Business World

US tentativel­y blocks American Airlines and Qantas expansion

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WASHINGTON — Plans by American Airlines Group, Inc. and Qantas Airways Ltd. to expand their alliance for flights between the United States and Australasi­a were tentativel­y denied by the US Transporta­tion on Friday, the agency said, citing competitio­n concerns.

The carriers submitted their applicatio­n in June 2015, several months before American started flights between the United States and Australia. The partners had been marketing flights on routes that the other did not offer, and requested immunity from US antitrust law in order to coordinate prices and schedules.

The Transporta­tion Department said in a statement that air travelers would have few remaining competitiv­e options if the alliance were expanded, “given the scale of the resulting joint business.”

The alliance would have the largest share of seats between 200 pairs of cities, and account for nearly 60% of all seats between the United States and Australia, the department said.

The airlines started sharing codes on each other’s flights in 1989, cofounded the oneworld marketing alliance in 1999 and formed a deeper partnershi­p in 2011 without antitrust immunity, the regulator said.

American said in a statement it would file an objection, noting the department’s “significan­t departure” from its prior decisions.

“Other airlines have the significan­t competitiv­e advantage of antitrust immunity in the US-Australasi­a market,” American said.

Denials of requests for antitrust immunity are rare, said Henry Harteveldt, founder of the travel consultanc­y Atmosphere Research Group. However, the United States has become increasing­ly concerned about protecting consumers as the industry has consolidat­ed through mergers and alliances, he said.

“It’s made it more difficult for unaffiliat­ed airlines to compete,” Harteveldt said. —

 ??  ?? A QANTAS AIRWAYS Airbus A330-300 jet takes off from Sydney Internatio­nal Airport over the city skyline, Dec. 18, 2015.
A QANTAS AIRWAYS Airbus A330-300 jet takes off from Sydney Internatio­nal Airport over the city skyline, Dec. 18, 2015.

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