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Originally Posted by LeftCoaster
How did we end up with the current situation of 14x into the Emirates and 3x into Qatar? Was that a previous deal before ME3 decided to force countries into full open skies?
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In the case of the UAE, the agreement for 1 daily by a UAE airline and 1 daily by a Canadian airline was indeed the legacy air agreement that predates the rapid expansion of EK and ET.
For Qatar, the Canadian government of the day was under a lot of pressure to open up traffic rights to the ME3. In this case, both the Canadian and Qatar governments were willing to severely limit capacity on the bilateral.
Quote:
Originally Posted by trofirhen
Thanks, Cage.
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Your welcome.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeftCoaster
That's a very strange bilateral, I wonder what exactly it is protecting by allowing only flights to once side of the country.
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Nname is referencing the old bilateral. The new bilateral was signed in 2005 in the dieing days of the Martin Liberal government.
new bilateral presser is available here:
http://news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=156789
As to why the bilateral is so strange, the answer related to 1980s available equipment and economic ties. There was no equipment to allow for nonstop services. Further the equipment available for one stop services required fifth freedom rights to make the route viable. Therefore a very restrictive agreement was reached to allow AC or AI to fly across the Atlantic as an extension of the UK and select other European traffic rights. CP had no desire to service India through the Pacific and did not want AI to take passengers from either HKG, NRT, or ICN. At some point the Canadian government threw India a bone and allowed for 2x weekly flights across the Pacific.
Finally (and this gets really strange to wrap your head around) back in the AC vs CP days, Transport Canada policy was "Divide the World". AC got TransAt services (with the exception of AMS) and CP got TransPac. The World was divided and India became a TransAt destination rather than TransPac because services were traditionally conducted with a European intermediary stopover.