European Union backs Open Skies deal with U.S.
The European Union approved an aviation deal with the United States on Thursday that opens up restricted transatlantic routes to new rivals, but bowed to British concerns in delaying when the agreement takes effect.
The "Open Skies" deal will allow airlines to fly from anywhere in the EU to any point in the U.S., shedding limitations that also discourage them from charging what they like or combining with other carriers.
The EU said its 27 nations had unanimously voted for the deal, which will take effect March 30, 2008. European negotiators will now have to secure U.S. agreement to delay the pact, originally scheduled to begin Oct. 28, and want to push on with new talks to eliminate remaining barriers on airline ownership.
Britain won its demand for extra time before opening up London Heathrow, the EU's busiest airport, to more carriers.
Only four airlines— British Airways PLC, Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd., AMR Corp.'s American Airlines and UAL Corp.'s United Airlines— currently have the right to fly from Heathrow to the U.S., a lucrative route that represents around a third of all EU flights to the United States.
EU governments also stipulated how they could suspend parts of the deal— curtailing U.S. airlines' new rights in Europe— if further talks don't lead to more concessions from the United States within three years.
"If no agreement is reached in 2010, each member state may— if it wishes— notify the [European] Commission of any particular rights they would like to suspend," said EU Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot. "The idea behind this clause is to bring pressure to bear on the U.S."
He said he did not believe such sanctions would ever be levied because by 2010 both the EU and U.S. would be moving toward total liberalization for the aviation industry.
Calls for more U.S. concessions
British Airways CEO Willie Walsh, however, said Britain had to stand by its pledge to withdraw traffic rights if the U.S. did not open up to EU airlines. He claimed the EU had already given away its most valuable negotiating asset by opening up Heathrow.
"So far the U.S. has made no meaningful concessions," he said. "American carriers can now fly into Heathrow, Europe and beyond while their own backyard remains a no-go area for EU carriers, and foreign ownership of their airlines remains unchanged."
But Virgin Atlantic was satisfied, saying it wants to expand the number of its flights from key European hubs to New York in the next two years, adding 500 jobs.
EU officials have repeatedly said they were disappointed with the U.S. failure to lift a rule that bars foreign investors from owning more than 25 per cent of an American airline's voting shares— the key precondition it set for a deal.
The Bush administration tried and failed to win support to scrap the rule amid worries from U.S. airlines and labour unions that doing so could threaten jobs and security.
"The EU continues to pursue this goal and today we have opened up the door for further negotiation, further progress," German Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee said.
Environmentalists called the deal a move backward in efforts to fight global warming. The European Federation for Transport and Environment said more flights could completely negate other efforts to curb climate change and cut the amount of carbon dioxide released by aviation in coming years.
25 million more passengers
The EU, however, has said the deal would reduce the cost of tickets, putting an extra 25 million people on transatlantic flights within five years. Just under 50 million travellers now fly those routes.
It also claimed the deal will generate benefits of up to $16 billion US in five years as ticket prices fall, airlines generate savings and the market grows. That would create up to 80,000 jobs spread equally between Europe and the United States, it said.
The Association of European Airlines said increased competition between airlines would drive down fares and see them serve new routes, though it said the financial benefit of immediate commercial advantages was difficult to assess.
Credit Suisse said U.S. carriers Continental Airlines Inc., Northwest Airlines Corp. and Delta Air Lines Inc. were "likely bigger winners than most believe." Access to Heathrow would help them win major corporate travel contracts, it said.
However, Heathrow is currently full— demand for slots at the airport is high and airlines are reluctant to give them up. New rivals will have to wait for new ones to become available when a fifth terminal opens next March.