Today on EVA
Apollo nears multibillion-dollar deal for Atlantic Aviation stake
US investment firm Apollo Global Management is close to acquiring a majority stake in private aviation services provider Atlantic Aviation
Duncan Aviation expands leadership to support Pratt & Whitney engine programs and customers
Duncan Aviation has announced the appointment of Brian Harms as the Engine Overhaul Manager
Daher Aircraft delivers a TBM 980 to Dr. Ian Fries
Daher Aircraft today announced the delivery of a new TBM 980 to Ian Blair Fries, M.D., his sixth consecutive TBM family aircraft
C&L Aerospace appoints Ike Knudson as Regional Sales Manager
C&L Aerospace, a C&L Aviation Group company, today announced the appointment of Ike Knudson as Regional Sales Manager
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EVA Magazine
Latest issue
| 73
Spring 2026
The world has not felt this scary since the 1980s, when the Cold War suddenly became frigid. A new war against Iran, fermented over decades of distrust and now encouraged to spill over into armed conflict, has inevitably brought disruption to the Middle East and as far away as Cyprus. Global transport hubs, including airports, have taken missile and drone hits, threatening civilians and the region’s key business and VIP aviation infrastructure.
We have also seen a bizarre presidential proclamation aimed at Canada’s civilian aircraft regulator thrust business aviation unexpectedly into the international spotlight. It seemed to take most industry insiders by surprise, sending them scurrying to discover if it had any legal foundation at all. Meanwhile, as we lurch from one geopolitical crisis to another, let us not forget Venezuela, Mexico and the still-raging, bloody war between Russia and Ukraine.
The market has largely adapted to the repercussions of the latter conflict, while the very end of February and first days of March have seen business jets positioning away from airports under threat in the Gulf, as airspace closures allow. The impact in the longer term remains uncertain, but elsewhere the business of business aviation continues with its usual resilience.
Inside this issue



