Premium travel business news and community blog from TheBeat.travel
A business travel community blog
The Beat
Beat News TheBeat Blog Live Beat Subscribe Now to The Beat for premium travel distribution news About The Beat Supplier Directory
The Beat
Login Login Help
Email Address
Password
Free Membership
Visit the all new BusinessTravelNews.com!
Subscribe to our leading business travel newsletters
Follow us on these popular social networks
Posted Jan 4, 2010

reduce the size of text on this page   increase the size of text on this page
David's picture
Blogging at TheBeat.travel
In examining a oneworld alliance antitrust immunity application highlighted by a proposed American Airlines/British Airways/Iberia joint venture, the U.S. Department of Transportation on Dec. 22 "established a supplemental comment period--through January 11" for interested parties "to respond to late-filed pleadings." One such late filing, submitted by the U.S. Department of Justice, argued that the proposed agreements "would result in competitive harm on certain transatlantic routes serving 2.5 million passengers annually" and increase fares "up to 15 percent."
Having urged caution in June 2009 regarding the Continental-Star Alliance immunity request (with suggestions that DOT largely dismissed) DOJ recommended that DOT impose conditions on the oneworld carriers--"slot divestitures or carveouts, as appropriate"--to protect competition.
DOJ wrote that an antitrust immunity grant for oneworld "is likely to result in significant competitive harm in six transatlantic markets where American currently competes with British Airways and Iberia." Those markets are:
• Dallas-London and Miami-Madrid (where current nonstop service only is offered by the applicants);
• New York-London (where "Delta and Continental lag far behind American, British Airways, and Virgin in the share of the nonstop business traffic they carry between New York and London," according to DOJ);
• Boston-London; Chicago-London; and Miami-London.
The expected increases in fares on those six routes "are directly attributable to the loss of nonstop competition," DOJ wrote.
As it did in its filing on the Continental-Star Alliance immunity application, DOJ wrote that "few, if any" of the corporate travel managers it interviewed "stated a desire for increased inter-alliance competition."
DOJ's involvement in such DOT deliberations has drawn Congressional interest. A U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee in 2009 scheduled a hearing titled "Competition Concerns with International Airline Alliances: Should DOJ Co-Pilot the Airline Antitrust Immunity Process?" It was postponed twice, and never occurred.
Share this blog entry with your social network TheBeat.travel Blog - Read the rest of this entry

beat blog   beat blog
beat blog
Posted by: Blog info More by David
beat blog
beat blog   beat blog
Comments on this post
Login or free subscription required
NorthStar Travel Media
Travel Management 2011 Ancillary Airline Fee Panel (PDF)
American Express Business Travel Airline Fee Primer (PDF)
GDS Economics (PDF)
Procurement Convergence (PDF)