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DOT 11-05
Saturday, January 15, 2005
Contact: Brian Turmail,
Tel.: (202) 841-9951
U.S. Transportation Secretary Mineta Announces New Open Skies Aviation Agreement
with India
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta today announced that the
United States and India have initialed a landmark Open Skies aviation agreement
that will lead to more flights, lower fares and stronger economic ties between
the two countries. The agreement comes after three days of negotiations,
launched by Secretary Mineta and India’s Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel
last Thursday.
“This agreement means that U.S. and India will be closer than ever before,” said
Secretary Mineta. “Today’s agreement begins a new era where American and Indian
consumers, airlines and economies can reap the rewards of cheaper flights, more
choices and faster air service.”
Under the new agreement, airlines from both countries will be allowed to select
routes and destinations based on consumer demand. The deal provides for open
routes, capacity, frequencies, designations, and pricing, as well as
opportunities for cooperative marketing arrangements, including bilateral
code-sharing with domestic Indian carriers. The agreement also allows all-cargo
operators to operate in either country without directly connecting to their
homeland.
India and the United States are the world’s two largest democracies and two of
world’s fastest growing economies, Secretary Mineta noted. Trade between the two
nations totaled $18 billion in 2003, a 13.5 percent increase from the previous
year, and was growing at an even faster pace in 2004. Such a relationship needs
to be supported by the strong commercial aviation ties that this agreement will
create, he said, including more direct flights to serve the approximately 2
million passengers a year traveling between the two countries.
The provisions expected to provide the greatest economic benefit, like those
affecting routes and code-sharing, take effect immediately. The entire agreement
will come into force once it is signed, expected to take place in the near
future. The new pact replaces an antiquated agreement signed in 1956 that placed
restrictions on the number of airlines that could fly between the two countries,
cities that could be served, the frequency of service and pricing.
With this Agreement, India will become the 67th bilateral U.S. Open Skies
partner.