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DOT 50-08
Contact: Bill Mosley
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Tel.: (202) 366-4570
DOT Proposes to Approve Expanded Transatlantic Alliance
Involving Delta, Northwest
The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) today proposed to allow Delta Air
Lines, Northwest Airlines and four of their international partners in the
SkyTeam alliance to combine their existing transatlantic alliances.
In a show-cause order issued today, the Department tentatively decided to grant
antitrust immunity and allow the two U.S. carriers, along with Air France,
Alitalia, Czech Airlines and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, to coordinate their
services and act as a single carrier for U.S.-Europe services. Northwest has an
existing alliance with KLM, while Delta has an existing alliance with Air
France, Alitalia and Czech Airlines.
The Department tentatively concluded that the proposed alliance is in the public
interest because it features a proposed new and highly integrated joint venture
that will likely produce efficiencies and provide consumers with additional
price and service options, such as lower fares and more nonstop and connecting
flights. The United States has an Open-Skies Plus aviation agreement with the
European Union (EU). Each of the international carriers involved in today’s
decision is from an EU member state. The U.S.-EU agreement assures that
transatlantic markets remain open to other competitors because U.S. and European
airlines are now able to serve any route between the United States and Europe.
As a condition of obtaining antitrust immunity, the Department proposed to
require that the carriers implement the immunized alliance within 18 months. The
Department stressed that the carriers would remain subject to antitrust laws for
domestic service and for international flights that are not covered by the
alliance agreement.
Beginning with the Northwest-KLM alliance, which was approved in 1993, the DOT
has granted antitrust immunity to a number of international airline alliances
where it found that the alliance benefited the public and did not substantially
reduce competition.
Delta and Northwest first petitioned the Department to allow the alliance in
2004. After an initial tentative denial, they reapplied in June of last year
with a substantially revised agreement.
Interested parties will have two weeks to comment on today’s tentative decision.
The parties will reply to all comments within seven days and the Department will
then issue a final decision. The show-cause order, alliance application and
public comments are available on the Internet at
http://www.regulations.gov, docket number OST-2007-28644.