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Emirates becomes world's largest Boeing 777 operator

Emirates welcomed the arrival of its 78th Boeing 777 aircraft, a 777-300ER, becoming the world's largest operator of Boeing 777 aircraft. Emirates has another 28 Boeing 777s pending delivery, worth over US$ 7 billion at list prices.

Emirates welcomed the arrival of its 78th Boeing 777 aircraft, a 777-300ER, becoming the world's largest operator of Boeing 777 aircraft. Emirates has another 28 Boeing 777s pending delivery, worth over US$ 7 billion at list prices.

Emirates has become the world's largest airline operator of Boeing 777 aircraft with the arrival of its 78th Boeing 777.

Emirates has another 28 Boeing 777s pending delivery, worth over US$7 billion at list prices, and it is also the only airline to operate every model in the Boeing 777 family: -200s, -200ERs, -200LRs, -300s, -300ERs and freighters. The newest addition to the Emirates fleet is a Boeing 777-300ER configured for long distance journeys.

"The 777s form the backbone of our fleet, and we have configured these aircraft to give us maximum flexibility in terms of route deployment. Emirates' 777s today fly to six continents from our Dubai hub, operating routes within a two-hour distance to long-range journeys of 16 hours non-stop," said Emirates Airline president Tim Clark.

"The 777 is an excellent aircraft in terms of operating economics, and importantly, the new technologies incorporated within enable us to fit it out with the latest onboard systems and passenger amenities," he added.

Emirates recently completed an upgrading programme for its existing 777 fleet, and now all of its 777 aircraft boast its award-winning ICE (information, communication, entertainment) system, which offers passengers in all cabin classes an unrivalled choice of up to 1,200 channels of the latest movies, TV programming, music and games on demand.

The airline's long-range 777s have also been equipped with the very latest onboard products including private suites in First Class, lie-flat massage seats in Business Class, and ergonomically designed seats in Economy Class.

Emirates received its first 777, a Boeing 777-200, in 1996.

In total, Emirates now operates an all-wide body fleet of now 137 Boeing and Airbus aircraft to 99 cities in 60 countries on six continents.

Emirates flies daily from Dubai to Malta with a stopover in Larnaca, Cyprus on a Boeing 777 aircraft.

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