supplies and essential materials, part of which were donated by Air Transat and its employees; also on board were approximately 100 volunteers from various organizations. Some of the supplies went to SOS Children’s Villages, a Transat partner that cares for orphans in two Haitian villages.

In organizing these two humanitarian flights, Air Transat has received co-operation and support from a number of organizations including Aéroports de Montréal, Ottawa International Airport and Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, as well as from private partners, among them CARA, Cargo Air Services, the Otis Grant and Friends Foundation, Saputo, Eska, Pepsi, PUMA and Unisource.

About Air Transat

Air Transat is Canada’s leading holiday travel airline. It carries some 3 million passengers annually to nearly 60 destinations in 25 countries. Air Transat has a fleet of 18 Airbus A330s and A310s. The company employs approximately 2,000 people. Air Transat is a subsidiary of Transat A.T. Inc., an integrated international tour operator with more than 60 destination countries and that distributes products in over 50 countries.