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U.S. Department of Transportation
DOT approves expanded transatlantic alliance involving Delta, Northwest
Friday, May 23, 2008

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) said it will grant antitrust immunity to Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines, and four of their international partners to combine their transatlantic operations in an expanded SkyTeam alliance.

The Department’s grant of antitrust immunity allows the two U.S. carriers, along with Air France, Alitalia, Czech Airlines and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, to coordinate their transatlantic fares, services and capacity as if they were a single carrier in these markets, subject to certain conditions. Northwest has an existing alliance with KLM, while Delta has an existing alliance with Air France, Alitalia and Czech Airlines.

This action, which makes final the tentative decision issued April 9, does not affect Delta’s and Northwest’s ongoing plans to merge. The merger plans are subject to a separate antitrust review by the Department of Justice.

In approving antitrust immunity, the Department concluded that the proposed alliance is in the public interest because it features a proposed new and highly integrated joint venture that will likely produce efficiencies and provide consumers with additional price and service options. The United States has negotiated an Open-Skies Plus aviation agreement with the European Union (EU). The U.S.-EU agreement provides that transatlantic markets remain open to other competitors because U.S. and European airlines are now able to serve any route between the United States and Europe.

The Department noted that the carriers have not yet put into place the joint venture upon which many of the public benefits of antitrust immunity would depend. For this reason, the Department required the carriers to fully implement the proposed alliance within 18 months as a condition of retaining immunity. The Department also stressed that the carriers would remain subject to antitrust laws for domestic service and for international flights that are not covered by the alliance agreement.

Beginning with the Northwest-KLM alliance, which was approved in 1993, the DOT has granted antitrust immunity to a number of international airline alliances where it found that the alliance benefited the public and did not substantially reduce competition.

Delta and Northwest first petitioned the Department to allow the alliance in 2004. After an initial tentative denial, they reapplied in June of last year with a substantially revised agreement.

Michael Verikios - Friday, May 23, 2008
3 recommendation(s) , 60 print(s), 516 views, 0 comment(s)
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Poll
How do you expect luxury travel to perform in times of economic downturn?.

Providers of luxury travel products are going to witness shorter stays by their customers and an increase in seasonality.

People are going to become more value conscious and will opt for those luxury offers that represent a convincing value-for-money proposition. Providers of overpriced services are those to feel the pinch.

Both people paying for their personal trips and firms paying for their top executives' business trips will cut back on travel expenses, thus affecting all luxury travel providers.

It is going to be business as usual. Those people opting for high-end travel products are not going to be affected by the looming crisis.

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