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ANA Ramps up for Montreal

redefining how aerospace trade shows can be staged

Written by Jack Meadows   
Aerospace North America has successfully redefined how aerospace trade shows can be staged.  Aerospace North America (ANA) has successfully redefined how aerospace trade shows can be staged. But after appearing to take a backseat at the 2001 Aerospace Congress and Exhibition (ACE) in Seattle, the ANA is looking confidently to Montreal in 2003.

The 2003 edition will be the first for Dale Hunt, a former director of the ANA who was appointed president in 2001. And if people are confused over the alphabet soup of acronyms that surrounds one of this continent's biggest aviation trade shows, Hunt suggests that they shouldn't be. "ACE is the event," he said. ANA is what puts it all together.

To understand the relationship between ANA and ACE it is useful to go back to where it all started, with the launch of Airshow Canada at Abbotsford, British Columbia in 1989. The location proved a good meeting point between West and East.

By its second year, the biannual Airshow Canada had already established itself as a major international event. Although never vying with Paris or Farnborough, it had clearly broken into the big league as the only North American aerospace show of substance. By 1997, with 509 exhibitors from 29 nations, and 15,000 trade visitors, Airshow Canada had outgrown the facilities at Abbotsford.