Australia/US agree open skies pact
A Reuters report says that Australia and the United States have agreed to drop restrictions on lucrative trans-Pacific flight routes between the two countries, Australia’s government said on Friday.
Transport Minister Anthony Albanese said talks with US officials in Washington had reached agreement on an open-skies pact, which could see more US carriers fly to Australia via ports in Asia, such as Tokyo.
“This agreement will remove restrictions on competition for the benefits of Australian jobs and consumers,” Albanese said in a statement.
The deal helps clear the way for Australian airline Virgin Blue Holdings Ltd to begin flights to the United States on its carrier V Australia by the end of this year, edging open one of the world’s most lucrative and protected long-haul routes.
But shares in Australia’s flag-carrier Qantas Airways Ltd slumped by 3.6 percent to A$4.58 ($NZ5.30) at 0147 GMT (2.47pm NZT) on expectations the airline will face tougher competition on the prized cross-Pacific route, on which it has a near-monopoly.
United Airlines is currently the only competitor to Qantas in non-stop flights to the United States. It runs 14 flights a week to Australia.
Qantas operates 48 flights a week and reportedly generates as much as 20 percent of its profits from the route.
A 2006 report for Singapore Airlines said Qantas charged 38 percent more for flights from Sydney to Los Angeles than on the competitive “kangaroo route” from Sydney to London.
The open-skies deal replaces an aviation treaty between Australia and the United States under which airlines based in either country were capped at four weekly flights on the route in the first year.
Virgin’s V Australia, which is 62 percent owned by Toll Holdings Ltd, has asked the US Transportation Department for 10 weekly flights, having already placed an order for six long-range Boeing 777-300ERs with options to buy another six.
Australia’s former conservative government rejected repeated requests from Singapore Airlines for permission to fly from Australia to the United States.
Albanese’s centre-left Labor government, elected in November, has not yet said if it supports the entry of Singapore Airlines on the route. Singapore wants access to new markets to help offset competition from low-cost carriers in Asia.
Singapore Airlines estimates that opening the Pacific route to more competition could increase the number of travellers between the United States and Australia by up to 8 percent.
As Special on location report from AIME 2008 by The Mole
John Alwyn-Jones
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