WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2003
- Messages
- 21,709
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except 5th freedom rights are rights to fly beyond Japan to other Asian countries. It doesn't apply to access to HND.Poor Delta and United with there fifth freedom rights. I cant imagine the DOT not giving this open slot to one of them. What in the world does AA need with new service?
The US and Japan have Open Skies, limited by slots at both NRT and HND. It's the same situation, BTW, that faced CO, DL, NW, and US after LHR opened due to EU Open Skies.... the difference is that AA, the dominant US airline chose a partner with BA, the dominant British airline at LHR.
In Japan, the #2 US airline to Japan, UA, chose the #2 Japanese transpac airline while the #1 Japanese transpac airline, JL, chose, the #3 US transpac airline.
The same protectionist policies for the largest airport, HND, exist as existed at LHR. Japan has managed to limit access to HND even after Open Skies, something that the UK did not do w/ LHR.
The same principle applies to GRU, the largest market in S. America until 2014 when GRU is supposed to open a new terminal that should increase capacity to allow Open Skies between the US and all of Brazil; all airports in Brazil except metro São Paulo have Open Skies with the US now on a practical basis.
the irony is that Chinese frequencies are free for the asking and Japanese frequencies - to HND anyway- are on US carrier shopping lists.IMO, granting HA its HND slots so that it can fly Japanese tourists on holiday to Hawai'i was a massive waste of scarce resources - HND slots. Better to give that slot to DL or UA than reward a carrier that could have accomplished its goals by seeking NRT slots instead. Sort of like the situation when NW sought more China frequencies and UA, AA and CO all screamed that NW should not be in line to get more scarce China frequencies until it began using its flexible China rights nonstop from the mainland instead of NRT-China.