About Travel Industry

BNET Travel provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives into all aspects of the travel and tourism industry. In addition to detailed airline and hotel company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new travel and carrier routes, bankruptcies, mergers, tourism figures, investments and a host of other important business issues.

American and British Airways Still Waiting for Feds Antitrust Immunity Decision

By Brett Snyder | Nov 9, 2009

October was supposed to be it. By Halloween, the feds were supposed to have made their ruling on the long-delayed application by British Airways (LSE: BAY.L) and American (NYSE: AMR) for antitrust immunity, but we still haven’t heard a thing. The airlines are frustrated, the pilots are thrilled, and this whole thing is just a mess. I, for the life of me, can’t figure out how they keep holding this up.

As you probably know, there are three big alliances with major presences over the Atlantic. British Airways and American form the cornerstone of the oneworld alliance. United (NASDAQ: UAUA), Continental (NYSE: CAL), and Lufthansa are the backbone of Star Alliance. And Delta (NYSE: DAL) and Air France make up the main players in SkyTeam. United and Lufthansa long ago applied for antitrust immunity which would allow them to coordinate schedules and pricing over the Atlantic. Recently, the immunity was expanded to include Continental, Air Canada, and some European players as well. SkyTeam has built off the successful Northwest/KLM pioneering alliance to form a strong bond between Air France, Delta, KLM, and others. This just keeps getting stronger for them.

Yet oneworld partners British Airways and American have not been able to get antitrust immunity. They’ve been turned down once and now they’re waiting to hear back again. So what’s the problem? Politics, of course. And London/Heathrow is right in the middle of things.

Originally, the issue was centered around the highly restrictive nature of flights at London/Heathrow. Before the UK joined the EU-US open skies treaty, flights between the US and London were limited to four US/UK airlines. American and British Airways were two of those. The government didn’t like that kind of dominance in a single alliance, so they shot it down. For customers, this has been a pain. You can’t even earn miles on American if you fly BA over the Pond. It’s been an all-or-nothing kind of deal for the airlines.

When open skies went into effect between the US and UK, those carrier limits at Heathrow disappeared. While no other British airline has opted to fly between the US and Heathrow, there is nothing stopping them. On the US side, US Airways, Delta, and Continental all now find themselves at Heathrow. So how is this still an issue up for debate?

Now it comes down to slots. While Heathrow may not have carrier restrictions anymore, there are still slot restrictions in place. The speculation by many is that BA may have to relinquish some slots to make this deal go through. To date, they’ve refused to do that.

Let’s be honest, are slots really an issue here? Delta, Continental, and US Airways had no trouble getting a hold of slots for their flights. That’s what alliance partners are for. And Star Alliance partner bmi has a very significant number of slots at the airport that could easily be reallocated for Transatlantic flying if they so chose. Look at a place like Frankfurt - Lufthansa has a higher percentage of slots there than BA has at Heathrow, but they were still granted immunity with United and others. But this is London, and it’s a different story.

Unaligned Virgin Atlantic has been one of the most vocal opponents here for years. They say it’s bad for competition. Lately, however, the most noise has been coming from American’s own pilots. In fact, the pilots have issued a release declaring “unequivocal opposition” to the deal. Why? Well, they think they’re all going to lose their jobs. Yeah, it’s more of the “sky is falling” kind of rhetoric that apparently was so ineffective that the flight attendants responded by saying they support the deal.

So now, we continue to sit and wait while the DOT slowly tries to make a decision. Hopefully this painful process will end, immunity will be granted, and we can see true competition between the three alliances.

In addition to writing BNET's travel industry blog, Brett Snyder also pens the award-winning consumer travel blog, Cranky Flier. You can follow him on Twitter under the name crankyflier.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Russia Changes WTO Strategy

    The Wall Street Journal - 165 days 6 hours 19 minutes ago

    Moscow will pull its long-delayed application to join the WTO and reapply as part of a bloc with neighbors Kazakhstan and Belarus.

  • Boeing starts repairs on 787

    The Australian - 58 days 4 hours 26 minutes ago

    WORKERS at Boeing in Everett, Washington, have begun fixing a flaw on the first 787 Dreamliner test aircraft in preparation for its long-delayed first flight later this year, a Boeing executive said

  • Garmin: Nuvifone's North American launch still on hold

    FierceMarkets - 166 days 11 hours 10 minutes ago

    Garmin said that its long-delayed nuvifone will go one sale in Asia in the next month, but that the phone#039s North America and European launch is still on hold. Garmin COO Cliff Pemble made the announcement at a shareholder meeting in suburban Kansas City Friday. "We believe we#039re getting very close," Pemble said at the meeting,...

  • Opening date set for long-delayed Acropolis Museum

    CBC News - 281 days 9 hours 15 minutes ago

    Greece is to open its long-delayed Acropolis Museum this June, Culture Minister Antonis Samaras said Friday. The 100-million euro project was originally scheduled for opening in 2004, ahead of the Athens Olympics. The museum, located at the foot of the ancient Acropolis, a hill that is home to ancient temples including the Parthenon, has been...

  • Bombay's Bridge Over Troubled Traffic

    Forbes - 149 days 17 hours 49 minutes ago

    Even at the best of times, navigating traffic-choked roads in Mumbai isn't for the fainthearted. As the monsoon clouds hover over the Arabian Sea starting June, they herald the worst of times for commuters in India's financial capital, located on the country's western coast. This monsoon holds the promise of some reprieve for a certain section...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Click Here