Trigana Air (registered as Trigana Air Service) is an
airline based in
Jakarta, Indonesia.
History
The company commenced operations in early 1991 with two
Beechcraft King Air 200 fixed-wing aircraft, and by the end of that year had added two licence-built
Bell 412SP helicopters. They also operated two ATR aircraft for
Hainan Airlines from Sanya to Haikou and Hanoi until 2016.[1]
Although the airline itself never flew to the
European Union, the region
imposed a ban on all Indonesian airlines from flying into its airspace in 2007 following the crash of
Garuda Indonesia Flight 200, a category that included Trigana Air.[2] The ban was lifted in 2018.
In March 2021, the company announced a partnership with
J&T Express. It was also said that J&T Express would use some of the airplanes owned by Trigana Air for its operations.
Destinations
Trigana Air flies to 20 destinations throughout Indonesia, with a particular focus on
Western New Guinea.[3]
Aircraft operated by Trigana Air have been involved in 14 serious incidents, 10 of which resulted in
hull loss.[6]
On 21 April 2002, a Trigana Air
Antonov An-72, registered as ES-NOP, was carrying out a chartered cargo service from
Sentani Airport, Jayapura to
Wamena Airport. The plane was carrying four people: a
Lithuanian pilot,
Estonian co-pilot,
Russian flight engineer, and a loadmaster (nationality undetermined). While landing in Wamena, the front compartment of the Antonov An-72 suddenly caught fire. All aboard were evacuated safely from the plane.[7]
On 25 May 2002, a
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter registered PK-YPZ crashed in heavy rain whilst carrying supplies for the local town. All four passengers and both crew members died.[8]
On 11 February 2010, Trigana Air Flight 162, operated by an
ATR 42-300 registered PK-YRP, force landed in a
paddy field near Balikpapan after both engines failed in-flight. All 52 passengers and crew on board survived.[9]
On 8 April 2012, a DHC-6 Twin Otter carrying eight passengers and crew had several shots fired at it whilst landing at Mulia Airport in Papua province on a flight from
Nabire. Both pilots received injuries which led them to lose control of the aircraft, which veered into an airport building.[10] Of the eight passengers and crew aboard, one was killed and four were injured.[11]
On 16 August 2015,
Trigana Air Flight 267, operated by an ATR 42-300 registered PK-YRN, lost contact just before 3pm local time after taking off from Sentani airport in Papua's capital Jayapura on a flight to
Oksibil. Its wreckage was found by villagers in the Bintang highlands region of Oksibil.[12] All 49 passengers and five crew members were killed in the accident.[12][13] The NTSC released their report 2 years and 5 months after the crash, and stated that pilot error and the failure of the ground proximity warning system were the causes.[14]
On 13 September 2016,
Trigana Air Flight 7321, registration PK-YSY performing flight IL-7321, operating a flight from
Sentani Airport in
Jayapura, made a hard landing on runway 15 at
Wamena Airport, breaking both main gears. The aircraft slid to a stop on the runway, coming to rest partially on the grass. Nobody was hurt.[15]
On 20 March 2021 a Boeing 737-400, registration PK-YSF, had a landing gear issue while departing from
Halim Perdanakusuma International Airport. When attempting to make an emergency landing, the landing gear collapsed, causing significant damage, and the plane skidded off the runway.[16]