Gregory Polek
Senior Editor

Gregory Polek has spent his entire career in aviation journalism with AIN, starting as a proofreader and assistant to then-managing editor Mary Mahoney in 1995 after serving an internship with New Jersey Monthly magazine and completing his B.A. degree in English/Writing at New Jersey’s William Paterson College. By 1997 Polek accepted a position as an associate editor, covering the regional airline beat for Aviation International News in place of retiring industry veteran Don Anderson. The assignment took Polek across North America and Europe to profile regional airlines varying in size and mission from the likes of floatplane operators Kenmore Air and Chalk’s Ocean Airways to regional jet operators such as SkyWest and American Eagle. Today, in his dual role as Air Transport Editor and International Airshow Editor, Polek writes, edits, and manages AIN’s commercial aviation content while overseeing each of the company’s daily international air show publications in Paris, Farnborough, Singapore, and Dubai. Most recently Polek has assumed oversight of daily coverage of the Helicopter Association International’s annual Heli-Expo convention.

Latest from Gregory Polek

Aircraft

Emirates Launches World's Shortest A380 Flights

The twice-daily Emirates service from Dubai to Muscat extends just 185 nm in each direction.
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Aircraft

Boeing To Launch Latest EcoDemonstrator Phase With 777

The U.S. airframer expects to test 50 technology projects this fall.
Aircraft

American Sets Retirement Date for MD-80s

The last 26 of the McDonnell Douglas widebodies will leave the AA fleet on September 4.
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Aircraft

MHI Reaches Deal To Acquire Bombardier’s CRJ Program

The contract calls for Bombardier to complete CRJ production in the second half of 2020 and continue to supply spare parts from its plant outside Montreal.
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Aircraft

More than 400 Max Pilots Sue Boeing in Class Action

737 Max pilots flying for a major international airline join Pilot X in suing Boeing.
Aircraft

Airbus Says IAG Narrowbody Tender Remains Open to A320

An LOI covering 200 Boeing 737 Max jets does not guarantee Airbus won’t ultimately win a firm order for A320s instead, according to Airbus CEO Faury.
Aircraft

Qantas Becomes Latest Customer for Airbus A321XLR

The deal involves a new firm order for 10 airplanes and a conversion of an existing order for 26 A320neos.
Aircraft

KLM Inks Deal for up to 35 Embraer E195-E2s

Air France KLM subsidiary will receive its first aircraft in 2021.
Aircraft

Qatar Airways Signs for Five Boeing 777 Freighters

The Doha-based carrier plans to take all of the cargo planes next year as it prepares to increase the size of its fleet 20 percent.
Aircraft

Boeing Lands Order for Twenty 737 Converted Freighters

The deal with ASL Aviation brings the program's order and commitment total to 120.
Aircraft

China Airlines To Order Six 777 Freighters

Taiwan’s flag carrier prepares to launch operations from Taipei to North American and Europe.
Aircraft

IAG Deal Gives Major Boost for Beleaguered Boeing Max

The British Airways parent plans to take as many as 200 of the narrowbodies to fly out of Gatwick Airport.
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Aircraft

IAG Inks Deal for 14 Airbus A321XLRs

The British Airways parent plans to allocate the new narrowbodies between Iberia and Aer Lingus.
Aircraft

Saudia Neo Order Includes 15 Airbus A321XLRs

The kingdom’s flag carrier now holds firm orders for 65 neos.
Engines

CFM Seals Massive Leap Deal with AirAsia

The Malaysian low-fare carrier finalizes a purchase contract covering 200 Leap-1As.
Aircraft

Korean Air, ALC Boost Boeing’s Dreamliner with Big Orders

Deals involve a total of 35 of the widebodies
Aircraft

De Havilland of Canada Ships Its First Dash 8

The new owner of the former Bombardier Q400 program introduces TAAG Angola Airlines as a previously unidentified customer for six Dash 8s.
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Aircraft

GECAS Inks Deal for 10 Boeing 737-800BCFs

The aircraft leasing arm of GE also places further options on 15.
Aircraft

Mitsubishi Working with Partners on M100 Definition

The smaller of two SpaceJet variants would carry airframe advances to ensure lighter weight and improved aerodynamics.
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Engines

Boeing Still Not Ready To Commit to NMA

The launch of the Airbus A321XLR won’t influence Boeing’s calculations of the business case for its proposed new middle-of-the market airplane.
Aircraft

Boeing Market Forecasters Unshaken by Current Crises

Boeing's Current Market Outlook shows a demand for 44,000 airplanes worth more than $6.8 trillion over 20 years.
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Aircraft

Boeing Set To Face Show Scrutiny on Max Response

The U.S. airframer enters Paris during one of its most difficult periods in its storied history.
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Engines

CFM’s Leap Production Back on Schedule

The GE-Snecma joint venture fully expects to meet its delivery target of 1,800 engines this year.
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Aircraft

Maintenance Ops Face Unsung Effect From Max Grounding

While airlines need to perform certain upkeep on grounded airplanes such as the 737 Max, their maintenance schedules become out of sync.
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Aircraft

Mitsubishi’s MRJ70 Destined for Makeover as SpaceJet M100

The M100 will seat 76 passengers in a three-class configuration and maintain a low-enough takeoff weight to meet U.S. scope clause restrictions.
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Aircraft

Airbus Commits To Ensuring A220 Meets Full Potential

Customer demands prompt range improvements and 180-minute Etops for the Airbus A220.
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Aircraft

Mitsubishi Heavy In Talks To Buy CRJ Line

A deal to acquire Bombardier’s last commercial aircraft program would give Mitsubishi valuable engineering expertise and support capacity.
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Aircraft

Longview Capital Resurrects De Havilland Canada Moniker

The new owner of the Dash 8 program names former Q400 boss Todd Young to lead the business.
Aircraft

CSALP Becomes Airbus Canada On June 1

The name of the Airbus-Bombardier-Investissement Quebec partnership now reflects the European manufacturer’s controlling stake.
Accidents

Discourse Turns Divisive as SSJ100 Crash Probe Nears End

Hundreds of thousands in Russia sign a petition to ground the Superjet fleet.