| In the
beginning The Salén Shipping Company had been involved in a study of the air cargo business with a group of Scandinavian ship owners. These did not lead to any action that suited Salén, so they started to explore the opportunities by acting rather than studying. Their original idea was to fly fresh fruit and vegetables during the week from the Canary Islands to Sweden and Swedish tourists on weekends. Loftleiðir Icelandic had five surplus CL-44 aircraft that were used on North Atlantic passenger services in the 1960s. When the Icelandic carrier decided to phase out the CL-44s and introduce DC-8s on its routes, they tried to sell or find use for the surplus aircraft, which were originally designed as cargo aircraft with a swing tail. Salén and Loftleiðir agreed that Luxembourg would be ideally suited for the company’s headquarter, because, first of all, Luxembourg is located in the heart of Europe and, secondly, because Luxembourg authorities had already expressed their interest in establishing an all-cargo carrier in Luxembourg in 1969. Meetings were organized with Luxair to negotiate the creation of an all-cargo airline. The three partners agreed during the very early stages of the company, that each party would contribute to the different phases in the operation. Thus, Loftleiðir was responsible for operational and technical matters, Salén for sales and the Luxembourg group for administration. Einar Olafsson, who had been station manager for Loftleiðir in Luxembourg, was appointed General Manager. Saloft: Cargolux’s first flight went to Hong Kong in September 1970. |